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Nigeria’s gas moment: Africa’s biggest energy opportunity is finally waking up

by Caesar Keluro
May 28, 2026
in Comments
Africa

For decades, Nigeria was known globally as an oil giant. But beneath its soil sits another treasure far larger and potentially more transformative: natural gas.

 

With more than 200 trillion cubic feet of proven gas reserves — the largest in Africa — Nigeria is quietly positioning itself for what could become one of the continent’s biggest industrial and economic transitions in decades. And unlike oil, gas may prove to be the fuel that powers not only exports, but factories, electricity, transportation, and even Africa’s digital future. The shift is already underway.

 

Through the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) and the government’s “Decade of Gas” agenda, regulators are trying to modernise the sector, attract investment, and simplify long-standing bottlenecks that previously discouraged global energy players. The reforms are gradually bringing more clarity around pricing, licensing, infrastructure development, and commercialisation.

 

Why does this matter now? Because the global energy map is changing rapidly. The war-related tensions involving Iran, supply disruptions across global energy markets, and Europe’s search for alternative gas suppliers have made countries with large gas reserves increasingly strategic. Nigeria is one of the few nations with the scale to benefit from this shift.

 

At the same time, the world’s energy transition is creating an unusual paradox: while renewable energy grows, global economies still need reliable transition fuels to power industries, cities, and technology infrastructure. Gas has emerged as that bridge.

 

For Nigeria, the opportunities are enormous. 

 

The first is electricity. Africa’s fourth largest economy still struggles with chronic power shortages despite abundant energy resources. Reliable gas supply could significantly improve power generation for industries, businesses, and households. Manufacturing hubs across Lagos, Ogun, Kano, and Port Harcourt could become more competitive if stable energy becomes available.

 

The second opportunity lies in industrialisation. Gas is no longer just something burned for electricity or exported overseas. It is now a critical feedstock for fertilisers, petrochemicals, methanol, steel, and heavy manufacturing. Countries that industrialise around cheap and reliable gas often build stronger export economies.

 

Then comes the digital economy. The rise of artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and hyperscale data centers is dramatically increasing global electricity demand. Data centres require enormous and stable power supplies. Increasingly, investors are looking at gas-supported energy systems to power these digital infrastructures in emerging markets.

 

Nigeria could become a future destination for energy-intensive digital investments if it can solve its infrastructure problems. And that remains the biggest challenge.

 

Despite its vast reserves, Nigeria still lacks enough pipelines, processing facilities, storage systems, and gas transportation infrastructure. Large volumes of gas remain stranded underground or wasted through flaring. Security concerns, vandalism, and regulatory delays also continue to slow progress.

 

Pricing remains another issue. Investors want commercially viable gas pricing systems that allow projects to recover costs while remaining affordable for domestic industries.

 

Still, momentum is building.

 

Following the removal of fuel subsidies, compressed natural gas (CNG) adoption is rising as businesses and transport operators search for cheaper alternatives to petrol and diesel. New conversion centres, fuelling stations, and gas mobility projects are beginning to emerge across the country.

 

The bigger picture is becoming clearer: Nigeria’s future may depend less on crude oil exports and more on how efficiently it commercialises gas.

 

If managed properly, gas could become the foundation for industrial growth, export earnings, digital infrastructure, regional energy trade, and economic stability.

 

For years, Nigeria was seen as a country sitting on potential. In gas, it may finally possess the opportunity to convert that potential into long-term prosperity.

 

Caesar Keluro is a Middle East-based venture capitalist, media and tech executive, global speaker, and author of “DIGITALIZATION: Making Sense of Today’s Changes and Tomorrow’s Impact”. He is the CEO of AustDora Investment Limited and serves as a venture capitalist at the African Financial Federation (AFF), driving cross-border investments, innovation, and technology conversations across Africa and the Middle East. He can be reached on WhatsApp +2348176644039 (text only) or gurucaesar@gmail.com, Twitter: @KCaesar; https://www.linkedin.com/in/caesarkeluro/

 

  • business a.m. commits to publishing a diversity of views, opinions and comments. It, therefore, welcomes your reaction to this and any of our articles via email: comment@businessamlive.com
Caesar Keluro

Caesar Keluro is a Middle East-based venture capitalist, media and tech executive, global speaker, and author of “DIGITALIZATION: Making Sense of Today’s Changes and Tomorrow’s Impact”. He is the CEO of AustDora Investment Limited and serves as a venture capitalist at the African Financial Federation (AFF), driving cross-border investments, innovation, and technology conversations across Africa and the Middle East. He can be reached on WhatsApp +2348176644039 (text only) or gurucaesar@gmail.com, Twitter: @KCaesar; https://www.linkedin.com/in/caesarkeluro/

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