75% of African oil is exported, says petroleum group 

Onwubuke Melvin
Onwubuke Melvin

The Secretary-General of the African Petroleum Producers Organisation, Omar Farouk Ibrahim, has said that nearly 75% of oil produced in Africa is exported to other continents for energy consumption.

This was disclosed by Ibrahim during the recent Mozambique Energy and Industry Summit held in the southeastern African country, according to Nairametrics.

Ibrahim stated that, in countries like Europe and America, about 40% of the gas produced daily on the continent ends up there.

According to him, since the discovery of oil and gas on the continent, it has been treated as an export commodity.

He noted that the largest proportion of the African population continues to live in energy poverty because of the sole focus on the export of oil and gas by the continent.

According to Ibrahim, there is a lack of access to clean energy for cooking and other domestic uses in almost one billion Africans, which means that 600 million people do not have access to electricity.

“The final challenge is markets for our oil and gas. 75% of the oil and 40% of the gas that Africa produces daily are exported outside Africa.

“This is because oil and gas have been treated as export commodities from the very first time they were discovered on our continent. They were not seen as commodities that should benefit primarily the people of the continent but as outsiders.

“That is why today Africa exports oil and gas even when it has the largest proportion of its population living in energy poverty.

“Nearly 1 billion of Africa’s 1.49 billion population do not have access to clean energy for cooking and other domestic uses. Over 600 million of our population do not have access to electricity,” he said.

The Secretary-General stressed that the challenge of energy poverty faced by Africa must be tackled exclusively by Africans.

He said that to ensure easier access for its rapidly growing population, the continent needs to become more capable of improving energy production and distribution by developing capacity, skills, resources, and technologies.

Ibrahim underlined that Africa holds 125 billion barrels of proven oil reserves and over 600 trillion cubic feet of proven gas reserves, all of which can be utilized to eradicate energy poverty in the continent.

“So, what is Africa doing to ameliorate these challenges? Are we prepared, as a continent, and as oil and gas-endowed nations to abandon the over 125 billion barrels of proven oil and over 600 trillion cubic feet of proven gas reserves in our soil, even when our continent has the largest proportion of its population living in energy poverty?

“We should take full control of all operations of the industry from financing to technology and energy market infrastructure,” Ibrahim added.

However, He called on oil-rich countries to work together and fund infrastructure projects throughout Africa through credible financial institutions to drive energy development.

He also challenged countries to task foreign nations to channel climate funds to clean the mess they created in Africa by polluting the atmosphere with over 2,500 gigatons of emissions over 150 years.

“Stop looking forward to receiving a pittance from the countries of the North who destroyed our common patrimony, namely the common atmosphere by polluting it with over 2,500 gigatons of emissions over 150 years.

“Ask them to commit to removing just 25% of the legacy emissions they have put out there. That way, the imminent danger we face today will be removed and Africa can use the same fossil fuels to also get industrialized,” Ibrahim said.


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