Italy Seals Increase in Gas Supply From Algeria

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The announcement was made during Prime Minister Mario Draghi’s visit to Algiers. Since the beginning of the year, Algiers has delivered 13.9 billion cubic meters of gas to Rome, exceeding the volumes initially planned by 113%.

Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi was received in Algeria on Monday, July 18 by President Abdelmadjid Tebboune, with whom he co-chaired the fourth Algerian-Italian summit. MM. Tebboune and Draghi signed fifteen memorandums of understanding and agreements concerning the supply of Algerian gas to Rome, but also justice, micro-enterprises, and start-ups, industrial cooperation, and sustainable development.

Algeria, which maintains privileged relations with Italy, “has become its first gas supplier in recent months” after being overtaken for a long time by Russia, from where 45% of the peninsula’s gas imports came from, declared Mr. Draghi in front of the media, alongside Mr. Tebboune. “The signed agreement on energy cooperation demonstrates our determination to do even more in this area,” he said later at a bilateral economic forum.

Several countries have looked to Algeria to reduce their dependence on Russia since it invaded Ukraine in late February. In front of the media, Mr. Tebboune announced the signing on Tuesday of “an important agreement, amounting to 4 billion dollars [3.9 billion euros]  “, between the American, Italian and French groups Occidental Petroleum, Eni, and Total, “which will supply Italy with significant quantities of additional gas”. This contract will make it possible to “develop a deposit located in the perimeter of Berkine [in the Sahara], which should produce more than a billion barrels” of hydrocarbons, a government source told.

Algeria will also increase its gas deliveries to Italy by exporting some 4 billion additional cubic meters in the coming days, the same source said. Since the beginning of the year, Algeria has supplied Italy with 13.9 billion cubic meters, exceeding the volumes initially planned by 113%. It plans to deliver a total of 6 billion additional cubic meters to it by the end of 2022, according to the official Algerian agency APS.

$8.5 billion in trade in 2021

The Eni group, present in Algeria since 1981, manages the TransMed gas pipeline with the Algerian hydrocarbon giant Sonatrach, which links the country to Italy via Tunisia. It can transport up to 32 billion cubic meters of gas per year and, until recently, Algeria passed through it 22 billion cubic meters per year, which leaves a margin of 10 billion, according to expert Abdelmajid Attar, the former Algerian energy minister.

The agreement for an increase in volumes delivered to Italy had been announced by Mr. Draghi during a first visit to Algiers in April, but no figures had been communicated. Eni had only mentioned the use of the “available transport capacities of the gas pipeline [Transmed] to ensure greater flexibility in energy supply and to gradually supply increasing volumes of gas from 2022 [in order to arrive] at 9 billion [additional] cubic meters of gas per year in 2023-2024”. The gas contract between the two countries was renewed in May 2019 for a period of eight years, until 2027, in addition to two additional optional years.

Between Algeria and Italy, trade exceeded $4.3 billion in the first five months of 2022, Algerian Prime Minister Aïmene Benabderrahmane said at the opening of the bilateral economic forum. “Algeria is Italy’s leading trading partner for the regions of Africa and the Middle East,” he said, recalling that last year, trade had reached 8.5 billion dollars, “an amount expected to increase this year”. The head of Italian diplomacy, Luigi Di Maio, hoped that “the areas where our countries collaborate [could] still expand and diversify”, welcoming Algerian commitments to “improve the business climate”.