News Post
Statoil, BG Group to build Tanzania’s first LNG plant
Statoil and BG Group will build Tanzania’s first liquefied
natural gas plant in Lindi and are due to meet with authorities about the
project’s schedule and details in April, according to energy minister Sospeter Muhongo.
The two companies will announce the site decision next week, Muhongo said in an interview in Oslo. Statoil declined to comment, spokesman Knut Rostad said by phone.
Statoil, which has discovered as much as 20 trillion cubic feet of
natural gas in Block 2, and BG, which says recoverable volumes are as much as 15 trillion cubic feet in three neighboring blocks, plan to build an
LNG plant to export gas to Asia, profiting from rising demand in the region.
Statoil, Norway’s biggest energy company, is targeting another 5 to 15 trillion cubic feet as it plans as many as a dozen wells off Tanzania over the next two years, head of
exploration Tim Dodson said last week.
Production could start in 2021 or 2022 and investments could be $20 billion to $30 billion, Statoil has said. Partners in the offshore blocks include ExxonMobil,, Ophir Energy and Pavilion Energy.
Tanzania’s government hopes Statoil and BG, which operate their respective blocks, will decide to build the plant with “at least” two trains, Muhongo said.
Tanzania, which has the largest gas reserves in east Africa after Mozambique with 46.5 trillion cubic feet, expects that figure to exceed 100 trillion cubic feet within the next two to three years, Muhongo said.
Bidders in the country’s licensing round started last year will be announced May 15, Muhongo said, adding he “suspects” Statoil to be among them.
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