Mnazi Bay Exploration Partners Receive First USD 3.8 Million Payment For Gas Sales To Tanzania Transnational Pipeline

Mnazi Bay Gas Well

Wentworth Resources Limited (OSE:WRL), a Norwegian energy company focused in Tanzania and Mozambique, has recently announced that a first gross payment of USD 3.8 million has been received from Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) for sales gas volumes to the Tanzanian new transnational pipeline in October, 2015.

Wentworth, one of the exploration partners together with French Maurel & Prom Group of the Mnazi Bay concession in Mtwara in Tanzania’s southern coastal region, delivered to Madimba Processing Centre, the 532 km pipeline from Mtwara to Dar es Salaam and the Kinyerezi Gas Receiving Facility, a total of 1,032 million square cubic feet (mmscf) at a rate of 33 mmscf per day in last October.

The production volume came from the operation of three out of five wells at Mnazi Bay which are operated under a restricted flow basis but that are expected to reach the 80 mmscf when all wells are fully operated by Q1-2016.

The first payment is the result of a gas supply agreement signed in September, 2014 between the Government of Tanzania and both exploration partners that aimed at double the country’s power generation capacity to 3,000 Mw by 2016 according to Reuters.

The agreement establishes the option for Gas Supply Limited Company (GASCO), the state-run operator of the Madimba Processing Centre, to raise the demand of gas to a maximum of 130 mmcf per day for a period up to 17 years at a locked price of USD 3.00 per million British Thermal Unit (BTU) or USD 3.07 per thousand cubic feet.

Wentworth and Maurel & Prom are satisfied with the pipeline system work and are confident that their existing wells will meet future demand at higher daily delivery rates to support cost reduction and improving reliability of power generation in the country, explained Wentworth Managing Director Geoff Bury.

Mnazi Bay’s partnership is meant to shift the current power generation sector from hydro to gas fired power plants due to recent longer droughts that are hitting the country and constraining water availability for power generation.

Currently in Tanzania 37.4% of the energy generated comes from hydro plants while 31% comes from gas fired ones according to Tanzanian Energy and Water Regulatory Authority (EWURA).

According to the Wall Street Journal, Tanzania is planning to use its now 55 trillion cubic feet natural gas reserves to boost its electricity sector and be less-dependent from oil imports, a movement that would help the country to save USD 1 billion on crude imports a year.

Want to know more about Energy in Tanzania? Our free Tanzania Business and Investment Guide 2026 covers Energy, plus regulations, key sectors, and investment opportunities—all in one place.

Download Free Guide
Related Posts
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.
Tanzania Kenya Rwanda
Read More

Tanzania Hosts Rwanda and Kenya Presidents, Signs MoUs on Tanga-Taveta SGR, Dar-Mombasa Gas Pipeline, and Scraps Non-Tariff Barriers

Tanzania hosted Rwandan President Paul Kagame on 3 May 2026 and Kenyan President William Ruto on 4-5 May 2026, signing eight MoUs with Kenya covering railways and a Dar es Salaam-Mombasa gas pipeline study, and agreeing to eliminate all non-tariff barriers by May 2026. Bilateral trade with Rwanda reached TZS 644 billion in 2025, while Tanzania-Kenya trade stood at over USD 720 million in 2024.