Tanzania Natural Gas Reserves Projected to Reach 200 Trillion Cubic Feet

Based on the positive ongoing deep offshore gas exploration activities, the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) expects gas reserves to reach 200 trillion cubic feet until 2017.

The announcement was made by Dr Emma Msaky, acting Director of Exploration and Production of TPDC during the 3rd East Africa Oil and Gas Summit that was held in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on March 27th and 28th 2014.

The current estimate stands at 46.5 trillion cubic feet, with 3 wells from Tachui and Zafarani expected to contribute soon.

Tanzania Investment Guide 2026 Free Edition

Seventeen licensed international energy corporations, among which are British Gas Group, Norway’s Statoil, Brazil’s Petrobras, Royal Dutch Shell, and Exxon Mobile are currently exploring 19 existing wells in seven deep offshore blocks and one onshore block, with 18 out of them already proven to be yielding gas in the future.

Given this dynamics, Tanzania has an opportunity to become one of the leader suppliers of liquefied natural gas (LNG) by 2025, reaching to countries as Pakistan, China, Spain and Chile.

Due to the capital intensive gas exploration industry, the commercial production of LNG may begin only in 2020, with possibility to start even earlier in case of smooth preparation.

The location of the LNG plant is, however, unspecified until today, with exploration companies to find the best area to construct the plant.

Want to know more about Energy in Tanzania? Our free overview of the Tanzania Business and Investment Guide 2026 covers Energy, plus key sectors and investment opportunities. The complete 141-page edition includes policies, taxation, key regulations, full macroeconomic data, and sources.

Download Free OverviewGet the Full Guide
Related Posts
Tanzania ASSESSMENT OF ECONOMIC IMPACTS ON TANZANIA ARISING FROM THE GULF CRISIS
Read More

Tanzania Gulf Crisis Report Rates Energy, Food, Transport, Tourism and Budget at High Risk

A May 2026 rapid assessment by Tanzania's National Planning Commission and UNDP rates energy, food, transport, tourism and the Government budget at high risk from the Gulf crisis, which raised Dar es Salaam fuel prices by up to 69% between January and May 2026. The report flags a possible TZS 153.7 billion monthly customs revenue shortfall and fuel subsidy needs rising to TZS 1,384.2 billion by July, alongside buffers including a 124% food self-sufficiency ratio, USD 6.3 billion in reserves and 57 trillion cubic feet of gas.
Tanzania-Rwanda energy cooperation agreement 2026 Hassan Kagame
Read More

Tanzania and Rwanda Sign Energy Cooperation Agreement Covering Power Trade, Oil, Gas and LNG

Tanzania and Rwanda signed a bilateral energy cooperation agreement covering cross-border electricity trade, joint power infrastructure development, and petroleum product distribution. The deal also extends to oil and gas exploration, LNG project opportunities, and the use of artificial intelligence in the energy sector, building on the existing 80 MW Rusumo interconnection, which has synchronized the grids of Tanzania, Rwanda, and Burundi since March 2024.
Russia Maxim Reshetnikov Tanzania Kitila Mkumbo
Read More

Tanzania and Russia Agree to Open Industry, Energy, and Infrastructure to Joint Investment

Tanzania and Russia have agreed to deepen investment cooperation in industry, energy, transport infrastructure, and air transport, with value-addition processing, production technology, and goods transportation named as priority areas at the Third Joint Intergovernmental Commission held in Arusha on 15–16 May 2026, which drew 120 Russian companies. The deals also cover Russian investment in mining, agriculture, and ICT, direct Air Tanzania (ATCL) flights to Russia, and a signed agreement to promote the Swahili language in Russia.