Nigeria will unveil its first comprehensive Gas and Power Infrastructure Map at the 25th edition of NOG Energy Week, a move expected to address one of the long-standing challenges facing investment in the country’s gas and power sector: the lack of reliable and consolidated industry data.
The map, developed by the Gas for Africa programme in partnership with NNPC Limited, will provide a single overview of Nigeria’s gas and power infrastructure, covering pipelines, processing facilities, power generation assets, LNG terminals and major transmission networks across the country.
Its release comes as Nigeria seeks to strengthen its position in the global energy market amid growing demand for reliable energy partners and increasing interest in the country’s gas resources and infrastructure opportunities.
Beyond the infrastructure map, stakeholders attending the event will also gain access to a strategic report on Nigeria’s gas sector, described by the organisers as the most comprehensive intelligence publication yet produced on the industry.
The report examines the evolution of Nigeria’s gas market since 2020 and provides insights into the NNPC Gas Master Plan 2026, upstream production trends and reserves, midstream pipeline infrastructure, capacity gaps, downstream CNG, PNG and LNG developments, the gas-to-power value chain, and gas-based industrial activities including fertilisers, petrochemicals, methanol and metals processing.
According to the organisers, the report offers the most complete picture of Nigeria’s gas industry assembled in a single publication and is designed to provide investors and industry stakeholders with actionable intelligence across the entire value chain.
The unveiling comes at a time when global supply chains are facing disruptions and countries are seeking secure and scalable energy sources. Organisers noted that Nigeria has strengthened its position in recent months, supported by oil production of 1.71 million barrels per day, the launch of the Gas Master Plan in January 2026 and the operation of the Dangote Refinery at capacity.
They said the infrastructure map and accompanying report would help translate investor interest into concrete investments by providing clearer information on the country’s energy assets, opportunities and development priorities.
“The Nigeria Gas & Power Infrastructure Map delivers what the global energy community has long demanded: a single, comprehensive and authoritative mapping of Nigeria’s gas and power infrastructure,” the organisers said.
They added that the accompanying report adopts a full value-chain approach and provides detailed insights into every major segment of the gas industry, offering stakeholders a clearer understanding of opportunities and gaps across the sector.
Participants at NOG Energy Week will be among the first to access both publications, giving them early insight as industry discussions, partnership announcements, memorandum signings and project negotiations take place during the five-day event in Abuja.
With preparations intensifying ahead of the conference, governments, ministerial delegations, chief executives and industry leaders from across the global energy value chain are expected to gather at the Bola Ahmed Tinubu International Conference Centre (BATICC), Abuja, to discuss the future of Africa’s energy sector.
Follow Us on Google News
Follow Us on Google Discover