Policy Brief1 March 2026

West Africa Gas Policy Framework: A Decade Review

This policy brief reviews ten years of operational and regulatory performance under the West Africa Gas Pipeline (WAGP) Treaty, evaluates ECOWAS energy integration mechanisms, and draws concrete lessons for the Nigeria-Morocco Gas Pipeline

Lead Author
Joseph Agwuh
Head, Technology and Innovation

Executive Summary

This policy brief reviews ten years of operational and regulatory performance under the West Africa Gas Pipeline (WAGP) Treaty, evaluates ECOWAS energy integration mechanisms, and draws concrete lessons for the Nigeria-Morocco Gas Pipeline governance framework. Key findings: average utilisation of 61% over 2010-2025; Ghana off-take shortfalls accounting for 72% of the utilisation gap; and the structural absence of an independent regional pipeline regulator, that which is the single most important governance lesson for NMGP design.

Background

The West Africa Gas Pipeline entered commercial operation in 2008 following the WAGP Treaty signed by Nigeria, Ghana, Benin, and Togo. It remains the only operational cross-border gas pipeline in sub-Saharan Africa and the primary reference point for continental pipeline policy design.

Treaty Performance Assessment

Average capacity utilisation over the review period (2010-2025) reached 61%, significantly below the 90% bankability threshold. Ghana off-take shortfalls account for 72% of the utilisation gap, driven by domestic gas price subsidies reducing demand for pipeline imports.

Regulatory Architecture Review

The WAGP Authority has functioned primarily as a dispute resolution mechanism rather than a proactive regulatory institution. This structural gap, the absence of an independent regional pipeline regulator, is the single most important governance lesson for NMGP framework design.

Recommendations for NMGP Governance

APRN recommends the establishment of an African Pipeline Regulatory Commission (APRC) modelled on the European Network of Transmission System Operators (ENTSO-G), with binding authority over tariff methodology, capacity allocation, and technical standards across all ECOWAS pipeline corridors.

The WAGP Treaty is the most important precedent in African pipeline diplomacy. Its successes and failures are the lesson plan for every corridor negotiation that follows — especially the $25 billion Nigeria-Morocco Gas Pipeline.
Joseph Agwuh, Head, Technology and Innovation

Explore More

Africa's Premier Engineering Intelligence