Tanzania has acquired over 2,000 hectares of land at Likong’o- Mchinga
in Lindi to pave the way for a $30 billion liquefied natural gas plant.
TEA GRAPHIC | FILE
By Fumbuka Ng'wanakilala
In Summary
- BG Group, recently acquired by Royal Dutch Shell, alongside Statoil, Exxon Mobil and Ophir Energy, plan to build a $30 billion-onshore LNG export terminal in partnership with the state-run Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) by the early 2020s.
- But a final investment decision has been held up by government delays in finalising issues relating to acquisition of land at the site and establishing a legal framework for the nascent hydrocarbon industry.
Tanzanian president John Magufuli ordered officials on
Monday to speed up long-delayed work on a planned liquefied natural gas
(LNG) plant, saying implementation of the project had taken too long.
BG Group, recently acquired by Royal Dutch Shell, alongside
Statoil, Exxon Mobil and Ophir Energy, plan to build a $30
billion-onshore LNG export terminal in partnership with the state-run
Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) by the early 2020s.
But a final investment decision has been held up by government
delays in finalising issues relating to acquisition of land at the site
and establishing a legal framework for the nascent hydrocarbon industry.
"I want to see this plant being built, we are taking too long.
Sort out all the remaining issues so investors can start construction
work immediately," the presidency quoted Magufuli as saying in a
statement.
Magufuli, a reformist who took office in November, has sacked
several senior officials for graft and cut spending he deemed wasteful,
such as curbing foreign travel by public officials.
The president's office said Magufuli issued the instructions for
the LNG project to be fast-tracked during talks with Oystein Michelsen,
Statoil's Tanzania country manager, and senior Tanzanian government
energy officials.
The Tanzanian presidency did not give the construction schedule
for the project, but said once completed the LNG plant would have an
expected economic lifespan of more than 40 years.
The government said it has acquired over 2,000 hectares of land
for the construction of the planned two-train LNG terminal at Likong'o
village in the southern Tanzanian town of Lindi.
Tanzania discovered an additional 2.17 trillion cubic feet of
possible natural gas deposits in February, raising the east African
nation's total estimated recoverable natural gas reserves to more than
57 trillion cubic feet.
East Africa is a new hotspot in hydrocarbon exploration after
substantial deposits of crude oil were found in Uganda and major gas
reserves discovered in Tanzania and Mozambique.
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