
The planned pipeline would stretch roughly 5,660 kilometres along the Atlantic coast, crossing more than a dozen West African countries from Nigeria to Morocco.
Its estimated cost is around 25 billion US dollars, making it one of the most ambitious energy infrastructure projects ever conceived on the continent.
From Lagos, the route would run through countries including Benin, Togo, Ghana, CΓ΄te d'Ivoire, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Senegal and Mauritania before reaching Morocco.
Once complete, it could deliver tens of billions of cubic metres of gas per year, connecting to Morocco's gas infrastructure and onward toward the European network.
The project has advanced through feasibility studies and route finalisation, with steps taken toward a special-purpose joint venture between Moroccan and Nigerian stakeholders and a final investment decision.
Financing for such a large undertaking is being sought from multiple partners, and various governments and institutions have signalled interest in supporting it.
For Morocco, the pipeline reinforces its role as an energy bridge between Africa and Europe and complements its southern-province development drive.
For West Africa, the project promises gas access, electrification and industrial opportunity along the coast, though it faces long timelines and significant security and funding challenges.
The planned route is roughly 5,660 kilometres along the Atlantic coast.
Estimates put the cost at around 25 billion US dollars.
It is a long-term project; first exports have been discussed for the early 2030s, with phased operation thereafter.