+86-156-2511-0166[email protected]WhatsApp
Hanheng Refractory
HOMEABOUT
PRODUCTS
All products
APPLICATIONS & INDUSTRIESMARKET SUPPORTNEWS
DISCUSS
Hanheng Refractory
HOMEABOUTAPPLICATIONS & INDUSTRIESMARKET SUPPORTNEWS
DISCUSS
+86-156-2511-0166WhatsApp[email protected]
Hanheng RefractoryHanheng RefractoryBuilt for heat. Proven in delivery.

Hanheng Refractory Materials Co., Ltd. supplies shaped bricks, monolithic refractories, tundish materials, and insulation products for steel, ferroalloy, glass, boiler, and other heat-intensive operations.

Quick links

  • Home
  • About
  • Products
  • Applications & Industries
  • Market Support
  • News

Core products

  • Magnesia-Carbon Brick
  • Alumina-Magnesia-Carbon Brick
  • Magnesia-Alumina-Carbon Brick
  • Al2O3-SiC-C Brick
  • Calcium-Magnesium-Carbon Brick

Contact

Panpan Road, Zhanqian District, Yingkou, Liaoning, Chinawww.hanhengref.com[email protected]+86-156-2511-0166WhatsApp

© 2026 Hanheng Refractory

Project discussionProduct systemPrivacy Policy
Industry update
Published June 23, 2026cementenergylogistics

Nigeria, Libya, Algeria Burned Over 25bcm Gas ​In 2025

Africa remained an area of persistent flaring. wth Nigeria, Libya, and Algeria flaring more than 25 bcm of gas ​in 2025, despite widespread power shortages ​and efforts by several governments ⁠to expand domestic gas use

Source-backed market reading focused on the local industrial developments, project signals, and operating consequences that are actually worth tracking.

Read Article
Previous article

Africa remained an area of persistent flaring. wth Nigeria, Libya, and Algeria flaring more than 25 bcm of gas ​in 2025, despite widespread power shortages ​and efforts by several governments ⁠to expand domestic gas use. The World Bank’s Global Gas Flaring Tracker, reported by Reuters, noted that global gas flaring rose to a six-year high in 2025, driven by increases ​in Russia and Iran.

This is as Nigeria’s upstream regulator, Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), said its metered data shows about 6.08 bcm of gas was flared in 2025, slightly below the World Bank’s 6.6 bcm estimate. It attributed the ​differences to satellite versus on-site measurement methods.

It said the marginal increase in flaring was due ​to higher gas ⁠output. “Nigeria’s commitment to end routine flaring by 2030 remains firm,” said Eniola Akinkuotu, spokesperson of the NUPRC, which he said has “a scheme to monetise gas flares”. Nine countries — Russia, Iran, Iraq, Venezuela, Mexico, Libya, Algeria, and the U.S.

currently account for more than four-fifths of global flaring while producing nearly half of the world’s oil. Flaring climbed for a third consecutive year to 167 billion cubic metres, wasting an estimated $54 billion worth of gas and outpacing growth in global oil production.

The data points to a central challenge for the World Bank-backed Zero Routine ​Flaring by 2030 initiative, opens new tab: global progress depends heavily on a small group of oil-producing countries where weak infrastructure, limited gas ​markets, financing constraints, and uneven enforcement continue to slow investment in gas capture and processing.

“At a time ⁠when many countries are struggling to increase affordable and reliable energy, the economic development costs of continued flaring are simply too high,” ​said Demetrios Papathanasiou, World Bank Group global director for energy. “The technologies and approaches needed to capture and utilize associated gas are well ​established.

But in many oil-producing countries, gas utilization is not yet integrated as a core part of oil production planning, with infrastructure investment and regulatory enforcement often lagging,” said Zubin Bamji, Manager for the World Bank’s Global Flaring and Methane Reduction Partnership (GFMR).

Russia, Iran, and Iraq together flared about 84 bcm in ​2025, nearly half the global total, with Russia and Iran accounting for much of the year-on-year increase, according to the data. Energy ministries ​in the three countries declined to comment. But Russian newspaper Vedomosti Daily earlier this month cited data from the official statistics office called Rosstat ‌that 25.1 ⁠billion cubic metres of associated gas were flared in 2025, an increase of 6.8% compared with 2024.

READ ALSO: FG Convenes Emergency Meeting, Invites EFCC, DSS, Police To End LPG Hoarding, Diversion

Next article

Sources and reading line

Public reports, policy documents, and industry releases cited in this article remain available here for continued review.

View cited sources1 sources

Nigeria, Libya, Algeria Burned Over 25bcm Gas ​In 2025

Published source

Document: Channels TV Business RSS · Source: Channels TV Business RSS

Open source↗
Continue from here

Continue this article into market review, product systems, and project preparation.

When this signal is already affecting your buying sequence, continue from here into the related market page, product route, or a practical project discussion.

Related market pages

Continue into the country page when destination documents, packing, and delivery timing need a deeper read.

Nigeria industry and refractory demandOpen market page
Related product systems

Continue into the product systems that are most likely to appear in the same procurement discussion.

Alumina-Magnesia-Carbon BrickReview productCalcium-Magnesium-Carbon BrickReview productBasic Ramming Mass for Induction Furnace Working LiningReview product
Project preparation

Share the unit, duty position, target campaign, destination market, and document questions so the next reply can stay practical.

Unit name, exact hot-zone position, and current lining route

Target campaign, shutdown or commissioning window, and expected quantity split

Destination market, delivery route, and the document set needed before quotation

Discuss this articleBack to News