Governor of the Bank of Tanzania (BoT), Prof Benno Ndulu
In his presentation last week at the launch of Breakfast Series
Meetings on "Preparing for Gas Economy," organised by Rex Attorneys,
Prof Ndulu said Tanzania stands to register tremendous prosperity with
gas economy.
"Based on current estimates and under favourable global prices, gas
production might add to government coffers about 3-4 billion US dollars
(nearly 5.5 - 7.4tri/-) per annum," the governor said.
He explained that the economy is projected to start accelerating at
the rate of 15.3 per cent annually within the next 12 years, following
massive off shore discovery of natural gas in the country.
Prof Ndulu, however, pointed out that natural gas 'is not forever'
and at one point in future the wells would completely dry up, stressing
the need for prudent policies and judicious use of proceeds for
diversifying the economy.
"The amount of gas discovered is finite. Once exploitation starts
the current known reserves are expected to last for approximately 25 -
30 years...but further discoveries may extend the life period of
exploitation," he said.
Prof Ndulu said natural gas alone would not meet the current twin
challenges of employment and sustained growth. He pointed out that in
order for Tanzania to realise its goal of attaining middle income status
by 2025 (Vision 2025), the country needed a diversified economy.
"This should be an economy with some natural resources, some
industries, some services and increasingly productive agricultural
sector. "We must therefore focus on utilisation of gas revenue to
diversify the economy and create capacity for sustainable growth and for
future generations, as well as exploiting forward and backward
linkages," he explained.
He further said that the natural gas available was sufficient to
satisfy domestic demand and exports to some neighbouring and Asian
countries.
Prof Ndulu allayed fears of inevitable resource curse following
massive discovery of off-shore natural gas fields, saying with good
policies, resources can be equitably and prudently shared.
He listed Botswana and Malaysia among the success stories.
"Resource curse is not a pre-ordained phenomenon it can always be
avoided," he said.
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