In spite of the efforts to curb the menace of gas flaring, Nigeria lost 15,400 Gigawatts (GWh per hour) of power generation potential in five months, between January and May 2025 due to gas flaring.
According to the Data obtained from the latest report of the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA), this represents a 17.5 per cent increase, when compared to 12,700 GWh, generation losses suffered in the corresponding period of 2024 with the monetary value of the 539.2 million mscf flared gas during the period put at $154.1 million.
NOSDRA said that the defaulting companies, including the International Oil Companies (IOCs) were liable to fines amounting to $308.1 million (about N318.3 billion).
The agency said that the breakdown of the volume of gas flared across oilfields by companies showed that for the companies operating onshore, it rose by 10 per cent to 102.4 mscf, as against 51.7 mscf flared by companies operating offshore.
NOSDRA explained that the volume of gas flared during the period under review was equivalent to a carbon dioxide emission of 8.2 million tonnes.
The agency lamented that despite efforts to reduce gas flaring, it has continued in Nigeria since the 1950s, releasing carbon dioxide and other gaseous substances into the atmosphere.
Nigeria’s Minister of State for Environment, Dr. Iziaq Salako, said that NOSDRA was planning to ensure alignment with this aspiration as it begins stakeholders’ engagement on methane mitigation and reduction in Nigeria’s oil and gas sector.
Meanwhile, the Vanguard newspaper reported that the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), Mr. Gbenga Komolafe, has said Nigeria’s gas flare commercialisation programme (NGFCP) has the potential to unlock $2.5 billion investment in the oil and gas sector.
Komolafe explained that in addition to huge revenue generation, the NGFCP would create a significant amount of jobs.
“As the global focus shifts towards a low-carbon future, NUPRC is embedding sustainability into seven upstream operations, mitigating environmental risks and protecting communities.
“Key actions include: managing methane and GHG emissions; fostering energy efficiency and carbon credits, promoting investments in Carbon Capture Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) and enforcing Environmental Social and Governance (ESG) goals.
“Through the Nigeria Gas Flare Commercialisation Programme (NGFCP), approximately $2.5 billion in investment will potentially be unlocked, generating huge revenue and creating a significant number of jobs. We have been deliberate in efforts at social inclusiveness for enhancing host community development,” he added.
GIK/APA


