West African Gas Pipeline Could Become Model Project

Rendering by Sigurd Decroos
The birth of the new West African Gas Pipeline involves the construction and operation of a regional high-pressure gas transmission system that will supply natural gas produced in Nigeria to thermal power stations in Benin, Togo and Ghana.
The 678-km natural gas pipeline extends from the existing Escravos-Lagos gas pipeline at the Alagbado "Tee" to a new compressor station in Ajido near Lagos Beach and from there follows the coastline some 15 km offshore to the Takoradi power plant in west Ghana. It also includes lateral connections from the offshore line to onshore gas-receiving stations at Cotonou, Lomé, and Tema.
The project will reduce the cost of electricity supply in Ghana, Togo and Benin by replacing oil with gas imported from Nigeria. The pipeline capacity also allows for future demand growth in power generation, and potential demand from minerals and other industrial sectors. In addition to its economic advantages, the replacement of oil by gas will improve local air quality as well as reducing the emission of greenhouse gasses.
Nigeria, the gas supplier, will benefit from an additional outlet for its gas production, at a time when the government is taking steps to end flaring of natural gas, and from a new source of upstream revenue.
The project is the first in West Africa to develop regional exports of natural gas and is fully supported by the New Economic Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) and by ECOWAS. It will promote regional economic and political integration.
The project was subject to Environmental and Social Impact Assessments EIAs) including extensive public consultation, in line with EU standard and policies. Detailed environmental management plans (EMP) and resettlement action plans (RAP) have been developed to provide mitigation, compensation and monitoring requirements for the project.
The conclusion of the assessment was that no potentially high severity impacts would remain after the planned mitigation measures are applied.
The project is located mostly offshore (90% of the pipeline route) in the Gulf of Guinea with relatively short onshore sections in Nigeria, Benin, Togo and Ghana. The pipeline route does not cross any protected areas although it does run through or in the vicinity of some ecologically sensitive areas such as coastal lagoons and mangrove systems.
A number of species with international conservation status are also known to occur in the project area. The pipeline right-of-way has been kept to the minimum of 25 meters and the overall project's landtake is limited to around 200 acres. Compensation concerns approximately 2,900 affected households, most of them losing a small portion of the land they own and/or cultivate.
In April 2006, an association of 12 communities affected by the project in southwest Nigeria formally complained to the World Bank Inspection Panel (IP) that the project did not comply with some of World Bank guidelines for public consultation, compensation, economic evaluation and supervision[1].
The investigation carried out by the IP was completed in April 2008[2] and the World Bank response was issued in June 2008[3]. The Panel investigation concluded that there have been a number of non-compliances with World Bank Operational Policies and Procedures, in particular relating to the social assessments and involuntary resettlement (lack of baseline socio-economic data, inadequate disclosure of information, inadequate compensation payments).
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