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African Energy Chamber Amplifies Diversity Fight in Africa’s Energy Sector

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Africa’s energy renaissance, the Chamber argues, must be defined not only by reserves, LNG terminals or licensing rounds — but by who holds influence and who benefits from growth

SANDTON, South Africa, March 5, 2026/APO Group/ –As Africa’s oil and gas sector gathers unprecedented momentum — buoyed by major discoveries, renewed exploration campaigns and intensifying global demand for diversified supply — the African Energy Chamber (AEC) (https://EnergyChamber.org) has sharpened a parallel and increasingly vocal campaign: ensuring that Africa’s energy renaissance is not built on exclusion.

In a firm public statement that has reverberated across industry circles, the Chamber declared that as Africa’s oil and gas sector expands, investment must “guarantee African participation, reject discrimination and uphold local content.” It warned that in the coming weeks it will engage African officials and industry leaders to secure “clear commitments to inclusive hiring and equal opportunity,” adding pointedly that “where progress is absent, we will exercise our lawful right to protest.”

The message marks the latest escalation in what has become a sustained, multi-year advocacy push targeting global conference organizers and industry platforms that derive significant revenue from African markets but, according to the AEC, fail to reflect Africa in their leadership structures.

A Campaign Years in the Making

The current confrontation did not emerge overnight. Over the past several years, the AEC has issued multiple press releases, public letters and statements addressing what it describes as systemic exclusion within certain international energy forums.

Among those most frequently cited are Frontier Energy Network, organizer of the Africa Energies Summit in London, and Hyve Group, a global exhibitions firm with significant exposure to African-focused extractive industry events.

In successive communications dating back several conference cycles, the Chamber has called for structural reform, urging these entities to hire, promote and empower African professionals — including Black women — into senior executive and board-level positions.

The AEC argues that while African ministers, national oil companies, regulators and indigenous firms are prominently featured on stage at major summits, decision-making power within the organizing companies remains largely non-African.

To reinforce its position, the Chamber has publicly circulated graphics highlighting what it says is the near absence of Africans on boards and executive leadership teams of these organizations — despite the fact that a substantial portion of sponsorship revenue, delegate participation and thematic focus centers on Africa.

For the AEC, this disconnect is not symbolic — it is structural.

NJ Ayuk: “Inclusion Is Not Optional”

Executive Chairman NJ Ayuk has been at the forefront of the campaign, framing it as a matter of principle rather than rivalry.

“Africa’s energy future cannot be dictated from boardrooms that do not include Africans,” Ayuk has said in connection with the Chamber’s recent statements. “If you are making substantial revenue from African markets, hosting Africa-focused events and leveraging African participation, then Africans must be part of your leadership and governance structures.”

He has consistently rejected the notion that the campaign is confrontational for its own sake. Instead, he presents it as aligned with the continent’s local content laws and sovereignty agenda.

“We are not asking for favors. We are demanding fairness, merit-based opportunity and respect. Africa cannot champion local content at home while tolerating exclusion abroad.”

Frontier Energy Network in the Spotlight

In its most recent release on exclusion, the Chamber directly cited Frontier Energy Network, reigniting scrutiny around the Africa Energies Summit.

The AEC contends that while the summit convenes high-level African participation — including ministers, regulators and executives — the internal hiring and leadership structure of the organizing body does not adequately reflect African professionals.

“Frontier Energy Network’s hiring practices – widely understood across the industry to exclude Black professionals – are wrong. Full stop,” the AEC said. It further warned that organizations earning substantial revenue from Africans cannot expect to benefit from African markets while denying fair employment to Africans.

Following publication of the Chamber’s latest statement naming Frontier, Pan African Visions reached out via email to Frontier Energy Network seeking comment and reaction. At press time, no formal response had been received.

However, shortly after the AEC’s renewed charge, Frontier’s Founder and CEO, Gayle Meikle, published a detailed LinkedIn essay titled “Frontier CEO Brief: What Is an African?”

While the post did not directly reference the Chamber’s allegations, it addressed themes central to the debate — identity, sovereignty and partnership.

“I am an African woman. I am Zimbabwean. I was born in Zimbabwe. That is who I am,” Meikle wrote, emphasizing Africa’s diversity across 54 sovereign states and more than 2,000 languages. She cautioned against reducing Africa to binary definitions of who is “African enough,” politically or economically.

Meikle underscored Africa’s civilizational depth — from Arab and Amazigh communities in the north to Yoruba, Igbo, Swahili, Shona, Zulu and Xhosa traditions — and argued that Africa’s resources must serve African development first.

“Africa welcomes investment, but it expects partnership,” she wrote. “Sovereignty and collaboration are not in conflict; they are mutually reinforcing.”

She concluded with a personal declaration: “No one grants me that agency. It is inherent. And anyone who attempts to diminish it will discover that it cannot be taken.”

Ayuk’s Direct Rebuttal

The LinkedIn post drew an immediate and sharply worded response from Ayuk.

In a public post visible on and off LinkedIn, Ayuk accused Frontier’s leadership of avoiding the core issue.

“Don’t pee on my leg and tell me it’s raining,” Ayuk wrote, stating that he had received outreach from industry professionals offended by what he described as a “No Blacks employment policy in 2026.”

He called directly on Meikle and Frontier executive Daniel Davidson to commit to hiring Black professionals.

“Don’t just beg them to come to Africa Energies Summit® and give you their money. Your brothers and sisters are qualified and need jobs. Hire them,” Ayuk wrote.

Africa’s energy future cannot be dictated from boardrooms that do not include Africans

He further warned that African professionals were privately indicating they would not attend the summit if the alleged exclusionary hiring practices continued.

“A lot of Africans are already telling me in private they will not attend because of this race-based no blacks hiring policy. Don’t spend your money where you can’t work.”

Ayuk’s post went beyond institutional critique and focused particularly on Black women in the energy sector.

He recounted a conversation with a young woman in the seismic industry who told him that white male executives often pave the way for white women to be hired, while Black women must “fight hard” for similar opportunities — especially within companies profiting from African markets.

“In today’s oil industry, black women are still the last hired and the first fired,” Ayuk wrote. He emphasized that Black women often navigate the intersection of race and gender as dual minorities in senior roles, facing unique mental health and professional pressures.

Quoting Maya Angelou, he concluded: “Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better.”

Hyve Group and Boardroom Representation

Similarly, Hyve Group has been the subject of sustained criticism from the African Energy Chamber — most forcefully articulated in 2024 — over what the Chamber described as a persistent absence of African leadership within a company that derives substantial revenue from African markets.

In a strongly worded 2024 statement, the AEC argued that while Hyve plays a pivotal role in Africa’s energy and mining landscape through flagship events such as Mining Indaba and Africa Oil Week, its executive and board-level leadership did not reflect the continent from which it earns significant commercial returns.

“It is disheartening to note that despite being a major beneficiary of Africa’s economic contributions, Hyve Group has yet to usher in a leadership team that reflects the rich diversity and talent pool present on the continent,” the Chamber stated at the time.

The AEC further contended that prevailing hiring practices based on personal networks, trust and familiarity perpetuate exclusionary patterns that leave qualified African professionals — including Black women — outside decision-making circles.

Executive Chairman NJ Ayuk contrasted Hyve’s leadership composition with what he described as the oil and gas industry’s stronger track record in promoting African talent.

“The Oil and Gas industry that I love and champion is the greatest advocate for hiring Africans. It has trained Africans, promoted them, and many have become great entrepreneurs today,” Ayuk said in 2024. “That’s why I love Oil and Gas.”

He expressed disappointment at what he described as a disconnect between Hyve’s commercial success in Africa and its internal leadership structure.

“Hyve Group makes a huge part of its revenue from Africa, yet no African is in its leadership. They hire people they know, they trust and like. We’re not in that circle. I am very disappointed,” Ayuk stated. “People of African heritage are greater participants and sponsors of their programs. I believe they are capable of doing the leadership jobs, but there has not been an adequate commitment to hire and promote them at Hyve Group.”

Ayuk also argued that corporate rebranding and public-facing diversity messaging must translate into measurable structural change.

“Their rebranding and wokeness must lead to some inclusion and vice versa; otherwise, their wokeness is pure self-indulgence.”

The Chamber framed the issue as one of fairness, economic reciprocity and governance consistency, particularly for countries such as South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, Namibia and Tanzania that actively support and host Hyve events.

“We cannot accept that in 2024, companies doing business in Africa and earning huge revenues will not have Blacks in leadership,” Ayuk said. “Africans must not buy where they can’t work.”

He further called for greater transparency around tax contributions linked to African-hosted exhibitions, urging disclosure of VAT collections and payments to relevant revenue authorities.

While the 2024 statement focused squarely on Hyve’s governance structure at that time, the broader principle articulated by the Chamber has since evolved into a wider campaign encompassing multiple global event organizers: diversity must extend beyond speaker lineups and branding to executive authority, hiring pipelines and boardroom representation.

“Inclusion cannot stop at the podium,” Ayuk has repeatedly maintained. “It must extend to governance, strategy and ownership of the narrative.”

As Africa’s energy and mining sectors continue to expand, the Chamber argues that companies profiting from the continent’s markets must align their internal leadership structures with the local content and economic sovereignty principles increasingly enforced across African jurisdictions.

The message — first forcefully delivered in 2024 — remains central to the AEC’s current push: representation is not optional, and economic partnership without leadership inclusion is unsustainable.

A Growing Ripple Effect

What distinguishes the current phase of the campaign is its intensity and visibility.

The public exchange between Frontier’s CEO and the AEC Chairman has transformed what was once a policy dispute into a high-profile industry debate about race, governance and economic sovereignty.

Industry insiders suggest some companies and institutions are quietly reassessing their participation in forums organized by entities facing exclusion allegations. While no major withdrawals have been publicly announced, reputational risk has become part of the calculation.

African state-owned enterprises and regulators — increasingly conscious of domestic local content laws — face growing pressure to align external partnerships with internal policy commitments.

Redefining Global Engagement with Africa

As energy security reshapes geopolitical priorities, Africa is emerging not as a peripheral supplier but as a strategic partner.

The AEC’s campaign seeks to ensure that this partnership reflects equity not only in rhetoric, but in leadership and employment structures.

Africa’s energy renaissance, the Chamber argues, must be defined not only by reserves, LNG terminals or licensing rounds — but by who holds influence and who benefits from growth.

“Africa’s energy renaissance must include Africans at every level,” Ayuk has insisted. “We will continue to fight for that principle — respectfully, lawfully and persistently.”

With the Africa Energies Summit approaching, the pressure shows no sign of easing. What began as a governance question has evolved into a broader reckoning over representation, partnership and the future architecture of Africa’s global energy engagement.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

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Dietsmann Brings its Energy Maintenance and Robotics Expertise to African Energy Week (AEW) 2026

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After decades keeping Africa’s oil, gas and power plants running, Dietsmann is bringing robotics and AI to the center of its work

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, June 12, 2026/APO Group/ –Dietsmann, the independent specialist in operation and maintenance (O&M) services for energy production facilities, will participate as a Bronze Sponsor at African Energy Week (AEW) 2026 – taking place from October 12-16 in Cape Town. The sponsorship deepens a presence in African energy that stretches back decades and reflects the company’s growing role in the policy conversation after it joined the African Energy Chamber (https://EnergyChamber.org) earlier this year.

 

Dietsmann’s participation at AEW 2026 reflects the growing role of specialist maintenance contractors in Africa’s energy industry. With much of the continent’s production now coming from mature fields, the contractors that keep those facilities running reliably and at lower cost have become more important than ever. Dietsmann has built its position over more than four decades, maintaining oil, gas and power plants across Angola, Nigeria, Gabon, Libya, Uganda and South Sudan, often in demanding offshore and remote environments.

The company’s expertise is also on display in the Republic of Congo, where industrial maintenance is its core business. There it maintains TotalEnergies’ offshore production facilities and services the 484 MW gas-fired Centrale Électrique du Congo, one of the country’s main power plants. In Angola, it has operated since 2000 through Sonadiets, a joint venture with Sonangol that was among the first of its kind between an African national oil company and a maintenance specialist.

Dietsmann knows that reliable operations are the foundation of energy security

Dietsmann also prioritizes workforce development in parallel to its technical work. The firm has organized local training programs in all its African host countries since the early 2000s, building maintenance skills among national employees through dedicated training centers and on-the-job campaigns. Its approach aligns closely with the local-content priorities that are defining this moment in African energy policy.

Maintenance itself is being reshaped by technology, and Dietsmann is among the contractors leading the shift across Africa. In partnership with the robotics firm Taurob, the company has deployed autonomous inspection robots, including ATEX-certified units built for hazardous environments, and is integrating drones and AI-based analytics to move maintenance from reactive repairs toward predictive monitoring.

The company’s CEO Cesare Canevese has carried a consistent message into African energy circles: reliable maintenance, digitalization and local skills are non-negotiables for continental energy security. He also notes that Dietsmann’s expertise travels across the energy transition, as the fundamentals of maintaining a facility change little whether it produces oil, gas or power – readying the company for work on Africa’s growing gas-to-power and LNG projects.

“Dietsmann knows that reliable operations are the foundation of energy security,” said NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber. “Pairing decades of field experience with new technology and local skills development is how Africa keeps its existing assets producing for longer.”

As a Bronze Sponsor at AEW 2026, Dietsmann is expected to feature in discussions on operational reliability, local content and the digital technologies reshaping how Africa maintains its energy infrastructure.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

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How Angola Made Local Content a Strategic Pillar of its Oil & Gas Sector

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NJ Ayuk’s latest book, “Crude Oil: Power, Turnaround and Transformation in Angola,” illustrates how embedding local content as a core policy priority can reshape an entire energy ecosystem – from finance to skills development and indigenous enterprise growth

Across Africa, local content has long been treated as a compliance requirement, added onto projects rather than built into them. Angola is charting a different course, positioning local participation as a central driver of long-term value. As NJ Ayuk explores in his newly released Crude Oil: Power, Turnaround and Transformation in Angola, the country is redefining the role of indigenous companies within its oil and gas sector – and, in doing so, reshaping the industry itself.

 

This shift is part of a broader reform agenda. After years of declining production and reduced upstream investment, Angola moved to restore competitiveness, not just through fiscal reforms, but by rethinking how value is created and retained domestically.

A turning point came with Presidential Decree 271/20 in October 2020. The law strengthened and expanded local content requirements, making Angolan participation fundamental to the sector’s future. As President João Lourenço emphasized, the framework is designed to “aid in wealth creation and the promotion of economic diversification” while increasing the role of Angolan-owned companies.

At the institutional level, regulators such as the National Agency for Petroleum, Gas and Biofuels (ANPG) and the Petroleum Derivatives Regulatory Institute (IRDP) have embedded local content provisions into contracts, ensuring that international operators integrate local firms into their core operations.

At the same time, a supporting ecosystem has taken shape. Industry bodies like Angolan Indigenous Oil & Gas Service Companies Association (ASSEA) and the Association of Service Providers of the Angolan Oil & Gas Industry (AECIPA) are helping indigenous companies scale and compete, while demand for local services continues to rise. As AECIPA President Bráulio de Brito puts it in the book, “rather than companies coming in and looking for people, they are looking for companies.” Angolan firms are no longer acting as intermediaries, but taking on a more direct and substantive role as essential service providers.

Rather than companies coming in and looking for people, they are looking for companies

State-owned Sonangol has reinforced this trajectory by prioritizing domestic supply chains and capacity-building. Across the sector, stakeholders – from regulators to operators – are aligning around a shared goal: building Angolan capability at scale.

The impact is increasingly visible. Local companies are securing contracts across the value chain, from chemical supply and offshore services to inspection and certification. These roles point to a growing presence of local companies in the core operations of the industry.

The role of finance is equally critical, as Ayuk notes in Crude Oil. By extending local content requirements to the banking sector, Angola has addressed one of the key barriers to participation: access to capital. Domestic banks can now co-finance projects and support oilfield service providers. Institutions such as Banco BCS are offering tailored solutions – from factoring to foreign currency payments – enabling local companies to compete more effectively.

Meanwhile, partnerships with international oil companies are increasingly focused on knowledge transfer. Training programs, STEM initiatives and workforce development efforts led by operators such as ExxonMobil and TotalEnergies are helping build a more skilled, inclusive talent base, ensuring local content extends beyond ownership to expertise.

As Angola’s Minister of Mineral Resources, Oil & Gas Diamantino Azevedo has emphasized, local content is about integrating Angolan businesses into the sector, promoting technology and fostering competitive markets. It is, in effect, a tool for broader economic diversification, with spillover effects across industries from logistics to construction.

According to Ayuk, the rise of companies like Etu Energias – Angola’s largest private oil company – underscores what this model can deliver. With ambitious growth targets and an expanding portfolio, it represents a new generation of indigenous firms moving from participation to leadership.

Angola’s experience offers a clear lesson: local content works best when it is intentional, enforced and backed by institutions and capital. By embedding it at the heart of its oil and gas strategy, Angola is not only strengthening its industry, but redefining who benefits from it.

Crude Oil: Power, Turnaround and Transformation in Angola is now available for purchase. Buy the book on Amazon (https://apo-opa.co/4olvqAF)

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

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Venezuela Energy Week 2026 to Define New Investment Pathways as Hydrocarbons and Power Sector Reforms Move into Implementation

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Venezuela Energy Week will serve as a key platform for clarifying how international capital can re-enter the hydrocarbons and power sectors through evolving operational and financial structures

CARACAS, Venezuela, June 10, 2026/APO Group/ –Venezuela Energy Week (VEW) 2026 is set to become a focal point for how the country’s hydrocarbons reforms are translating from policy into practice, as government stakeholders, PDVSA and international operators work to define the practical routes for investment entry into the oil and gas sector. With reforms now moving into implementation, attention is shifting from regulatory design toward the mechanisms that will determine how participation is structured, financed and sustained.

 

Venezuela’s current framework is being operationalized through a limited set of established and negotiated channels, including participation in PDVSA joint ventures, crude-backed repayment structures and production-linked agreements tied to existing oilfields. International operators such as Chevron, for instance, remain active within existing joint venture structures, including Petropiar in the Orinoco Belt and Petroboscán in western Zulia, which continue to underpin production and export activity under PDVSA-led arrangements.

Alongside joint venture activity, crude-based repayment mechanisms are becoming an increasingly important financial pathway for foreign participation. These arrangements – including crude-for-debt structures and production-linked repayment agreements – allow international partners to recover value through physical oil cargoes or allocated output rather than conventional financial transfers.

Companies such as Repsol and Eni have operated within similar frameworks, where repayment structures effectively shape cash flow recovery, exposure management and the timing of capital return. However, these mechanisms continue to operate under constraints, including delayed settlements, non-standard payment schedules and ongoing uncertainty around contract enforcement, all of which continue to weigh on long-term reinvestment planning. VEW 2026 will help stakeholders assess how these frameworks can be refined to improve predictability, strengthen implementation and support more scalable and sustained investment participation.

Beyond hydrocarbons, Venezuela is beginning to open selective pathways in the power sector. Recent policy discussions and incremental reforms have pointed toward greater private participation in electricity generation, alongside early-stage efforts to improve operational efficiency across the grid and expand space for independent power producers. While still in a gradual phase of liberalization, these developments suggest an additional entry point for international and regional investors, particularly in generation, infrastructure rehabilitation and distributed energy solutions.

As reforms progress, VEW 2026 will serve as a key platform for aligning policy intent with operational realities, bringing together public and private stakeholders to assess how existing mechanisms are functioning in practice and where adjustments may be needed. Key issues such as payment timing, contractual enforcement and risk allocation remain central to the investment environment, shaping whether current frameworks can support scalable reinvestment or remain limited to sustaining baseline production. Beyond policy direction, the event will help clarify investment entry points and how capital can be deployed across both hydrocarbons and emerging power sector opportunities.

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

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