Mozambique launches audit on $4.5bn cost overrun of TotalEnergies project

The Mozambican government has initiated a review of the expenses incurred during the five-year suspension of TotalEnergies' gas project, halted due to an armed insurgency in the country’s north.

Share:

Comprehensive energy news coverage, updated nonstop

Annual subscription

8.25€/month*

*billed annually at 99€/year for the first year then 149,00€/year ​

Unlimited access • Archives included • Professional invoice

OTHER ACCESS OPTIONS

Monthly subscription

Unlimited access • Archives included

5.2€/month*
then 14.90€ per month thereafter

FREE ACCOUNT

3 articles offered per month

FREE

*Prices are excluding VAT, which may vary depending on your location or professional status

Since 2021: 35,000 articles • 150+ analyses per week

The government of Mozambique has approved the resumption of the Golfinho/Atum gas project, led by TotalEnergies, while launching an audit to assess the costs accumulated during its suspension. The project was halted following a deadly 2021 attack in the town of Palma, near the site. The expenditure review is part of a control process ahead of any final authorisation to resume operations.

A $20bn project awaiting restart

With an initial investment estimated at $20 billion, this liquefied natural gas development is considered one of the largest in southern Africa. According to the authorities, the audit will specifically cover the force majeure period declared by TotalEnergies following the attack. The French group has formally requested $4.5 billion (€4.19bn) in compensation for the cost overrun caused by the extended suspension, along with a ten-year extension of the concession.

Restart conditions and legal uncertainty

The Mozambican government has not yet stated whether it will agree to the demands made by TotalEnergies. In a letter addressed to President Filipe Nyusi, the company expressed hope of resuming production in 2029, subject to the approval of its revised development plan. The French major holds a 26.5% stake in the project, for which it is also the lead operator.

Meanwhile, TotalEnergies is facing several legal proceedings in France. A preliminary investigation has been opened for involuntary manslaughter following complaints from survivors of the Palma attack, who accuse the company of failing to protect its subcontractors. Another complaint, filed in Paris on Monday by the NGO European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights, targets the company for alleged complicity in war crimes.

A strategic revival for Mozambique

The project’s return to operation could reposition Mozambique on the global natural gas map. According to a 2024 report by consulting firm Deloitte, the projects led by TotalEnergies, ENI, and ExxonMobil could place the country among the top ten global producers, contributing an estimated 20% of Africa’s output by 2040.

Security remains a critical factor. The insurgency in Cabo Delgado province, driven by a group affiliated with the Islamic State organisation, has caused more than 6,300 deaths since 2017. Testimonies reported by Politico also mention abuses committed by Mozambican armed forces around the gas site.

Shell sells a 50% stake in Tobermory West of Shetland to Ithaca Energy, while retaining operatorship, reinforcing a partnership already tested on Tornado, amid high fiscal pressure and regulatory uncertainty in the North Sea.
Russian company Novatek applied major discounts on its liquefied natural gas cargoes to attract Chinese buyers, reviving sales from the Arctic LNG 2 project under Western sanctions.
A first vessel chartered by a Ukrainian trader delivered American liquefied gas to Lithuania, marking the opening of a new maritime supply route ahead of the winter season.
A German NGO has filed in France a complaint against TotalEnergies for alleged war crimes complicity around Mozambique LNG, just as the country seeks to restart this key gas project without any judicial decision yet on the substance.
Hut 8 transfers four natural gas power plants to TransAlta following a turnaround plan and five-year capacity contracts secured in Ontario.
By selling its US subsidiary TVL LLC, active in the Haynesville and Cotton Valley formations in Louisiana, to Grayrock Energy for $255mn, Tokyo Gas pursues a targeted rotation of its upstream assets while strengthening, through TG Natural Resources, its exposure to major US gas hubs supporting its LNG value chain.
TotalEnergies acquires 50% of a flexible power generation portfolio from EPH, reinforcing its gas-to-power strategy in Europe through a €10.6bn joint venture.
The Essington-1 well identified significant hydrocarbon columns in the Otway Basin, strengthening investment prospects for the partners in the drilling programme.
New Delhi secures 2.2 million tonnes of liquefied petroleum gas annually from the United States, a state-funded commitment amid American sanctions and shifting supply strategies.
INNIO and Clarke Energy are building a 450 MW gas engine power plant in Thurrock to stabilise the electricity grid in southeast England and supply nearly one million households.
Aramco and Yokogawa have completed the deployment of autonomous artificial intelligence agents in the gas processing unit of Fadhili, reducing energy and chemical consumption while limiting human intervention.
S‑Fuelcell is accelerating the launch of its GFOS platform to provide autonomous power to AI data centres facing grid saturation and a continuous rise in energy demand.
Aramco is reportedly in talks with Commonwealth LNG and Louisiana LNG, according to Reuters, to secure up to 10 mtpa in the “2029 wave” as North America becomes central to global liquefaction growth.
Kyiv signs a gas import deal with Greece and mobilises nearly €2bn to offset production losses caused by Russian strikes, reinforcing a strategic energy partnership ahead of winter.
Blackstone commits $1.2bn to develop Wolf Summit, a 600 MW combined-cycle natural gas plant, marking a first for West Virginia and addressing rising electricity demand across the Mid-Atlantic corridor.
UAE-based ADNOC Gas reports its highest-ever quarterly net income, driven by domestic sales growth and a new quarterly dividend policy valued at $896 million.
Caprock Midstream II invests in more than 90 miles of gas pipelines in Texas and strengthens its leadership with the arrival of Steve Jones, supporting its expansion in the dry gas sector.
Harvest Midstream has completed the acquisition of the Kenai liquefied natural gas terminal, a strategic move to repurpose existing infrastructure and support energy reliability in Southcentral Alaska.
Dana Gas signed a memorandum of understanding with the Syrian Petroleum Company to assess the revival of gas fields, leveraging a legal window opened by temporary sanction easings from European, British and US authorities.
With the commissioning of the Badr-15 well, Egypt reaffirms its commitment to energy security through public investment in gas exploration, amid declining output from its mature fields.

All the latest energy news, all the time

Annual subscription

8.25€/month*

*billed annually at 99€/year for the first year then 149,00€/year ​

Unlimited access - Archives included - Pro invoice

Monthly subscription

Unlimited access • Archives included

5.2€/month*
then 14.90€ per month thereafter

*Prices shown are exclusive of VAT, which may vary according to your location or professional status.

Since 2021: 30,000 articles - +150 analyses/week.