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African Energy Chamber (AEC) Supports Namibia’s 2026 Energy Investment Surge as Sintana Listing Unlocks Local Ownership

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African Energy Chamber

Namibia’s transition from oil and gas discovery to financing – with Sintana’s NSX listing – supports a transition toward strong domestic capital pools and strategic partnerships that will shape the country’s path toward first oil and deeper local participation

WINDHOEK, Namibia, April 20, 2026/APO Group/ –Atlantic margin focused energy company Sintana Energy’s planned secondary listing on the Namibia Securities Exchange (NSX) has emerged as one of the most significant signals yet that Namibia’s oil and gas sector is entering a new phase of financial maturity. Announced in April 2026 at the Namibia International Energy Conference (NIEC) in Windhoek, the move aims to open direct participation in offshore exploration assets such as PEL 83 and PEL 87 to Namibian investors for the first time at scale.

 

At a moment when final investment decisions (FIDs) are approaching across multiple Orange Basin developments, the listing reflects a broader shift underway in Namibia’s energy landscape: capital is no longer flowing only into exploration, but increasingly into domestic market formation, local ownership and structured participation in the upstream value chain. As the voice of the African energy sector, the African Energy Chamber (AEC) supports this listing as a pivotal step toward deepening local ownership, expanding capital market participation and embedding Namibians directly in the country’s rapidly evolving upstream oil and gas sector.

 

“Where we are right now, we have a fierce urgency of NOW,” says NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman, AEC. “You need to think about energy security. This goes across the board in Africa. Don’t make the mistake of thinking things are just going to happen, you have to become active. We have to make some bold choices and those bold choices need to come around stabilization terms, taxes and other fiscal decisions.”

 

At NIEC 2026, Sintana Energy positioned its upcoming NSX listing as a cornerstone of its long-term strategy to deepen Namibian participation in the upstream sector. Chief Executive Robert Bose emphasized that current market conditions, strong exploration success and evolving fiscal frameworks create a unique window to align capital markets with national development goals and broaden local investor involvement in key offshore assets.

 

As one of the country’s premier financial institutions, Standard Bank Namibia is expanding its energy-focused corporate and investment capabilities as offshore oil and gas activity accelerates, positioning itself as a key intermediary between global capital and domestic opportunity. The bank is increasingly involved in structuring financing solutions, advisory services, and public-private participation-linked transactions, while also deepening skills programs to build technical and financial expertise needed for large-scale upstream and infrastructure development across Namibia’s emerging energy value chain.

 

Standard Bank Namibia’s Head of Corporate and Investment Banking Nelson Lucas said that predictability and regulatory certainty are essential to unlocking investment in the oil and gas sector. He noted Namibia’s strong investor base, shaped by past listings, and emphasized opportunities to expand local capital market participation in supporting energy development.

We have to make some bold choices and those bold choices need to come around stabilization terms, taxes and other fiscal decisions

 

Furthermore, insurance company Old Mutual Investment Group Namibia is emerging as a key enabler of domestic institutional capital for the country’s energy build-out. The group manages diversified investment portfolios within Namibia’s financial system and is increasingly focused on infrastructure-linked opportunities tied to oil and gas development. Its role is centered on deepening local capital markets, supporting long-term project financing and strengthening investor confidence in the sector’s growth trajectory.

 

The group’s Managing Director Designate Sepo Haihambo underscored the scale of domestic financial capacity, noting that Namibia’s banking sector reached $187 billion in 2024. She emphasized that leveraging this local capital in infrastructure and energy projects is essential to crowding in international investment, strengthening confidence and ensuring balanced, sustainable sector growth.

 

With a high-impact exploration portfolio spanning multiple offshore licenses, including PELs 97, 99, 100 and 107, exploration company Eco (Atlantic) Oil & Gas is advancing its position in the Walvis Basin. In April 2026, the company farmed down a 60% stake to energy major bp, securing capital and technical backing ahead of a planned drilling campaign, as it targets significant deepwater prospects.

 

At NIEC 2026, Eco (Atlantic) CEO Gil Holzman highlighted how rapidly Namibia’s upstream landscape has evolved, pointing to a surge in major discoveries and investor interest. He stressed that the next phase must focus on enabling meaningful local participation, ensuring Namibians are integrated into the sector as development accelerates.

 

In the midst of these major financial and technical developments, financial institution Rand Merchant Bank (RMB) Namibia is positioning itself at the center of the country’s energy financing landscape, with a growing focus on structuring deals that balance international capital with local participation. As RMB Namibia’s Investment Banking Transactor Leonard Hamunyela noted, the bank sees significant opportunity in supporting Namibian companies across the oil and gas value chain, particularly through trade finance, project structuring and risk allocation frameworks tailored to large-scale energy developments.

 

As Namibia advances toward FID and first oil, the AEC maintains that aligning capital, policy and local participation will be decisive, ensuring the country’s oil and gas sector evolves into a globally competitive, investment-ready and inclusive engine of long-term economic growth.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

Energy

Gwede Mantashe Joins African Energy Week (AEW) 2026 as South Africa’s Petroleum Reforms Open the Orange Basin to Drilling

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African Energy Chamber

A new petroleum law and the prospect of fresh Orange Basin drilling is resetting South Africa’s upstream, and Minister Mantashe is taking the AEW host nation’s case to the global market

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, June 8, 2026/APO Group/ –Gwede Mantashe, Minister of Mineral and Petroleum Resources of the Republic of South Africa, has been confirmed as a featured speaker at the upcoming African Energy Week (AEW) 2026 Conference and Exhibition, where he is expected to lay out the reform agenda reshaping the country’s upstream oil and gas sector and its drive to convert long-stranded offshore gas into production.

 

South Africa is pursuing one of the most significant upstream overhauls in its history, anchored by a new law that gives oil and gas their own regulatory regime for the first time. The reforms position the host nation as both a destination for exploration capital and a future producer along an Atlantic margin that has drawn the world’s largest oil companies to the region.

At the center of the shift is the Upstream Petroleum Resources Development Act (UPRDA), which President Cyril Ramaphosa signed into law in October 2024. The Act separates petroleum from the mining statute that has long regulated both sectors. It also creates a single petroleum right covering exploration and production along with a 20% carried interest for the state. The UPRDA awaits a presidential proclamation to take effect, and implementing regulations that went through a further round of industry comment in early 2026 are now being finalized.

A clear petroleum framework and a credible state partner are what international capital needs to commit to the Orange Basin

Mantashe has emerged as the most forceful advocate for accelerating the sector. He has long-argued that South Africa must shift from importing refined products to producing its own, warning that dependence on foreign supply leaves the economy exposed to global price shocks. This shift becomes increasingly more importance in the current global climate, where supply security has become a major challenge – particularly for import-reliance economies such as South Africa. As such, Mantashe has repeatedly pressed for faster licensing and fewer legal delays to exploration. AEW 2026 is a key platform to bring this discussion to a global audience.

“South Africa has the geology for exploration. Now it is building the regulatory certainty it needs to turn discoveries into bankable projects,” said NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber. “A clear petroleum framework and a credible state partner are what international capital needs to commit to the Orange Basin.”

Offshore, TotalEnergies – operator of Block 3B/4B in the Orange Basin – is preparing to begin drilling in South African waters in 2026 pending final regulatory approvals. The acreage sits on trend with the Venus discovery in neighboring Namibia, where TotalEnergies is developing the basin’s first oil project.

Onshore, momentum is building in Mpumalanga, where gas developer Kinetiko Energy’s Amersfoort project has logged sustained high-flow results and is advancing plans for an LNG pilot plant. Mantashe has also signaled that government is moving to lift the long-standing moratorium on shale gas development, with the Petroleum Agency of South Africa (PASA) estimating recoverable Karoo reserves at 209 tcf.

Mantashe is also expected to report on successes of the South African National Petroleum Company (SANPC), the state entity formed in May 2025 through the merger of PetroSA, iGas and the Strategic Fuel Fund. Positioned as the country’s petroleum champion, SANPC is intended to anchor state participation across the value chain as South Africa works toward 6 GW of gas-fired power by 2030.

As AEW 2026 prepares to convene policymakers, investors and operators at the Cape Town International Convention Centre from October 12-16, Mantashe’s address carries added weight as the host nation’s signal to the market. His message is expected to be direct: South Africa is open for upstream investment and ready to move from potential to production.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

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Business

Mining Review Africa expands coverage to include global mining news

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vukagroup

The expanded editorial scope aligns with Vuka Group’s commitment to delivering timely, relevant and insightful content that supports informed decision-making across the mining value chain

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, June 8, 2026/APO Group/ –Vuka Group’s Mining Review Africa (https://WeAreVUKA.com), a leading source of mining industry news and insights, is expanding its editorial coverage to include major mining developments from around the world.

 

While Mining Review Africa remains firmly committed to reporting on the opportunities, challenges and successes shaping Africa’s mining sector, readers will now also benefit from coverage of international projects, investments, technologies, commodity markets and policy developments influencing the global mining industry.

The move reflects the increasingly interconnected nature of the mining sector, where developments in one region can have significant implications for investment decisions, supply chains, commodity markets, and mining operations worldwide.

Expanding our coverage enables us to deliver a more comprehensive view of the mining industry while maintaining our strong focus on Africa

“As the mining industry continues to evolve on a global scale, our readers are seeking greater context around international developments that impact Africa and the wider resources sector,” said Mining Review Africa Editor-in-Chief, Gerard Peter.

“Expanding our coverage enables us to deliver a more comprehensive view of the mining industry while maintaining our strong focus on Africa.”

Readers can expect enhanced reporting on major mining projects, mergers and acquisitions, sustainability initiatives, technological innovation, critical minerals, energy transition developments and regulatory changes from key mining jurisdictions worldwide.

The expanded editorial scope aligns with Vuka Group’s commitment to delivering timely, relevant and insightful content that supports informed decision-making across the mining value chain.

Mining Review Africa has established itself as a trusted voice within the African mining industry, providing news, analysis and thought leadership for mining professionals, investors, suppliers and policymakers. By broadening its coverage, the publication aims to give readers a deeper understanding of the global forces shaping the future of mining, while continuing to place African mining stories at the centre of its reporting.

For readers, this means access to a wider range of industry intelligence, bringing together African mining news and key international developments on a single trusted platform.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of VUKA Group.

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Energy

Libya Energy & Economic Summit (LEES) 2027 to Define Libya’s Next Phase of Energy Expansion in Tripoli

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Etu Energias

Returning for its fifth edition, LEES 2027 will advance Libya’s $18 billion energy pipeline, targeting 1.6–2 million bpd, gas megaprojects and renewables

TRIPOLI, Libya, June 4, 2026/APO Group/ –The fifth edition of the Libya Energy & Economic Summit (LEES) 2027 returns to Tripoli on January 23–25. Positioned as Libya’s landmark energy event, LEES serves as the country’s premier international platform for investment, technical collaboration and private sector engagement across oil, gas, power and renewables.

 

LEES 2027 builds directly on the outcomes of LEES 2026, which marked Libya’s shift from post-recovery stabilization to execution-led development. The 2026 edition established an estimated $18 billion pipeline of energy and infrastructure projects and repositioned the sector from ambition to delivery, setting the foundation for the 2027 summit’s execution-focused agenda.

 

A central focus for 2027 is upstream acceleration. The National Oil Corporation’s (NOC) 2026 licensing round introduced 22 on- and offshore exploration blocks, the country’s first in 17 years, alongside a mandate to drill 70 to 100 new wells annually. With support from the Ministry of Oil & Gas, LEES 2027 will evaluate initial seismic results, contract awards and the transition from exploration rights into operational development phases.

Production expansion remains a core investment theme. Libya’s output stabilized at approximately 1.4 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2026, with LEES 2027 targeting pathways toward 1.6 million bpd in the near term and a long-term ambition of 2 million bpd. The summit – endorsed directly by the NOC – will focus on infrastructure bottlenecks, field optimization and midstream capacity required to support higher output levels.

 

Gas monetization and large-scale infrastructure development will also feature prominently. Eni’s $8 billion offshore Structures A&E project remains on track for completion by late 2027, while discussions around Chevron-linked shale studies highlight potential resources estimated at 123 trillion cubic feet of gas and 18 billion barrels of oil across key basins, including Sirte, Murzuq and Ghadames.

Moving from licensing and planning into large-scale execution and infrastructure delivery, LEES 2027 is a focal point for this critical transformation in Libya’s energy sector

 

The sector aims to attract an estimated $3–4 billion in annual drilling investment following unified drilling regulations announced in 2026. LEES 2027 will assess early implementation outcomes, including operational safety, fiscal predictability and contract execution efficiency across upstream assets.

 

Meanwhile, Libya’s 4 GW solar roadmap is advancing, anchored by TotalEnergies’ 500 MW Sadada solar project. Supported by the Renewable Energy Authority of Libya as an institutional partner, LEES 2027 is expected to focus on financial close milestones, construction timelines and the scaling of independent power purchase structures within the national grid strategy.

 

Human capital development will also remain a strategic pillar at next year’s event, with the Energy JEEL initiative having trained more than 900 youth participants aged 15–35 in engineering, digital systems and energy operations, forming a national talent pipeline aligned with Libya’s long-term energy transition and industrial expansion goals.

Against this backdrop, LEES 2027 – which takes place at the Tripoli International Convention Center – will serve as the sector’s execution benchmark, converting licensing frameworks, infrastructure commitments and production targets into operational outcomes across hydrocarbons, power generation and next-generation energy systems.

 

“Moving from licensing and planning into large-scale execution and infrastructure delivery, LEES 2027 is a focal point for this critical transformation in Libya’s energy sector,” says James Chester, CEO of LEES 2027 organizer Energy Capital & Power. “It will be a defining platform where investment commitments from 2026 are translated into measurable production, capacity expansion and long-term energy security outcomes.”

 

Join industry leaders at the Libya Energy & Economic Summit 2027 in Tripoli and explore investment opportunities in one of Africa’s most dynamic energy markets. LEES 2027 offers a premier platform for partnerships, innovation and sector growth. Visit www.LibyaSummit.com to secure your participation. To sponsor or participate as a delegate, please contact sales@energycapitalpower.com

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

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