Egypt has announced an oil and natural gas discovery in the Western Desert that should boost domestic production and reduce import costs.
The exploratory well has an estimated reserve of 330 billion cubic feet of gas and 10 million barrels of condensate and crude oil, totalling 70 million barrels of oil equivalent, the petroleum ministry said.
The well is the largest discovery by Agiba Petroleum Company, a joint venture between state-owned Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation and Italy’s Eni, in the past 15 years.
The new well is 10km from existing facilities and infrastructure, allowing rapid development and the start of production within a short period, the ministry said in a statement published by the cabinet.
Earlier this month Cairo confirmed a new natural gas discovery in the Nile Delta, with the well’s production capacity estimated at 50 million cubic feet per day in the West Abu Madi concession area.
In January Egypt announced five new exploratory wells, which are expected to add around 47 million cubic feet of natural gas, as well as 4,300 barrels of crude and condensate, to the country’s daily production.
Cairo launched a seismic survey in December last year to explore for oil and gas in areas that account for nearly 10 percent of the country’s landmass.
The country plans to drill 101 oil and gas wells this year, as part of a $5.7 billion investment approved by the government in 2025 to start drilling 480 wells over the next five years.
Prime minister Mostafa Madbouly said in March that the country’s gas import bill had increased by $1.1 billion a month since the outbreak of the Iran war.

