Oil & Gas Morocco and Nigeria agree terms for $25bn gas pipeline By Nadim Kawach April 24, 2025, 9:26 AM World Bank/Riccardo Savi Morocco’s energy minister Leila Benali said the pipeline project has "made considerable progress" and is in the execution stage Project will ship gas to Europe Gas terminal to be constructed 5,300km pipeline route finalised Morocco and Nigeria have agreed to create a joint venture to manage a long-planned $25 billion pipeline which will ship gas to Europe, a Moroccan minister has said. Leila Benali, minister of energy transition and sustainable development, told Morocco’s parliament that a floating gas storage terminal would also be installed at Nador on the Mediterranean for the mega project. Benali said the project has “made considerable progress” and entered the execution stage. She added that feasibility and engineering studies have also been completed. In her comments, published on Facebook and in Morocco’s press this week, Benali said the path for the 5,300km pipeline has been determined and that bids would be invited shortly for constructing a floating storage regasification unit in the port of Nador in northern Morocco. The pipeline project, part of an agreement signed by Morocco and Nigeria in 2017, will transport nearly 30 billion cubic metres of natural gas per year to Morocco and then to Europe. Morocco steps up solar power drive to meet 2030 target Turkey’s largest refiner buys Russian oil after price drop Morocco seeks operator for Africa’s largest shipyard The pipeline will stretch 5,300km from Nigeria to Dhakia in Morocco and 1,700km from Dhakia to northern Morocco. It will traverse several African countries, including the Republic of Benin, Togo, Ghana, Sierra Leone, Guinea and Senegal and terminate in Morocco with a spur to Spain. Morocco’s Arabic language daily Hespress quoted local officials as saying in late 2024 that Rabat and Nigeria could turn to oil-rich Gulf countries to fund the gas pipeline project after it failed to spur enough interest by Europe. The paper said the lack of European interest is mainly due to the growing trend in the continent to rely more on hydrogen projects. Register now: It’s easy and free AGBI registered members can access even more of our unique analysis and perspective on business and economics in the Middle East. Why sign uP Exclusive weekly email from our editor-in-chief Personalised weekly emails for your preferred industry sectors Read and download our insight packed white papers Access to our mobile app Prioritised access to live events Register for free Already registered? Sign in I’ll register later