LATEST ARTICLES

Global Gas Flaring Rises For Third Straight Year, Undermining Energy Security — World Bank Report

Global gas flaring rose for the third consecutive year, surging to 167 billion cubic meters (bcm) in 2025 and wasting an estimated $54 billion worth of gas, according to the 2026 Global Flaring Tracker, released by the World Bank Group on Tuesday, June 23.

The report finds that the 167 bcm flared globally in 2025 exceeds the volume of liquefied natural gas (LNG) that transited the Persian Gulf that year, a stark measure of the energy value being wasted.

The volume also matches Africa’s entire annual gas consumption, on a continent where energy poverty remains a significant barrier to economic development.

In effect, oil producers are burning a valuable resource that could support energy access, reduce reliance on costly imports, generate much-needed revenue in developing countries, and cut greenhouse gas emissions.

With acute energy challenges persisting across much of the world, the scale of this missed opportunity demands urgent attention from policymakers, operators, and investors.

Published annually by the World Bank’s Global Flaring and Methane Reduction (GFMR) Partnership, in collaboration with the Payne Institute at the Colorado School of Mines, the report provides a comprehensive and independent assessment of global gas flaring volumes, intensity, and trends.

Nine countries—Russia, Iran, Iraq, Venezuela, Mexico, Libya, Algeria, Nigeria, and the United States—account for more than four-fifths of global flaring while producing nearly half of the world’s oil.

“At a time when many countries are struggling to increase affordable and reliable energy, the economic development costs of continued flaring are simply too high,” said Demetrios Papathanasiou, World Bank Group Global Director for Energy.

“The gas currently being flared could be captured to power industries and businesses, create jobs, and strengthen energy security.”

Many countries import costly gas while simultaneously flaring vast amounts of it at their oilfields. Eliminating routine flaring globally would require an estimated $70–100 billion—less than twice the annual value of the gas currently being wasted.

Countries facing high import costs and domestic energy shortfalls stand to benefit from increased energy access, new gas revenues, and lower energy bills. Yet despite the tools needed to end routine flaring being well established, the practice persists. What holds back progress is not technical capability but structural challenges, including inadequate regulation, insufficient capital, limited market infrastructure, and a failure by operators and governments to prioritize flaring reduction.

Where effective policies and regulations, targeted investment, and strong leadership come together, flaring declines.

Governments and operators that act decisively achieve results. For instance, Kazakhstan has reduced flaring by 87% since 2012, including a further 16% reduction in 2025 alone.

“The technologies, policies, regulations, and financing mechanisms needed to capture and utilize associated gas are available. What is missing, in too many places, is the leadership, prioritization, and governance needed to put these solutions into practice and create access to markets and infrastructure. The cost of inaction will be measured in billions of dollars in lost revenue and continued energy insecurity for millions of people,” said Zubin Bamji, World Bank Manager for the Global Flaring and Methane Reduction (GFMR) Partnership.

Ghana: Gov’t Raises Gh¢8.81 Billion From Energy Levy In 2025 – Finance Minister

Ghana’s Minister for Finance, Dr. Cassiel Ato Baah Forson, on Tuesday revealed that the Energy Sector Shortfall and Debt Repayment Levy generated a total of GH¢8.81 billion in 2025 for the Energy Sector Support Account. According to him, the government allocated additional resources amounting to GH¢1.26 billion, bringing the total funds available in the account to GH¢10.07 billion. Dr. Forson made this known in an annual report on the energy levy presented to Parliament. Of this amount, GH¢9.82 billion was utilised in 2025, with GH¢6.32 billion used to settle energy sector shortfalls and GH¢3.52 billion allocated toward the repayment of legacy debt. The minister said proceeds from the levy were insufficient to fully meet the obligations for the 2025 fiscal year, resulting in an additional GH¢12.85 billion being paid by the Controller and Accountant-General’s Department from the Treasury Main Account. In total, GH¢22.67 billion was expended from both the Energy Sector Support Account and the Treasury Main Account to address energy sector shortfalls and repay legacy debt. The government further revealed that the balance in the Energy Sector Support Account as of December 31, 2025, stood at GH¢252 million. “Lodgements for the period under review amounted to GH¢8.81 billion, exceeding collections by GH¢158.25 million (1.8%). An amount of GH¢1.26 billion was also brought forward into 2025 as balances on the various accounts making up the Energy Sector Support Account, bringing the total funds available to GH¢10.07 billion. “Total utilisation from the Energy Sector Support Account in 2025 amounted to GH¢9.82 billion, comprising payments for energy sector shortfalls and the repayment of legacy debt in line with the provisions of Act 1135, leaving a balance of GH¢252.23 million,” Citinewsroom quoted from the annual report on the energy levy. The energy levy, introduced to raise additional funds for fuel purchases for thermal power plants and to settle outstanding sector debts, has faced calls for greater transparency from stakeholders. However, the government has defended its use of the proceeds, emphasising that the levy has supported efforts to ensure a more reliable power supply across the country.

South Africa: Sasol Expands Green Hydrogen Strategy Beyond Boegoebaai To Province-Wide Approach

Sasol has completed a pre-feasibility study on the Boegoebaai green hydrogen and ammonia export opportunity, confirming its strong technical and economic viability.

While Boegoebaai remains an important asset within Sasol’s portfolio, the company said it is refining its green hydrogen strategy in the Northern Cape to adopt a broader, province-wide development approach.

Instead of focusing on a single flagship project, Sasol is now pursuing a coordinated green hydrogen ecosystem that spans multiple sites across the province.

The shift reflects the scale of the opportunity and the need for long-term enabling conditions, including land availability, grid capacity, infrastructure development, and phased market growth.

Within this framework, Boegoebaai is expected to serve as a potential anchor project in a wider Northern Cape green hydrogen corridor, supported by a planned deep-water port and Special Economic Zone.

However, Sasol’s focus now extends beyond one location to a portfolio of renewable energy developments that together could support an integrated hydrogen economy.

The strategy aligns with the Northern Cape’s ambition to become a globally competitive green hydrogen export hub, leveraging its abundant solar and wind resources, available land, and infrastructure potential.

Sasol said it will continue working with government and other stakeholders to support the development of key enabling infrastructure, including transmission networks, port facilities, and logistics systems.

The company aims to help build a coordinated industrial platform capable of attracting investment and accelerating large-scale deployment.

A key driver of the strategy is the expectation that competitive green hydrogen production in the 2030s will depend on rapid expansion of large-scale renewable energy capacity in the 2020s.

Sasol therefore sees accelerated rollout of solar and wind projects as essential to supporting future hydrogen production, strengthening industrial demand, and ensuring long-term cost competitiveness for low-carbon fuel production in the region.

The company added that successful large-scale hydrogen development will require a multi-partner, multi-project approach to reduce early-stage risk, align infrastructure build-out with demand, and support both export and domestic market development. Sasol said its role is evolving toward that of a catalyst and integrator within a broader public and private sector ecosystem.

Angola: Azule Energy Approves Major Offshore Oil Development

Azule Energy has taken a final investment decision (FID) on the Greater PAJ project offshore Angola, advancing what the company describes as the country’s first integrated cross-block development. The deepwater project spans Blocks 31 and 31/21 and combines five offshore discoveries into a single development. Greater PAJ will develop the Palas, Astraea, and Juno fields in Block 31, as well as the Urano and Dione fields in Block 31/21. Operated by Azule Energy, the Angola-focused joint venture between Eni and BP, the project is expected to deliver first oil in the first half of 2029, less than three years after final approval. The development plan includes 17 wells tied back to a new floating production, storage, and offloading (FPSO) vessel with a nameplate production capacity of 95,000 barrels of oil per day (bpd). The FPSO will also be capable of exporting up to 70 million standard cubic feet per day (MMscfd) of natural gas. Associated gas produced by the development will be transported to the Angola LNG facility via a new gas export line connected to the existing Block 31 gas export network. According to Azule, the project represents a new approach to resource development in Angola by integrating reservoirs across adjacent offshore concessions, allowing operators to optimize infrastructure and improve development efficiency. The project supports Angola’s broader efforts to sustain offshore oil production while maximizing recovery from existing deepwater assets and infrastructure. In addition to operator Azule Energy, project partners include Sonangol E&P and Equinor. Azule Energy is Angola’s largest independent oil and gas producer and was formed in 2022 through the combination of Eni and BP’s Angolan upstream businesses.

The Gambia: Barrow Pledges To End Power Outages Within Two Years

The Gambia’s President, H.E. Adama Barrow, has stated that the intermittent power supply affecting the country will end within the next two years, assuring citizens that ongoing investments in the energy sector will deliver a more reliable electricity supply nationwide. The Greater Banjul Area and the West Coast Region are currently experiencing power outages due to what officials of the country’s electricity provider, NAWEC, describe as a reduction in power imports from the regional power grid. President Barrow, who is seeking re-election in the general election later this year, has faced criticism from opposition parties over the persistent power supply challenges. Speaking at a National People’s Party (NPP) rally in Brikama over the weekend, Barrow addressed growing public concerns over recent blackouts and water shortages, which have drawn criticism from opposition figures and residents alike. He defended his government’s record, arguing that no administration since independence has invested more in improving electricity generation and distribution. Zambia: Man Jailed Three Months For Trespassing At ZESCO Substation “I can confidently say that since The Gambia gained independence, no government has done as much to improve electricity supply as this government,” he told supporters. He attributed the recent nationwide outages to technical problems rather than systemic failures, stressing that such disruptions can occur even in advanced countries. “The recent electricity problems were caused by technical issues, which can happen anywhere,” he said. Barrow, however, maintained that the challenges are temporary and promised that Gambians would soon begin to see the benefits of ongoing investments in the energy sector. “I want to assure the nation that within the next two years, electricity outages will become a thing of the past,” he declared. He said his administration remains committed to expanding infrastructure, including electricity, roads, and water systems, as part of its broader development agenda. His remarks come at a time when electricity supply has emerged as a major political issue ahead of the presidential election, with opposition parties and civil society groups demanding lasting solutions to recurring power cuts. Barrow urged Gambians to support the continuation of the NPP government, arguing that sustained progress in electricity, water, and infrastructure development depends on the implementation of his administration’s long-term plans.

Thirteen Killed, 66 Injured Following Explosion At Qatar’s LNG Facility

At least 13 people were killed and 66 others injured after an explosion at Qatar’s main liquefied natural gas (LNG) processing facility in Ras Laffan Industrial City, Energy Affairs Minister H.E. Saad bin Sherida Al-Kaabi confirmed on Monday. The deceased were Indian and Pakistani nationals, while those injured include citizens of Qatar, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Kenya, Ghana, Tanzania, Nigeria, and Nepal. The injured are currently receiving medical treatment, the minister said. The facility was engulfed by fire on Sunday evening, June 21, 2026, triggering an explosion. Speaking on Monday, Minister Al-Kaabi said the blast at the Ras Laffan LNG complex was caused by a “technical malfunction” and ruled out any “hostile” action. He added that Qatar’s LNG exports would not be affected. Like its Gulf neighbours, Qatar has experienced Iranian missile and drone attacks during the United States and Israel’s war with Iran. The explosion occurred as workers were restarting operations at the giant gas complex after an Iranian attack in March had forced a suspension of activities. “This was an accident and not sabotage or hostile in nature. Plant production had been intentionally and completely halted since December 2025 due to urgent maintenance requirements. Operations resumed only two days ago,” Al-Kaabi said. He stated that the fatalities were all Indian and Pakistani nationals. Officials have not provided details on the conditions of the injured. The Ministry of Interior said there was no gas leakage that would pose a threat to public safety. The plant’s operator, QatarEnergy, did not disclose the exact location of the explosion or the extent of the damage. Al-Kaabi, who is also Chief Executive Officer of the state-owned company, said an investigation had been launched. “This will not affect our exports to the world in any way,” he insisted. QatarEnergy said emergency response teams were immediately deployed after the explosion at the Barzan gas facility and successfully brought the fire under control. Ras Laffan Industrial City, located about 80 kilometres (50 miles) north of Doha, is home to the world’s largest LNG export complex, producing approximately one-fifth of the global LNG supply.

America’s Nuclear Energy Race Accelerates At Texas A&M-RELLIS

America’s race to build the next generation of nuclear energy is accelerating at Texas A&M-RELLIS, as the Texas A&M University System recently signed agreements with Terrestrial Energy Inc. to advance the development of its planned small modular reactor. The ground lease and research agreements grant Terrestrial Energy site control over about 77 acres at Texas A&M-RELLIS and support site characterization, environmental reviews, testing, and research tied to its Integral Molten Salt Reactor (IMSR) technology. The work follows a 2025 memorandum of understanding between the A&M System and Terrestrial Energy after the company joined the RELLIS Energy Proving Ground initiative. “President Trump has made clear that America needs to move faster to develop the next generation of nuclear energy,” said Board Chairman Robert L. Albritton. “Texas is ready to help lead that work. At the RELLIS campus, the A&M System has the land, research capacity, and workforce mission to help move important energy technologies into the commercial world. This work can strengthen our state, our economy, and our national security.” The A&M System created the RELLIS Energy Proving Ground to give advanced energy companies access to land for planning demonstrations and commercial operations, research expertise, testing capacity, and workforce partnerships within one of the nation’s largest public university systems. At A&M-RELLIS, companies can pursue project siting, licensing, testing, and development work needed to move advanced nuclear energy technologies into nationwide commercial use. The U.S. Department of Energy also selected Terrestrial Energy for its Reactor Pilot Program, a federal effort announced in 2025 following President Trump’s Executive Order 14301 to accelerate the testing of advanced reactor designs outside the national laboratories. Texas and the nation face growing electricity demand driven by population growth, advanced manufacturing, data centres, artificial intelligence, and other energy-intensive industries. “The Texas A&M System was built to solve problems that matter to Texas and the nation,” said Chancellor Glenn Hegar. “Reliable power is one of those problems. At A&M-RELLIS, we are bringing industry, researchers, and public partners together to work on practical energy solutions that can support growth, strengthen the grid, and prepare students for high-demand careers.” The work also strengthens Bryan’s role as a hub for advanced energy development. “Energy is the catalyst for everything that drives our state and nation forward,” said Bryan Mayor Bobby Gutierrez. “These critical challenges are courageously studied and tested every day at the RELLIS campus, making our community a world-class destination for advancing new technology. The City of Bryan is honoured to help solve these challenges by supporting investments from companies like Terrestrial Energy.” Terrestrial Energy is developing a small modular reactor using its Generation IV IMSR technology, which the company says can provide reliable heat and electricity for industrial and power-generation uses. The agreements at A&M-RELLIS support completion of site characterization work, project development, and testing activities tied to the company’s commercial plans. They also support research and development activities connected to Terrestrial Energy’s Department of Energy partnership projects, known as TETRA and TEFLA. Terrestrial Energy has opened an engineering and project management office on the RELLIS campus to help coordinate its work with the A&M System and other partners. The agreements follow another recent milestone at the RELLIS campus. In May, Last Energy announced that the U.S. Department of Energy approved the Preliminary Documented Safety Analysis for its PWR-5 pilot reactor project at the campus. The projects are part of the A&M System’s broader effort to make A&M-RELLIS a national hub for advanced energy research, testing, and workforce development. Texas A&M-RELLIS, located in Bryan, was designed as an applied research and technology campus where universities, state agencies, and private-sector partners can collaborate on complex challenges in energy, national security, transportation, advanced manufacturing, and workforce development.

Zambia: Man Jailed Three Months For Trespassing At ZESCO Substation

A magistrate court in Chingola has sentenced a 30-year-old man, Samuel Chungu, from the Mikiloni area of Zambia, to three months’ imprisonment with hard labour after he was found guilty of trespassing at a ZESCO substation. He pleaded guilty to criminal trespass, contrary to Section 306(a) of the Penal Code, Chapter 87 of the Laws of Zambia, and was consequently convicted on his own plea. According to a statement issued by ZESCO Limited, on March 10, 2026, ZESCO security personnel and Zambia Police officers were conducting a night patrol in the Mwaiseni Industrial Area when they discovered a freshly dug trench suspected to be linked to an attempted theft of underground armoured cables. During an inspection of Substation No. 28, officers found Chungu hiding at the site. The suspect attempted to flee but was apprehended. A shovel, hacksaw, and pick were recovered from the area where he had been hiding. Chungu appeared before the Chingola Magistrate Court on June 10, 2026, and pleaded guilty. On June 17, 2026, he was convicted and sentenced to three months’ imprisonment with hard labour, effective from the date of conviction. Meanwhile, ZESCO recorded 37 security-related cases involving vandalism, theft, fraud, corruption, fraudulent appropriation of power, and abuse of corporation motor vehicles during the week of June 12 to June 19, 2026. The reported cases resulted in estimated property losses valued at K1,647,905, while recoveries amounting to K1,259,900 were made, leaving a net loss of K388,004. This compares with the week of June 5 to June 12, which recorded 20 cases and a net loss of K344,029. ZESCO commended members of the public for providing timely information that continues to support the recovery of stolen property and the protection of electricity infrastructure. The utility company urged the public to remain vigilant and report any suspicious activities around electricity infrastructure to ZESCO, the Zambia Police Service, or other local security authorities.

Saudis Turn To Russian Fuel Oil As Iran War Saps Fossil Power Supplies

Saudi Arabia continues to snap up high volumes of Russia’s fuel oil as the Hormuz crisis has forced shut oil and gas wells and reduced domestic supply for power generation amid rising temperatures. Russia’s vessel shipments of fuel oil and vacuum gasoil (VGO) slumped in May by some 6% from April, due to the continued Ukrainian strikes on Russian energy infrastructure, Reuters reported on Monday, quoting shipment data on LSEG and traders. Despite the overall decline in Russian fuel oil exports, to about 3.2 million metric tons last month, Saudi Arabia remained the single biggest buyer, accounting for more than a third of all Russian fuel oil shipments. These stood at 1.23 million tons in May, down by 17% compared to April, but at still relatively high levels compared to before the war. Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest crude oil exporter, became the leading buyer of Russian’s fuel oil two years ago, after the EU full embargo on Russian oil products came into effect in 2023. Since then, Saudi Arabia has consistently bought high levels of fuel oil from Russia. But the Saudi imports took off in March 2026, rising by 18% from February, after the Iran war and the Hormuz crisis forced massive shut-ins of oil and gas production in Saudi Arabia and all other producers in the Middle East. The Saudis, which use a lot of direct crude burn for power generation, turned to Russian fuel oil, which was de-sanctioned by the U.S. as the conflict raged. By importing fuel oil from Russia, Saudi Arabia left more of its crude available for exports, via the Yanbu port on the Red Sea that bypasses the Strait of Hormuz. Within weeks of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, Saudi Arabia had managed to hike its East-West pipeline flows from about 2 million barrels per day (bpd) to 7 million bpd, to keep its exports via the Red Sea, despite the closed Strait of Hormuz.

Ghana: PURC Increases Electricity Tariffs By 3.49%, Water Tariffs By 0.85%, Effective July 1

The Public Utilities Regulatory Commission (PURC) has announced a 3.49 per cent increase in electricity tariffs across the board and a 0.85 per cent increase in water tariffs for the third quarter, effective July 1, 2026.

According to the Commission, the tariff review is in line with its mandate to adjust tariffs quarterly to reflect developments within the review period.

The quarterly reviews track and incorporate movements in key operational factors that are beyond the control of Utility Service Providers (USPs) but are critical to service delivery.

These factors include the exchange rate between the Ghana Cedi (GHS) and the United States dollar (USD), the domestic inflation rate, the electricity generation mix, and the cost of fuel—mainly natural gas—used to power thermal plants.

In a statement on Monday signed by Dr. Shafic Suleman, Executive Secretary of the PURC, the Commission explained that the quarterly adjustments are intended to maintain the real value of tariffs and ensure that utility providers remain financially viable while continuing to deliver reliable services to consumers.

 The Commission applied a weighted average exchange rate of GHS11.2228 to one US dollar for the third quarter of 2026, representing a 0.2 per cent depreciation of the Cedi compared to the previous quarter.

It also used a three-month average inflation rate of 3.43 per cent, down from 4.17 per cent in the second quarter, while the weighted average cost of natural gas declined by 1.58 per cent to USD7.9708 per MMBtu.

The hydro-thermal generation mix remained unchanged at 20.9 per cent hydro and 79.1 per cent thermal generation.

Zambia: ZESCO Signs 25-Year Deal To Offtake Power From 400MW Sinazongwe Thermal Plant

Based on the combined impact of these indicators, PURC approved a 3.49 per cent increase in electricity tariffs for residential, non-residential, and special load tariff customers.

For residential consumers, the lifeline tariff for users consuming up to 30 kilowatt-hours per month increased from 86.9Gp per kilowatt-hour to 89.93Gp per kilowatt-hour.

Water tariffs were also adjusted upward by 0.85 per cent across all customer categories, including residential, commercial, industrial, public institutions, and bulk consumers.

Under the revised rates, the residential lifeline tariff for water consumption of up to five cubic metres rose from 593.49Gp per cubic metre to 598.54Gp per cubic metre.

PURC said it remains committed to monitoring the performance of utility service providers and ensuring compliance with regulatory standards to guarantee value for money and improved service delivery.

The Commission expressed appreciation to stakeholders for their continued support in implementing quarterly tariff reviews and indicated that the decision will be published in the Gazette and on its website in due course.

Ghana: BOSTenergies Refutes Fuel Contamination Claim At Kumasi Depot

BOST Energies Limited Company (BOSTenergies) has clarified a recent incident at its Kumasi Depot involving a tanker truck bearing registration number GN 8887-18, which was suspected of carrying adulterated petroleum products to the depot. According to sources, the truck, with a capacity of 54,000 litres, loaded petroleum products in Tema for discharge at the BOST Kumasi Depot. Upon arrival, and during routine operational and quality assurance procedures at the depot, BOST said its personnel identified anomalies in the product and immediately initiated the necessary control measures. In accordance with established quality control protocols, samples of the product were taken and subjected to internal analysis. According to BOSTenergies, the results indicated that the product did not meet the required specifications. “To ensure an objective and conclusive determination, additional samples were subsequently submitted to an independent third-party testing facility for verification. The independent assessment confirmed that the product was off-specification,” a statement issued by the company on Monday clarified. Following this confirmation, BOSTenergies said it notified the regulator, the National Petroleum Authority (NPA), and the tanker truck was immediately impounded in accordance with regulatory requirements. The company said appropriate regulatory and administrative actions are being pursued against the tanker driver and the transporter. “It is worth noting that the detection of the off-specification product is a clear demonstration of the effectiveness and robustness of the quality assurance systems and operational controls in place.” The company stated that at no point did the incident compromise the integrity of products within the depot’s storage and distribution system, as no litre of product was discharged from the said vehicle. It therefore dismissed publications and media reports alleging fuel contamination at the company’s Kumasi Depot. “We wish to unequivocally state that these reports are false, inaccurate, and mischievous, and they misrepresent the facts surrounding the matter.” The company advised the public to disregard any reports suggesting that fuel contamination occurred at the Kumasi Depot. “Such assertions are unfounded and do not accurately reflect the circumstances of the incident.” BOSTenergies reaffirmed its commitment to ensuring the highest standards of quality, safety, and operational excellence across its facilities, and said it will continue to work closely with the relevant regulatory authorities to safeguard the integrity of petroleum products throughout the supply chain.

Togo: Togo Oil, Lomé-Tokoin Airport Company Sign Deal To Expand Jet A1 Fuel Storage Capacity

TOGO OIL COMPANY S.A. (T-OIL) and the Lomé-Tokoin Airport Company (SALT) have signed two strategic agreements aimed at supporting the rollout of Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) in Togo and the construction of a 1,500-cubic-metre Jet A1 fuel storage tank at Gnassingbé Eyadéma International Airport (AIGE) in Lomé. The agreements were signed on Friday, June 19, 2026, in Lomé during the African Civil Aviation Commission (AFCAC) Convention and Exhibition, according to a report by Togo First. The first agreement focuses on the introduction of Sustainable Aviation Fuel in Togo and provides for the development of a supply chain that would replace a portion of the conventional jet fuel used by aircraft with fuels produced from renewable resources and recovered waste. Considered one of the most effective tools for decarbonising global air transport, SAF can reduce CO₂ emissions by up to 80 per cent over its entire life cycle compared with conventional jet fuel. Its deployment in Togo would position Lomé among the first airports in West Africa to enter this emerging market. According to the International Air Transport Association (IATA), SAF could account for nearly 65 per cent of the emissions reductions needed for the global aviation industry to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050. As environmental requirements imposed on airlines continue to tighten, the availability of SAF is also becoming an increasingly important factor in the competitiveness and attractiveness of airport hubs. Beyond its environmental benefits, the initiative could help Togo attract financing for renewable energy, green industry, and energy-transition projects. The second agreement covers the construction of a 1,500-cubic-metre Jet A1 fuel storage tank at Lomé’s airport. The infrastructure is expected to strengthen aviation fuel supply security, support growing air traffic, and contribute to the expansion of operations at AIGE. The investment also aims to reinforce Lomé’s position as a regional logistics hub as air transport activity continues to expand across West Africa. “It is a striking example of the vision of the President of the Council, who has instructed us to make every effort to continue positioning the country, and especially this airport, among the leading hubs in the sub-region and even on the continent,” said Robert Koffi Messan Eklo, Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources. The initiative forms part of a broader strategy pursued by the Togolese authorities to balance economic development, logistics performance, and environmental sustainability.

Ghana: GNPC Explorco And Tamale Technical University Seal Landmark Petroleum Partnership

GNPC Explorco, the exploration subsidiary of Ghana’s national oil company, GNPC, and Tamale Technical University (TaTU) have signed a landmark Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to establish a robust framework for technical knowledge transfer, capacity building, and collaborative skills development between the two institutions. The Vice-Chancellor of TaTU, Professor Bashiru Imoro Ibn Saeed, signed the agreement on behalf of the university, reinforcing the institution’s commitment to integrating real-world petroleum sector practices into its technical and engineering curricula. The signing was witnessed by the Chairman of the TaTU Governing Council, Mandariwura (Alhaji) Seidu Iddi, whose presence underscored the institutional and socio-economic significance of the partnership. The MoU sets the stage for structured interventions, including specialized training workshops, joint research opportunities, and practical industry exposure initiatives. These are not distant promises; they are deliberate, time-bound commitments designed to position TaTU graduates at the forefront of Ghana’s energy future. GNPC Explorco Managing Director, Samuel Opoku Arthur, urged all partners to prioritize skills transfer to Ghanaian engineers who will lead subsequent phases of the programme, a clear signal that homegrown talent is not optional but essential. “The Voltaian Basin is more than just an energy project; it is a catalyst for economic transformation in the North. We are committed to a ‘Ghanaians First’ strategy that prioritizes local content, jobs, and capacity building for the people of this region,” declared Principal Corporate Affairs Officer, Kwasi Appiah. In a related development, Explorco has signed a project management consultancy contract with LubriMax Ghana Limited and its technical partner, Well Engineers and Planners, to commence drilling activities in the Voltaian Basin. The move marks a significant step toward Ghana’s first onshore petroleum exploration campaign, with the first exploration well targeted for the third quarter of 2026. The partnership is expected to strengthen local capacity in the petroleum sector, create opportunities for students and faculty, and support the development of a skilled workforce capable of contributing meaningfully to Ghana’s growing energy industry.

Nigeria’s Power Sector: The Big Picture

Nigeria stands at a critical juncture in its economic development, yet a fundamental challenge continues to undermine every sector of the economy: the inadequate and unreliable supply of electricity. I have persistently highlighted that the electricity sector represents far more than a utilities problem—it is the backbone upon which Nigeria’s industrial renaissance must be built. The power sector crisis has become synonymous with Nigeria’s broader economic struggles, particularly for the manufacturing sector, which once served as a pillar of growth and employment. The statistics paint a sobering picture of Nigeria’s manufacturing landscape. More than 60 per cent of manufacturing firms have exited the national grid, representing an unprecedented abandonment of critical infrastructure by the very enterprises that should be anchoring economic growth. This mass exodus is not a sudden development but the culmination of years of frustration, mounting costs, and deteriorating grid reliability. What was meant to be an engine of development has become a liability that manufacturers can no longer afford to ignore. The financial burden imposed by unreliable power supply has become staggering. Manufacturers spent N676.6 billion on alternative energy in the first half of 2025, only slightly lower than the N708.1 billion spent in the second half of 2024. This represents an extraordinary outflow of resources dedicated solely to generating electricity that should have been provided by the national grid. More disturbingly, despite this expenditure, manufacturers have still been unable to meet their power needs because of the country’s unreliable and unaffordable electricity supply. The paradox is stark: manufacturers are spending billions on generators while still operating below capacity and struggling to reliably serve their customers. The true cost of Nigeria’s power crisis extends far beyond generator expenses. The lack of reliable electricity supply has hampered business growth in the manufacturing sector, leading to annual economic losses estimated at $26.2 billion (N10.1 trillion). To put this figure into perspective, it is comparable to the annual GDP of several African economies and exceeds the budgets of key sectors of government. These are resources that could otherwise be invested in education, infrastructure, healthcare, or poverty reduction. Instead, they are lost to inefficiencies arising from the failure to provide reliable electricity. The African Development Bank’s assessment is equally damning: power outages cost Nigerian businesses approximately three per cent of their annual sales, while more than 70 per cent of firms rely on generators because of the country’s unreliable electricity supply. This three per cent loss, when aggregated across the economy, translates into hundreds of billions of naira that could otherwise support growth, employment, and poverty reduction. Understanding why power supply is so critical to manufacturing requires an examination of the sector’s cost structure. Manufacturing firms in Nigeria spend, on average, 90 per cent of their variable costs on infrastructure, with electric power accounting for roughly half of that amount. This means that electricity costs represent approximately 45 per cent of a typical manufacturer’s variable costs—a burden that few competitors in more developed economies face. When grid electricity becomes unreliable, manufacturers are forced to operate their own generation facilities, effectively increasing their energy costs while simultaneously reducing their competitiveness in both local and international markets. I have noted that manufacturers spend several billions of dollars annually on alternative energy sources, costs that are inevitably passed on to consumers. This cost transfer leads to higher prices for goods and services, dampening consumer demand and slowing economic growth. The cycle becomes self-reinforcing: high manufacturing costs lead to higher consumer prices, reducing purchasing power and demand, which in turn results in underutilised production capacity and job losses. The consequences for employment have been severe. The manufacturing sector recorded 18,935 job losses in the first six months of 2025, a direct consequence of firms reducing operations, relocating, or disconnecting from the grid entirely. These are not merely statistics; they represent families losing income, communities losing economic anchors, and skilled workers being pushed into unemployment or the informal economy. The employment crisis extends beyond direct manufacturing jobs. When large industrial consumers exit the grid, they also reduce demand for supporting services such as transportation, logistics, packaging, and raw-material processing. The multiplier effect of manufacturing decline ripples throughout the economy, destroying livelihoods and reducing the tax base upon which governments depend to fund essential services. The gap between installed capacity and actual generation reveals the fundamental problem. Nigeria’s average generation capacity increased marginally by 12.59 per cent, rising to 4,633.79 MW in 2025 from 4,050.07 MW in 2020. While this represents progress, it masks deeper structural deficiencies. The power sector reportedly achieved a 35 per cent improvement in generation, transmission, and distribution performance in 2024, yet actual generation increased by only about 600 MW, suggesting that progress has stalled or plateaued. More critically, the national grid reportedly collapsed at least 11 times by November 2024, largely due to deteriorating infrastructure. Each collapse triggers a cascading crisis for manufacturers: production halts, goods spoil, contractual obligations are breached, and confidence in the system erodes further. Such unreliability makes long-term business planning difficult and discourages both domestic and foreign investment. I have consistently called on the Federal Government to create conditions that encourage industries and organisations that have exited the grid to reconnect. This would help stabilise electricity supply while reducing production costs and, ultimately, the prices of goods and services. The solution is not merely to generate more electricity but to create an ecosystem in which large industrial consumers find it economically attractive to return to the grid. This requires tariff stability, guaranteed supply reliability, and transparent regulatory frameworks. As I have previously noted, the sector remains adrift and lacks a clear policy direction. The government has taken some steps toward reform. Power sector revenue grew by 70 per cent, from N1.05 trillion to approximately N1.7 trillion in 2024, reflecting improved collections and tariff implementation. However, these gains remain modest relative to the scale of the challenge. The Federal Government’s release of the National Integrated Electricity Policy represents a welcome acknowledgment that structural reform is necessary, but implementation remains the ultimate test. The fundamental truth is that Nigeria cannot achieve the manufacturing-led growth required to lift millions out of poverty without resolving its power sector crisis. If large-scale consumers return to the grid and manufacturers channel their billions of naira in energy spending through the national electricity system rather than private generators, the government could provide electricity at significantly lower costs to all consumers. This observation captures the essence of the solution: a functional power sector creates virtuous cycles of growth, while a dysfunctional one creates vicious cycles of decline. The challenge is not merely technical. Nigeria possesses the financial and natural resources necessary to generate abundant electricity. The real challenge lies in governance, regulatory consistency, and the political will to prioritise long-term structural development over short-term political considerations. Until policymakers and regulatory authorities demonstrate a sustained commitment to creating a reliable, affordable, and transparent power system, the manufacturing sector will continue to struggle, economic growth will remain constrained, and millions of Nigerians will continue to bear the cost of systemic failure. As my advocacy through PowerUp Nigeria underscores, the power sector is not simply a technical problem awaiting an engineering solution. It is a development challenge requiring sustained policy commitment, transparent implementation, and unwavering focus on the ultimate goal: using electricity as a catalyst to unlock Nigeria’s vast productive potential and transform millions of lives. Until that commitment materialises, Nigeria’s economy will continue to operate far below its potential, constrained by the very infrastructure that should be setting it free. Adetayo Adegbemle is a public affairs analyst, researcher, and Convener of PowerUp Nigeria, an electric power consumer rights advocacy group based in Lagos. (X: @gbemle, @PowerUpNg)