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A Stronger Africa Requires Stronger Investment Policies (By NJ Ayuk)

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African Energy Chamber

Stable fiscal regimes, predictable contract terms, and anti-corruption measures help de-risk projects and give investors the confidence to commit long-term capital

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, December 17, 2025/APO Group/ —By NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman, African Energy Chamber (https://EnergyChamber.org/).

 

Investor confidence in Algeria’s energy sector is climbing. The country — already one of Africa’s most active oil and gas producers — has seen even more momentum in 2025.

 

In October, Algeria’s national oil company, Sonatrach, announced a USD5.4 billion partnership with Saudi Arabia’s Midad Energy to explore and develop new fields in the Illizi Basin. The government has also entered advanced talks with ExxonMobil and Chevron on a groundbreaking framework that would give US companies access to Algeria’s vast natural gas reserves — a first in the nation’s history. Earlier this year, Sonatrach and China’s Sinopec signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to jointly assess and potentially develop resources in the Gourara and Berkine-Est basins.

 

These agreements are not emerging in a vacuum. They reflect the deliberate reforms Algeria has enacted in recent years: simplifying business registration, establishing special economic zones, improving contract transparency, and signaling a stronger commitment to international partnership. As a result, the country is drawing a diverse roster of major players, from Eni and Equinor to TotalEnergies.

 

Algeria’s progress offers a timely lesson for African nations with petroleum resources. Africa’s oil and gas sector will require billions in new investment over the next decade, yet securing capital has become more difficult. As noted in the African Energy Chamber’s (AEC) “State of African Energy: 2026 Outlook Report,” Western financial institutions continue to retreat from fossil-fuel financing, and many investors remain cautious about perceived risks in emerging markets.

The governments that confront these challenges by adopting investor-friendly policies and strengthening governance will be the ones to realize the key benefits of oil and gas, including energy security, job creation, and broader economic growth.

 

Algeria shows what is possible when reforms align with clear investment objectives. Other countries that have taken similar steps, such as Angola and Nigeria, are also seeing renewed activity. But this cannot remain limited to a handful of markets. The resources are here. The opportunities are here. Now is the time to act.

 

The Opportunity Is Enormous. The Capital Isn’t.

 

Africa certainly doesn’t lack opportunity — it has an abundance of it. The continent holds an estimated 125 billion barrels of proven oil reserves and roughly 625 trillion cubic feet of natural gas as of 2025. These are not abstract numbers; they represent jobs, infrastructure, and prosperity waiting to be unlocked.

 

According to our outlook report, Africa’s overall hydrocarbon production is projected to hold steady at around 11.4 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (MMboe/d). But maintaining — let alone expanding — that output requires continuous investment. Wells decline. Infrastructure ages. New discoveries must be developed. Without consistent capital inflows, Africa risks leaving its wealth in the ground.

 

And while our outlook points to encouraging signs of renewed spending — particularly in countries like Namibia, Angola, and Mozambique — the continent remains far from reaching its full investment potential. The AEC estimates that the continent faces an annual energy finance gap between USD31.5 billion and USD45 billion. External investment is expected to average roughly USD35 billion per year between 2020 and 2030 — a level that will not deliver the production growth Africa needs to meet rising domestic demand or strengthen export capacity.

 

Investment Won’t Come Without Reform

 

Whether Africa can increase production hinges on several factors, but few are more important than governments’ ability to offer investment terms that meet industry needs. Oil and gas projects demand massive upfront capital — often in the hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars — and investors are keenly aware of the risks associated with frontier markets. These risks include political instability, abrupt regulatory changes, contract uncertainty, weak infrastructure, and security concerns. On top of that, private-sector financiers continue to face global pressure to channel capital toward renewable energy rather than fossil fuels.

 

If African countries want to compete for scarce investment dollars, they must demonstrate that their markets are stable, predictable, and commercially attractive.

 

One of the greatest deterrents to investors is slow or unpredictable regulatory approval processes. Lengthy permitting timelines, unclear requirements, or frequent policy changes can stall projects and undermine returns. Governments must streamline approvals and establish transparent regulatory frameworks with firm timelines. Fast, direct communication channels between regulators and companies also make an enormous difference in reducing delays.

 

A proven approach is the creation of one-stop regulatory agencies that consolidate multiple approvals under one roof. Equatorial Guinea has implemented a system that allows investors to establish a business within a week, and Angola recently launched a one-stop center for local content compliance in the oil and gas sector. These reforms dramatically reduce friction and make markets far more competitive.

 

Equally important is ensuring strong governance and transparency. Stable fiscal regimes, predictable contract terms, and anti-corruption measures help de-risk projects and give investors the confidence to commit long-term capital. Countries such as Nigeria and Ghana have emphasized clear rules, transparent licensing processes, and improved sector governance as central pillars of their investment strategies — and these efforts are widely recognized as strengthening investor trust.

 

The Green Energy Gap Africa Cannot Afford

 

Ironically, even as global institutions push investors to prioritize renewable energy, Africa is experiencing a significant green-energy investment shortfall.

 

If African countries want to compete for scarce investment dollars, they must demonstrate that their markets are stable, predictable, and commercially attractive

Our outlook report addresses this problem: “Africa’s renewable energy sector holds the potential to reshape the power landscape and enhance energy security for millions. However, given Africa is the second most populous continent in the world, the scale of investment in the renewable energy sector remains significantly behind that of other global initiatives.

 

“Between 2020 and 2025, Africa invested USD34 billion in clean power technologies, with 52% directed towards solar power and 25% towards onshore wind. Despite this investment, Africa’s share of global investments is projected to be just 1.5% in 2025.”

 

Just like the fossil-fuel financing gap, this shortfall is tied directly to investor risk perceptions. As the report explains, Africa continues to lag other regions because its energy markets are seen as high risk, marked by political instability, regulatory uncertainty, inadequate infrastructure, policy reversals, corruption concerns, and burdensome bureaucracy. Limited access to capital and high interest rates compound these challenges.

 

African governments must adopt policies that counter these concerns. The same reforms that draw investment into oil and gas — transparent rules, predictable contract terms, streamlined approvals, and stable fiscal regimes — will also increase investor confidence in solar, wind, hydrogen, and other green energy sources.

 

Strengthening renewable-energy financing is urgent, particularly because one of the power sources with the greatest potential to support Africa’s long-term energy security and economic growth is also among the costliest to develop: nuclear energy.

 

To grasp the scale of the challenge, consider that Africa plans to spend around USD105 billion to build 15,000 MW of new nuclear power capacity by 2035. Egypt’s 4,800 MW project on the continent is expected to cost nearly USD29 billion alone.

 

Yet the potential benefits of nuclear power cannot be overstated. As our report says, “Nuclear offers a unique advantage: it delivers stable baseload power, crucial for replacing fossil fuel generation and for stabilising grids that increasingly depend on intermittent renewable sources.” Without that stability, Africa risks unreliable supply as less-predictable solar and wind take on larger shares of the energy generation mix.

 

And while traditional nuclear infrastructure requires massive upfront capital, new small modular reactor technologies offer “smaller, more flexible project scales and lower capital requirements,” our report notes. For example, a microreactor with 10–20 MW output can cost between USD50 million and USD300 million, while a 300 MW SMR might cost around USD900 million to USD1 billion, much less than conventional nuclear plants.

 

For African countries seeking long-term, low-carbon energy security, encouraging nuclear investment will be worth the effort. But Africa cannot fully unlock its renewable-energy potential — or its nuclear potential — without creating a policy environment in which investors feel confident financing long-term, capital-intensive projects.

 

A Call for the World Bank to Step Up

 

Even with growing private-sector participation, Africa will need far greater financial support to develop its oil and gas resources, scale renewables, and build the foundation for a viable nuclear sector. Private capital alone cannot meet the scale of Africa’s energy needs.

 

This is why the AEC continues to call on the World Bank to end its 2017 ban on financing upstream oil and gas projects, a policy adopted in response to global concerns about greenhouse gases and climate change. Africa cannot eliminate its widespread energy poverty without responsibly developing its natural gas resources. Gas-to-power projects offer one of the fastest and most affordable pathways to expanding electricity access, providing the reliable baseload supply needed to power households, industries, and growing cities. And at a time when renewable-energy investment remains far below required levels, revenues from oil and gas can help finance the long-term transition to cleaner energy sources.

 

The AEC welcomes the World Bank’s decision to lift its ban on financing nuclear energy, as well as its ongoing review of restrictions surrounding natural gas exploration and production. But review is no longer enough. The pace of change must match the urgency of Africa’s energy crisis.

 

Population growth is accelerating faster than our electrification efforts, meaning every incremental gain is being swallowed by demographic realities. Africa needs the capital to expand access to electricity rapidly and at scale — not in 10 or 20 years, but now. By maintaining its prohibition on upstream oil and gas financing, the World Bank is unintentionally contributing to prolonged energy poverty, limiting Africa’s ability to industrialize and undermining progress toward a balanced and sustainable energy future.

 

Lifting this ban would not undermine global climate goals. On the contrary, it would support Africa’s responsible use of natural gas as a transition fuel, while enabling the continent to invest in renewables, storage, and nuclear power — the technologies that will power Africa for generations to come. What Africa needs from the World Bank is not hesitation, but partnership.

 

I would add that the AEC is not the only voice calling for change. The United States government has also urged the World Bank to reconsider its restrictions. As US President Donald Trump’s administration recently noted, multilateral development banks cannot fulfil their core mandates if the World Bank continues to restrict natural-gas financing. “An all-of-the-above energy strategy that provides for the financing of upstream gas would be a positive step towards reconnecting the World Bank, and all other multilateral development banks, to their core missions of economic growth and poverty reduction,” a spokesperson for the US Treasury Department told the Financial Times.

A Decisive Moment

Africa’s energy future will not be secured through rhetoric or cautious half-measures. It will be secured by creating the conditions that allow investment to flow — conditions that give global partners the confidence to support our oil and gas resources, expand our renewable-energy capacity, and build the nuclear infrastructure that can anchor our long-term energy security.

 

If African governments embrace reform rather than stagnation and if institutions like the World Bank commit to partnership instead of prohibition, Africa can end energy poverty, drive industrialization, and give millions the reliable power they need to thrive. Africa’s future depends on what we choose to do today.

 

“The State of African Energy: 2026 Outlook Report” is available for download. Visit https://apo-opa.co/3Yv2WZ8 to request your copy.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

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Sierra Leone’s PDSL to Host Strategic Investor Roundtable at Paris Energy Forum

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The Petroleum Directorate of Sierra Leone will lead a targeted roundtable at Invest in African Energy 2026, spotlighting upstream potential and cross-regional partnerships

PARIS, France, March 24, 2026/APO Group/ –The Petroleum Directorate of Sierra Leone (PDSL) is set to convene an investor roundtable at Invest in African Energy (IAE) Forum 2026 in Paris, underscoring growing interest in West and North African energy markets and the need for deeper capital engagement across exploration, renewable and offshore services. The session reflects a strategic effort by Sierra Leone to connect its emerging upstream prospects with established operators and project developers as the country moves to unlock the full potential of its emerging oil and gas industry.

 

Sierra Leone is increasingly positioning itself as a frontier oil and gas market with significant offshore potential, and part of the PDSL’s mandate is to catalyze investment interest in its offshore acreage through direct engagement with global capital. Recent data suggest the country holds estimated recoverable resources in the tens of billions of barrels, backed by discoveries and extensive multi‑client seismic datasets that prospective investors are evaluating. The PDSL is actively promoting licensing opportunities and drilling plans, emphasizing fiscal terms and exploration readiness to attract strategic partners.

 

A cornerstone of this strategy is the anticipated launch of the country’s sixth licensing round. Offering a rare early-entry opportunity into a largely untapped deepwater terrain with considerable upside, the upcoming bid round is backed by fresh 3D datasets which de-risk exploration and support new drilling campaigns. Just this month, GeoPartners announced that the final Pre-Stack Time Migration data for its recently acquired 3D multi-client seismic survey in the country was complete and is now available for licensing. The dataset provides a 3D window into the hydrocarbon potential of the underexplored northern Sierra Leone region.

 

Sierra Leone’s licensing drive comes as major operators advance exploration activities. In 2025, Eni signed a Reconnaissance Permit Agreement with the PDSL, securing rights to conduct reconnaissance and technical evaluation activities across offshore blocks G113, G129, G130, G131 and G132. The acreage covers 6,790 square kilometers within Sierra Leone’s territorial waters. Nigeria’s F.A. Oil Limited is pursuing drilling following its award of six offshore blocks through the country’s fifth licensing round in 2023. The company is currently seeking a farm-in partner to advance the project from exploration to production, offering a 40% stake in each of the G Blocks 53, 54, 55, 71, 72 and 73.

 

As these development unfold, the upcoming roundtable at IAE 2026 offers a unique opportunity for operators and policymakers to engage potential investors. The IAE 2026 Forum has become a strategic bridge between African upstream opportunities and global investors, with sessions like the PDSL roundtable designed to foster deeper dialogue and provide clarity on project pipelines and investment prerequisites. Discussions are expected to cover mechanisms for de‑risking exploration activity, optimizing fiscal and contractual frameworks and identifying synergies between hydrocarbon investment and renewable energy commitments.

 

For investors seeking differentiated exposure to African energy markets, the Sierra Leone roundtable represents both a focused exploration of frontier oil potential and a broader conversation about regional infrastructure, partnerships and the evolving demands of energy capital in the years ahead.

 

IAE 2026 (www.Invest-Africa-Energy.com) is an exclusive forum designed to connect African energy markets with global investors, serving as a key platform for deal-making in the lead-up to African Energy Week. Scheduled for April 22–23, 2026, in Paris, the event will provide delegates with two days of in-depth engagement with industry experts, project developers, investors and policymakers. For more information, visit www.Invest-Africa-Energy.com. To sponsor or register as a delegate, please contact sales@energycapitalpower.com

 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Energy Capital & Power.

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Cape Town Prepares for African Mining Week 2026 as Draft Program Reveals Continent’s Mineral Drive

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African Mining Week returns for its 2026 edition with an expanded three-day program, bringing together African mining leaders and global partners to shape the future of the continent’s mining sector

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, March 24, 2026/APO Group/ –Global economic trends – from record-breaking commodity prices to intensifying geopolitical competition for resources – are reshaping the strategic importance of Africa’s mineral wealth. As global countries race to secure supply chains for energy transition metals – which are expected to triple by 2030 – Africa is positioning its 30% share of the world’s critical minerals as a key pillar of economic growth. African governments are modernizing mining codes, developing industrial corridors and investing in mineral processing facilities to support local beneficiation, job creation, workforce development and regional mineral markets.

 

Against this backdrop, the upcoming African Mining Week (AMW) Conference & Exhibition – Africa’s premier gathering for mining stakeholders – has launched the draft program for its 2026 edition {https://apo-opa.co/3NneKLj}. Scheduled to take place October 14–16 in Cape Town, the event provides a platform where policymakers, global investors, project operators, technology providers, academia and mining service companies examine Africa’s mining opportunities, challenges and long-term strategic direction.

Under the theme ‘Mining the Future: Unearthing Africa’s Full Mineral Value’, the three-day, multi-track agenda reflects the growing urgency among African markets to strengthen value addition across the mining value chain.

Regional Cooperation and Policy Alignment in Focus

A key feature of the agenda is the Ministerial Forum, where African mining ministers will provide updates on regulatory reforms and policy alignment initiatives aimed at unlocking greater value from the continent’s mineral resources. Discussions will examine how harmonized regulatory frameworks and regional cooperation can accelerate investment flows and strengthen Africa’s position in global mineral supply chains.

The inclusion of regional policy integration reflects a growing continental push to leverage frameworks such as the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to enhance cross-border mineral cooperation and trade.

We are acting to enhance regional integration through frameworks such as the African Mining Vision and the Africa Mineral Strategy Group

“Africa’s integration is not only a political objective but a strategic economic vision,” stated Emmanuel Armah-Kofi Buah, Ghana’s Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, in remarks reported by Energy Capital & Power – organizers of AMW – in February 2026. “Our natural resources require coordinated policies. Isolated legal frameworks cannot fully unlock their value. Through integration and initiatives such as the ECOWAS [Economic Community of West African States] Mining Code and the African Mining Vision, we can build a stronger and more competitive mineral economy.”

Nigeria’s Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Henry Alake, echoed this emphasis on regional cooperation and beneficiation.

“We are acting to enhance regional integration through frameworks such as the African Mining Vision and the Africa Mineral Strategy Group,” he stated. “We must develop mineral corridors that connect resources, infrastructure and markets across the continent. Our goal is not to simply export raw materials, but to develop industrial hubs that create jobs and value across borders.”

Connecting Global Investors with African Opportunities

Strategic roundtables and Country Focus sessions form a key part of the AMW 2026 program, connecting African mining jurisdictions with international partners from the U.S, Europe, the Middle East and China. These sessions will provide African stakeholders with a platform to showcase exploration opportunities and project pipelines across the mining value chain.

Meanwhile, technical workshops and the exhibition floor at AMW 2026 will provide a platform for equipment manufacturers, technology providers and engineering firms to showcase innovations designed to enhance operational performance across mining operations.

By combining high-level policy dialogue with technical expertise and investment matchmaking, AMW 2026 positions itself as a critical marketplace where Africa’s mineral potential converges with global capital, technology and strategic partnerships – helping shape the next phase of growth for the continent’s mining sector.

AMW serves as a premier platform for exploring the full spectrum of mining opportunities across Africa. The event is held alongside the African Energy Week: Invest in African Energies 2026 conference from October 12-16 in Cape Town. Sponsors, exhibitors and delegates can learn more by contacting sales@energycapitalpower.com.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Energy Capital & Power.

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Tony Elumelu Foundation Selects Seven North African Entrepreneurs in 2026 Cohort

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Seven North African entrepreneurs in technology, education, professional services and agriculture selected from 265,000 applications at historic Abuja ceremony

Hope is not just a feeling — it is a system we can build

ABUJA, Nigeria, March 24, 2026/APO Group/ —
  • 7 North African entrepreneurs selected from Morocco, Tunisia and Egypt
  • 51% of the 2026 cohort are women, all selected purely on merit, without any quota in place
  • 3,200 total entrepreneurs selected from 265,000+ applications across 54 African countries
  • USD 5,000 in non-refundable seed capital for each selected entrepreneur
  • Selection conducted independently by Ernst & Young

 

The Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF) (www.TonyElumeluFoundation.org), the leading philanthropy empowering young African entrepreneurs, announced on Sunday, 22 March 2026 the 12th cohort of the TEF Entrepreneurship Programme at a ceremony held at the Transcorp Hilton, Abuja. The announcement was made by Founder Tony O. Elumelu, C.F.R.

 

Among the 3,200 entrepreneurs selected from 265,000 applications received from all 54 African countries: seven from North Africa. Three from Tunisia, two from Morocco, two from Egypt. Spanning technology, education, professional services and agribusiness, they represent a generation of North African founders building businesses that address the urgent needs of their communities. Their selection, which was conducted independently by Ernst & Young, places them among the most rigorously assessed young entrepreneurs on the continent.

 

This year’s cohort carries a historic signal: 51 percent of the 2026 entrepreneurs are women. They were selected purely on merit, without quota. Across hundreds of thousands of applications, women distinguished themselves through the strength of their ideas, the clarity of their business models and the ambition of their vision.

 

In 2026, the Foundation is empowering a total of 3,200 entrepreneurs across all its entrepreneurship programmes:

 

  • 1,751 entrepreneurs through Heirs Holdings Group: Heirs Energies, Transcorp Power, Transcorp Hotels, and United Capital;
  • 1,049 entrepreneurs in partnership with the European Commission, OACPS, BMZ and GIZ;
  • 100 entrepreneurs in partnership with Sèmè City Development Agency;
  • 100 entrepreneurs in partnership with DEG, the German Development Agency;
  • 100 entrepreneurs in partnership with the IKEA FoundationUNICEF’s Generation Unlimited and the Dutch Government; and
  • 100 entrepreneurs in partnership with UNDP and the Rwandan Ministry of Youth and Arts.

 

 

Each selected Tony Elumelu Entrepreneur will receive USD 5,000 in non-refundable seed capital, access to world-class business management training on TEFConnect, one-on-one mentorship, and entry into a powerful network of investors, partners and fellow entrepreneurs.

 

In his annual letter (https://apo-opa.co/4uOFepM), “A Story of Hope,” Tony O. Elumelu, C.F.R., Founder of the Tony Elumelu Foundation, shared a powerful message to the new cohort:

 

“For a long time, I believed luck was something that simply happened to you. Then I came to understand: luck can be engineered. Opportunity can be democratised. Hope is not just a feeling — it is a system we can build.” — Tony O. Elumelu, C.F.R., Founder, Tony Elumelu Foundation — 2026 Annual Letter

 

The Tony Elumelu Foundation has empowered over 2.5 million young Africans with access to business management training on TEFConnect (https://TEFConnect.com), and disbursed over USD 100 million in seed capital to more than 24,000 selected entrepreneurs.

 

Collectively, these entrepreneurs have generated USD 4.2 billion in revenue and created more than 1.5 million direct and indirect jobs. Through its support for African entrepreneurs, TEF has lifted 2.1 million Africans above the poverty line and positively impacted more than 4 million African households, with 46% of supported entrepreneurs being African women. Eighty percent of TEF-supported businesses survive and scale, against a global average of ten to twenty percent.

 

 

The announcement ceremony was broadcast live in English (https://apo-opa.co/3PWLiML), French (https://apo-opa.co/3PWLiML), Portuguese (https://apo-opa.co/4t4Y7Da) and Arabic (https://apo-opa.co/4bYHlQl).

 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of The Tony Elumelu Foundation.

 

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