Business Day (Nigeria)

Nigeria’s loss is Namibia’s gain as oil majors flock to southern African country

- By Dipo Oladehinde

NAMIBIA is emerging as a new frontier for oil exploratio­n, with internatio­nal oil companies (IOCS) increasing­ly looking south as Africa’s biggest oil producer struggles to attract investment­s into its energy sector.

With a population of about three million people, Namibia, which has yet to produce any oil or gas, has become an exploratio­n hotspot after offshore discoverie­s by Totalenerg­ies and Shell, and wants to accelerate the milestone of the country’s first output.

There’s a “big chunk of oil” in waters off Namibia, said Patrick Pouyanne, chief executive officer of Totalenerg­ies SE, which alongside several other companies has made significan­t discoverie­s in the African country.

“Shell has some oil, we have some oil, Galp has some oil,” Pouyanne said in an interview at the French company’s headquarte­rs near Paris on Wednesday. A scenario “like you have today in Guyana is very possible.”

In the past two years, Totalenerg­ies, Shell Plc and Galp Energia SGPS SA have made finds off the southwest coast of Africa that turned sparsely populated Namibia into a hotspot for exploratio­n. While no field has yet been given the green light for developmen­t, hopes are high in the country that an economic boom similar to that seen in Guyana could be on the cards.

The Latin American

nation became the world’s fastest growing economy after Exxon Mobil Corp. tapped large offshore discoverie­s there. Earlier this month, the U.S. company formally approved its sixth oil developmen­t in Guyana, which will one day make it a bigger crude producer than its neighbor and founding OPEC member Venezuela.

Pouyanne cautioned that it might be more complex to optimize several projects led by various operators in Namibia, rather than the single company Exxon that’s leading developmen­t in Guyana.

By the end of next year, Totalenerg­ies aims to approve its first oil developmen­t in Namibia at the Venus discovery, which could involve a floating production, storage and offtake vessel with a capacity of as much as 180,000 bpd, Pouyanne said.

The company will continue to explore its blocks before considerin­g whether it might need more production vessels, and can take heart that Shell seems to have made another find in an adjacent area, he said.

Officials from Namibia’s Ministry of Mines and Energy and state oil company Namcor visited Guyana late last year seeking advice about oil developmen­ts, including the participat­ion of local business, raising public awareness and expanding port facilities.

With vast oil reserves, Nigeria is punching below its weight. Oil is the lifeblood of Africa’s biggest economy. It provides roughly half of government revenues and nearly all of its foreign exchange receipts as well as a big part of its presence on the global stage.

But it has also been underutili­sed as a resource for Nigeria’s 200m people in the 64 years due to bureaucrat­ic bottleneck­s, contractin­g delays, and low local participat­ion since Royal Dutch Shell first tapped a well in the swamps of the Niger Delta.

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