Algeria, Nigeria and Niger sign MOU on pipeline
Abuja, July 29: Algeria, Niger and Nigeria signed a memorandum of understanding on Thursday to build a 4,000-kilometer (2,500-mile) Trans-Saharan Gas Pipeline.
Algeria's Energy Ministry said the natural gas pipeline would stretch across the Sahara desert.
It is estimated that, once the $13 billion (€12.75 billion) pipeline is complete, it will transport up to 30 billion cubic meters (1 trillion cubic feet) of gas annually from Nigeria, in West Africa, north through Niger and on to Algeria.
From there, it could be pumped through the undersea
Trans-Mediterranean Pipeline to Europe or loaded onto Liquefied Natural Gas tankers for export.
Gas pipeline in the works for a while
The idea was first proposed more than 40 years ago, but progress stalled.
The new momentum comes as the European Union seeks to wean itself off Russian gas amid the war in Ukraine.
The security situation in the Sahel region and tensions between the governments of Algiers and Niamey also delayed the project.
EU: Need for solidarity ahead of Russian gas crisis
It wasn't until 2021, when Algeria and Niger reopened their border, that discussions to construct the pipeline restarted.
Earlier this week, European Union member states agreed to reduce gas consumption as concerns grow that Russia might cut off already decreasing deliveries.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen had said the deal to reduce gas use is about preventing Russia from being able to blackmail Europe with gas deliveries, to stop "Russia using gas as a weapon," as she put it.
Source: DW