Nigeria to propose naira payment for local gas sale
Nigeria is proposing for
gas producers to sell gas to local power plants in naira to solve problems of
dollar shortages after a second currency devaluation in less than a year is
expected to balloon costs and make it hard for firms to pay.
Natural gas is sold in dollars
to power plants because investments tied to building gas plants and pipelines
are priced and paid for in dollars.
However, local operators
have had difficulties making dollar payments since a currency crisis which has
seen the naira lose significant value. The currency weakness is expected to
force the price of gas in the domestic market sharply higher.
Nigeria has 24 gas power
plants with a combined output capacity of 11,434 megawatts, but it only
delivers around a third of its capacity to the grid due to issues with gas
supply.
"Proposing domestic
gas payment in naira is a key step toward stability, aligning with our economy's
needs and promoting sustainable energy production," Power Minister Adebayo
Adelabu said in a post on X.
Adelabu added that he
plans to create legislative measures that will mandate naira payments for
domestic gas supply.
Nigeria has proven gas
reserves of 206 trillion cubic feet which it has struggled to tap due to
capital constraints. The government hopes it can fix the challenges by
switching to naira payments and capping dollar prices.
The
Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), the
local gas regulator, has asked producers to keep gas prices at $2.18 per
million British Thermal Units (MMBtu) as per agreement with unions three-years
ago.

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