Ghana to Supply Electricity to Nigeria in Exchange for Natural Gas

Ghana and Nigeria are preparing to sign a barter-style energy deal aimed at strengthening regional cooperation and addressing power challenges across West Africa.

Under the agreement, Nigeria will supply natural gas to Ghana, which will be used to generate electricity.

Rather than making a direct cash payment, Ghana will send a portion of the generated electricity back to Nigeria as compensation.

The arrangement is designed to ease Nigeria’s chronic power shortages while ensuring a steady flow of natural gas to Ghana.

Officials from both countries say the deal represents a new model of intra-African cooperation, reducing dependence on external financing and fostering mutual growth.

Ghana already exports electricity to several of its neighbors, including Togo, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, and Benin.

This latest partnership with Nigeria is expected to deepen regional energy integration and improve power reliability across West Africa.

Energy experts say such agreements could set a precedent for more barter-based trade within Africa, helping countries leverage their natural resources and infrastructure to achieve shared prosperity.

Author

  • Abu Bakarr Jalloh

    Abu Bakarr Jalloh is a Sierra Leonean writer, blogger, freelance journalist, YouTuber, and content creator. He is the CEO, founder, and Editor-in-Chief of The African Dream. For more info, send an email to abu@theafricandreamsl.com or WhatsApp +23276211583....

Share

Related Articles

Nigeria’s former president Muhammadu Buhari has died at the age of 82 in a London
Côte d’Ivoire, the world’s largest cocoa producer, has inaugurated a state‑owned cocoa grinding complex worth
Nigerian innovator Emeka Nelson from Anambra State developed a 1,000‑watt water‑powered generator that can run
Sierra Leone could be sitting on a 30 billion barrels of crude oil and gas,
Popular Nigerian music producer MasterKraft has arrived in Sierra Leone ahead of the grand finale
Since Captain Ibrahim Traore assumed leadership in 2022, Burkina Faso has made $18 billion from

Stories That Inspire, Delivered Weekly

Sign up to receive our handpicked selection of articles spotlighting African trailblazers, innovators, and cultural milestones.