Liquefied Petroleum Gas.
By Louis Kolumbia
The
Energy and Water Utilities Regulatory Authority (Ewura) has turned down
proposals for natural gas indicative prices submitted by the Tanzania
Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC).
TPDC had submitted
indicative price proposals to Ewura on the basis of ...
operational costs
incurred when transporting and connecting natural gas to customers.
But Ewura natural
gas director Charles Omujuni told The Citizen in an exclusive interview
last week that TPDC indicative price proposals were rejected due to some
irregularities and the failure to consider realities surrounding
natural gas business in the world.
"TPDC designed
indicative prices without considering realities in the global natural
gas market. We have directed them to rectify the issues before we can
recommend their proposals for a public hearing," Mr Omujuni said.
But in a swift
response, TPDC acting managing director Kapuulya Musomba refuted claims
that their proposal was turned down by the regulator, saying there were
only some minor technical and legal issues that needed to be sorted out
before the process continues.
"Ewura and TPDC
teams could not reach a common understanding over some minor technical
and legal issues that we cannot disclose at this stage. So an agreement
was reached to review the issues before the process can continue," Mr
Musomba said in a telephone interview.
Both sides declined
to reveal the indicative prices that TPDC had forwarded to Ewura, but
The Citizen is aware that the prices ranged between $4 and $6 per 1,000
cubic metres depending on the distance of the customers from the natural
gas wells. Dangote, Tanzania's largest cement maker located near by the
natural gas fields of Mtwara, has proposed to buy gas at $4 per 1,000
cubic metres, according to media reports.
The fact that TPDC
proposals were rejected well before the public hearing reveals the
corporation's lack of requisite expertise to calculate natural gas
prices, according to Mr Omujuni.
He urged the petroleum development agency to seek assistance from experts in the Ministry of Energy and Minerals.
"They could even seek some technical assistance from outside the country," Mr Omujuni advised.
But Mr Musomba told
The Citizen that TPDC would use local experts because the country has
had enough of them. According to him, TPDC issues with technical
capacity were being addressed.
Tanzania has 57
trillion cubic feet natural gas reserves. The government-owned, 533km
long pipeline brings gas from Madimba in Mtwara region to Dar es Salaam.
TPDC plans to
connect the natural resource to hundreds of households to be used for
domestic purposes and supply several planned filling stations where they
would be used by cars transformed from fuel to natural gas utilising
vehicles.
In January this
year, TPDC told The Citizen that Sh430 billion would be spent for
building a mega plant to facilitate transportation of natural gas to
large-scale factories and households in Mtwara, Lindi, Kilwa and Dar es
Salaam.
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