A few weeks after the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani
Alison-Madueke, emerged the first female President of the Organisation
of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), she was Tuesday appointed the
President of the Ministerial Meeting of the Gas Exporting Countries
Forum (GECF) in Doha, Qatar.
Also at its 16th Ministerial Meeting the same day, the member countries
of GECF appointed the Minister of Oil and Gas of Libya, Mr. Mashala SA
Said, as the Alternate President.
The meeting of GECF, an equivalent of OPEC, was attended by ministers
from Algeria, Iran, Libya, Qatar, Russia and United Arab Emirates, while
the Heads of Delegations from Bolivia, Equatorial Guinea, Egypt,
Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela were observers.
Alison-Madueke, who had been the Alternate President, was however
absent at the meeting but Nigeria’s Ambassador to Qatar, Ambassador
Shuaibu Ahmed, and the Group Executive Director in charge of Gas and
Power at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. David
Ige, were in attendance. Speaking to journalists at the end of the meeting, the Minister of
Energy and Industry of Qatar, Dr. Mohammed Saleh Al Sada said the
organisation noted that the global gas demand is increasing, while it is
decreasing in Europe due to the weak economy and policy measures.
“However, the Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) trade is increasing and is taking a greater share of global gas trade.
The ministers decided to start the preparations for the Third Gas Summit in Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran in 2015,” he said.
THISDAY gathered that as the oil price continues to drop at the
international market, Nigeria and other major gas producing countries
are seeking a formidable OPEC-like bloc to create a stable and reliable
gas market to argument the dwindling revenue from oil.
GECF, which will hold its 17th Ministerial Meeting in Abuja in 2015, is a gathering of the world’s
leading gas producers, being forced by the falling crude oil prices to
strengthen the 15- year- old forum to build a mechanism for stability
and security of supply and demand for gas.
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