Shell, Morocco ink 12-year natural gas agreement

The agreement includes the annual delivery of 500 million cubic meters of LNG to Rabat

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A view shows a logo of Shell petrol station in South East London, Britain, February 2, 2023. — Reuters
A view shows a logo of Shell petrol station in South East London, Britain, February 2, 2023. — Reuters

RABAT: Rabat and global energy giant Shell on Friday struck an agreement, under which the latter will supply the former with six billion cubic meters of liquefied natural gas (LNG) over 12 years, confirmed Morocco’s energy ministry.

In a statement, the ministry said, representatives of Morocco's national electricity authority, ONEE, and the British firm signed a contract in Rabat.

As per the details, the agreement includes the annual delivery of 500 million cubic meters of LNG to Morocco. The value of the 12-year deal has not been disclosed yet, AFP reported.

In the initial years, the gas will be delivered through Spanish ports and the Maghreb-Europe Gas Pipeline (GME). It will eventually be delivered through planned Moroccan LNG terminals.

Morocco has sought to diversify its energy sources particularly since neighbouring Algeria stopped supplying natural gas via the GME in November 2021, after severing ties over the disputed Western Sahara territory.

According to ONEE chief Abderrahim El Hafidi, the agreement with Shell will "address part of our needs and ensure the supply of natural gas to our power plants".

Leila Benali, Morocco's minister of energy transition and sustainable development, was quoted in the statement as saying "this medium-term supply contract will strengthen the kingdom's energy security and improve its competitiveness by accelerating the Moroccan decarbonisation strategy."