Page added on July 16, 2014
Egypt has finalised a $10bn deal with BP that could significantly boost the country’s natural gas production.
The gas project had stalled for three years in the face of political, social and economic turmoil in the Arab world’s most populous country but Egypt’s prime minister has announced completion of the deal according to Egyptian media outlet Ahram Online.
The BP-discovered fields are thought to hold around 5 trillion cubic feet of gas and could potentially produce 1.2 million cubic feet per day.
That would amount to roughly 20% of Egypt’s daily gas needs, although consumption is forecast to rise to12.5% in the current fiscal year.
The fields, located in the Alexandria governorate, are set to be connected to the national grid in 2017.
The move is likely to boost investor confidence in Egypt which has suffered from foreign capital flight and energy shortages since 2011.
The country’s new President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has launched a bid to tackle the country’s energy crisis, by reducing government fuel subsidies and encouraging Egyptians to reduce personal consumption.
Energy prices in Egypt have been among the lowest in the world for years. While successive administrations have pledged to tackle the fiscal challenge, Sisi is the first leader in decades to push ahead with major public finance reforms.
One Comment on "Egypt Seals $10bn BP Natural Gas Deal"
rockman on Wed, 16th Jul 2014 3:34 pm
I suspect the “1.2 million cubic feet” is a misprint. That’s the same as 1,200 mcf per day. Currently an mcf sells for about $4.50 per mcf in the US. Probably 1.2 billion cubic feet per day. That would be 1.2 million mcf per day or about $2 trillion per year even at the relatively low US price.