Africa Must Use its Gas Reserves to Drive the Economy, Industry Officials Say

©Tim on Tour/AdobeStock
©Tim on Tour/AdobeStock

 Africa countries need to use their gas reserves to lift more people out of poverty and build industry as they try to catch up with more developed countries even while the world seeks to cut emissions, some industry officials said on Tuesday.

Africa holds around 13% of the world's natural gas and 7% of its oil but has the world's lowest per capita energy use. 

Renewables could play a major role in Africa's energy supply in future but African governments say they need fossil fuels for baseload power generation for industry.

Osama Mobarez, secretary general of the East Mediterranean Gas Forum, told Reuters at an energy conference in Abu Dhabi that Africa accounted for about 3% of global energy consumption and less than 3% of emissions.

"Africa needs to have better living standards and at the same time several African countries during the last few years have discovered a lot of gas, and they need to develop this gas to have better lives for their people and also for industrialization," he said.

Africa needs to build oil and gas pipelines, liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals, distribution hubs and gas-fired power plants over the next 20 years to unlock its energy market with more than 600 million people, analysts say.

Energy demand is expected to grow rapidly over the next two decades, rising 30% from today's levels, compared with a 10% rise globally, consultancy McKinsey said in a report.

U.S. climate envoy John Kerry has cautioned against long-term oil and gas infrastructure investment in Africa, urging countries to turn to renewables instead.

The continent is home to 60% of the best solar resources globally, with just 1% of installed solar capacity.

But some industry officials said renewables would not be enough to help Africa catch up with more developed nations, which had relied on hydrocarbons in their own industrialization drive.

"Wind and solar is not going to help Africa industrialize. They need to have access to hydrocarbons. There is a sense in which it is an unjust transition for Africa," Joseph McMonigle, secretary general of the International Energy Forum, told the conference.


 (Reuters - Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Edmund Blair)


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