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Saturday, May 7, 2022

Nigeria among top 10 countries contributing to global gas flaring: World Bank

The ten oil-producing and flaring countries accounted for three-quarters of all gas flaring within 10 years under review.

• May 7, 2022
World bank

The World Bank, in a statement on its website on Saturday, says Nigeria was among ten countries that contributed to global gas flaring, the wasteful industry practice of burning natural gas during oil production, in the last 10 years. 

It said a new report from its Global Gas Flaring Reduction Partnership (GGFR) revealed that globally, gas flaring resulted in nearly 400 million tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2) equivalent emissions in 2021.

This amount of flaring had further underscored the urgency to accelerate the decarbonisation of the world’s economies.

The statement said satellite data compiled and analysed for GGFR’s 2022 Global Gas Flaring Tracker Report showed that 144 billion cubic metres (bcm) of gas was flared at upstream oil and gas facilities in 2021. 

The statement said ten oil-producing and flaring countries accounted for three-quarters of all gas flaring, with Russia, Iraq, Iran, the United States, Venezuela, Algeria, and Nigeria being the top seven over the last ten years.

Demetrios Papathanasiou, Global Director for the Energy and Extractives Global Practice at the World Bank, noted that climate change is one of the defining development challenges of our time. 

“Ending the polluting and wasteful practice of gas flaring and decarbonising oil and gas production, while also accelerating the transition to cleaner energy, is fundamental to mitigating climate change.”

The statement said while 2021 showed disappointing progress amid the global pandemic, some promising flaring reduction trends emerged in several countries.

“GGFR finds that the United States is the only one of the top 10 flaring countries to have successfully reduced flare volumes while increasing production over the last decade.

“Decreasing its flaring intensity, the volume of gas flared per barrel of oil produced by 46 per cent.”

It said in a companion report, Global Flaring and Venting Regulations, GGFR examined the flaring and venting policies of 21 countries, and highlighted successful approaches to reducing emissions. 

The report finds that many countries had also demonstrated leadership in flare reduction.

It said Kazakhstan had achieved the largest overall flare reduction of all countries in the last 10 years, reducing absolute flaring from four bcm in 2012 to 1.5 bcm in 2021.

This according to the statement is due to strictly enforced regulations, coupled with a domestic gas market that incentivises associated gas recovery.

It said Colombia reduced flaring from one bcm in 2012 to 0.3 bcm in 2021, enabled by domestic gas utilisation and strong regulations that prohibit any gas from being wasted.

Zubin Bamji, GGFR’s Programme Manager at the World Bank, said many oil-producing countries already have policies in place to reduce gas flaring and venting, but not all approaches have proven effective.

GGFR helps identify solutions to the array of technical, economic and regulatory barriers to flaring reduction. 

The partnership also urged ending routine gas flaring and venting by garnering commitments for the Zero Routine Flaring by 2030 initiative (ZRF). To date, 87 governments and companies have endorsed the ZRF initiative.

Nigeria endorsed the ZRF initiative in 2016.

(NAN)

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