Wentworth Anticipate Growth in Tanzania Gas Demand in 2019

tanzania gas

East Africa-focused oil & gas company Wentworth Resources (OSE: WEN, AIM: WEN) issued today its Commercial, Operational Update and 2019 Production Guidance.

In Tanzania, the company operates the Mnazi Bay & Msimbati gas fields in a joint venture with Maurel et Prom and the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC).

For 2019, the Company anticipates further growth in gas demand with the extension to the Kinyerezi-1 power plant that utilises the gas from Mnazi Bay, which is expected to come online in Q4 2019.

Tanzania Investment Guide 2026 Free Edition

This facility will initially require 5 MMscf/d and will build up approximately 30 MMscf/d of gas requirement when fully commissioned over a six-month period.

Continued gas demand growth in 2019 is also expected, primarily from the Dangote Cement Plant and other smaller industrial consumers; adding an additional 10-15 MMscf/d to national demand needs by Q2 2019.

Eskil Jersing, CEO of Wentworth Resources, commented: “We look forward to updating the market on our progress in 2019, in a rapidly developing demand-led landscape. Our efforts this year will be primarily focused on maintaining efficient operations at our Mnazi Bay asset, strengthening our financial position and executing on our M&A led growth mandate.”

Tanzania Gas

From 2010, Tanzania has witnessed further exploration and natural gas discoveries with estimated natural gas reserves (2016) of 57 trillion cubic feet (TCF).

Tanzania Investment Guide 2026 Full Edition

Natural gas was discovered both offshore and onshore the Songo Songo Island, while the gas discovery at Mnazi Bay was only offshore.

The natural gas from Songo Songo was first commercialized in 2004 and the gas from Mnazi Bay in 2006.

The commercialization of the two discoveries propelled further gas exploration both onshore and offshore.

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.