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China-Africa Energy Investment and Cooperation to be Showcased at Investor Forum in Shanghai

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Invest in African Energy

Taking place March 13, 2025, the Invest in African Energies investor forum will explore new opportunities for Chinese companies in Africa

SHANGHAI, China, February 18, 2025/APO Group/ –The African Energy Chamber (AEC) (https://EnergyChamber.org) – serving as the voice of the African energy sector – will host the Invest in African Energies investor forum in Shanghai on March 13, 2025. The forum will focus on building stronger China-Africa relations, while opening new avenues for Chinese producers, investors and equipment suppliers to expand their footprint across the continent.

Taking place at the Westin Bund Center in Shanghai, the investor forum builds on a series of impactful investor forums hosted globally. The forum will highlight emerging investment opportunities in Africa, while highlighting the role Chinese firms can play in driving projects forward. As part of the visit, the AEC will also be meeting with government officials, state companies, private companies and entrepreneurs encouraging greater collaboration between Africa and China across the oil and gas, mining and renewable sector.

China has become Africa’s largest bilateral trading partner in the last 20 years, with trade volumes amounting to $282 billion (2023). Primary commodities such as fuel, mineral products and metals represent three-fifths of Africa’s exports to China, while Chinese firms continue to expand their presence across the continent. Chinese exploration and production companies are already showing strong signs of increasing investment in Africa. Wing Wah, for example, is pioneering an integrated natural gas project in the Republic of Congo, designed to boost gas monetization and reduce previously-flared resources. Over three phases, the $2 billion Bango Kayo conventional block will produce 30 billion cubic meters of associated gas over a 25-year period.

Africa is wide open for energy business with Chinese companies, especially with the G20 coming to Africa this year

The state-owned China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) also has a strong presence across the continent. In Angola, the company is exploring investment opportunities, visiting the country in 2024 to discuss the deepwater Block 24. In East Africa, CNOOC is developing the East African Crude Oil Pipeline alongside TotalEnergies and the respective national oil companies of Uganda and Tanzania. At a cost of $5 billion, the 1,443-km pipeline will connect Uganda’s Kingfisher and Tilenga oilfields to Tanzania’s Port of Tanga. The pipeline will come online in 2026. CNOOC has also partnered with the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation to explore deep-sea Block 4/1B and 4/1C and is considering investing in South Sudan’s Blocks 3 and 7. In West Africa, CNOOC is conducting wildcat drilling at Blocks BC-9 and BCD-10.

The China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) is also investing heavily in upstream oil and gas projects. These include the Coral South FLNG development in Mozambique’s Area 4, which exported its first LNG cargo in 2022. CNPC also signed a $400 million crude oil supply agreement in 2024 with the government of Niger, with the company selling crude from its Agadem field. The CNPC is developing a 1,980km pipeline connecting the Agadem Rift Basin in Niger to Benin’s Atlantic Oil Terminal. These are just some of the many projects underway by the CNPC in Africa. Chinese independent United Energy Group (UEG) is on track to double its Egyptian output following the acquisition of Apex International Energy’s Western Desert portfolio. The project will increase UEG’s production by 22,100 barrels per day. UEG currently holds 5 concessions in Egypt’s Western and Eastern Deserts.

In addition to exploration and production firms, Chinese equipment suppliers and service providers are supporting the development of oil and gas projects in Africa. Construction firm China National Chemical Engineering, for example, is supporting the development of Angola’s Lobito Refinery – poised to be the largest in the country with 200,000 barrels per day capacity. The company has also expressed interest in supporting the development of Nigeria’s $20 billion Ogidigben gas project in Delta. Through the Belt and Road Initiative, China is encouraging further participation by Chinese equipment suppliers and infrastructure developers in Africa. The initiative seeks to create trade corridors across the continent, offering new opportunities for cross-border collaboration.

“China has proven that it is a strong partner for Africa. From upstream oil and gas projects to downstream infrastructure developments to renewable energy, power facilities and transportation corridors, Chinese firms are eager to support African development. The forum will build on this interest to connect Chinese firms to African projects,” states NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the AEC.

“Africa is wide open for energy business with Chinese companies, especially with the G20 coming to Africa this year and African Energy Week will play a lead role as the home of G20 Africa energy investments. We continue to encourage innovation and investment in our energy sector and encourage African states to move faster on creating a business climate where businesses of any type and size can grow and thrive, in our continent,” concluded Ayuk.

The forum serves as a prelude to the African Energy Week (AEW): Invest in African Energies conference, returning for its next edition from September 29 to October 3 in Cape Town. As the largest energy event on the continent, AEW 2025 seeks to drive a new wave of investment into African energy projects. As one of the continent’s biggest trade and finance partners, China’s role in driving projects forward will be discussed during the conference.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

Business

Utilities urged to close the performance gap in smart meter programmes

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performance

Improved revenue collection, accurate billing and clearer visibility of consumption remain persistent challenges for organisations that have invested in smart metering infrastructure

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, May 12, 2026/APO Group/ –Smart meters have already been deployed across many utilities and municipalities, yet the expected returns are still not being fully realised.

 

Improved revenue collection, accurate billing and clearer visibility of consumption remain persistent challenges for organisations that have invested in smart metering infrastructure.

To address this gap, ESI Africa, part of VUKA Group, and GridLens Energy will host a live webinar titled “Maximising smart meter returns” on Tuesday, 2 June 2026 from 14:00 to 15:00 SAST.

The webinar will take a practical look at where smart metering programmes underperform after deployment and what utilities, municipalities and energy users can do to improve outcomes from systems already in place.

Across the sector, common challenges include underutilised data, poor system integration, revenue leakage, billing inaccuracies and limited operational visibility. For many organisations, the issue is not whether to invest in smart metering, but how to extract measurable performance from the investment already made.

The session will bring together experts from GridLens Energy, Drakenstein Municipality and eThekwini Municipality to unpack the technical, financial and operational barriers that prevent smart metering programmes from delivering their full value.

Webinar details

Title: Maximising smart meter returns
Date: Tuesday, 2 June 2026
Time: 14:00 to 15:00 SAST
Registration: https://apo-opa.co/4dCRUcD

Expert speakers

  • Carson Dean, Founder, GridLens Energy
  • Hilton Smith, Chief Accountant: Water and Electricity Billing, Drakenstein Municipality, South Africa
  • Sindisiwe Shozi, Chief Engineer, eThekwini Municipality, South Africa

Key discussion points will include:

  • Why smart meter programmes often fail to deliver expected returns
  • Where value is lost across data, systems and operations
  • How to improve billing accuracy and reduce revenue leakage
  • The role of integration and interoperability in improving performance
  • Practical approaches to extracting more value from existing deployments

The webinar is designed for utilities, municipalities, metering teams, billing departments, revenue managers, infrastructure decision-makers, large commercial and industrial energy users, technology providers and system integrators.

Smart metering investment has already been made. The priority now is performance.

Register for the webinar here:
https://apo-opa.co/4dCRUcD

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of VUKA Group.

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Energy

Global Energy Bodies Converge at African Energy Week (AEW) 2026 to Shape the Continent’s Energy Future

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African Energy Chamber

From electrification to refining resilience and exploration strategy, leading international alliances will bring a systems-level approach to Africa’s evolving energy landscape at African Energy Week 2026

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, May 11, 2026/APO Group/ –As Africa accelerates efforts to balance energy security, industrial growth and decarbonization, African Energy Week (AEW) 2026 will convene a powerful cohort of global associations whose work is increasingly defining the trajectory of the continent’s energy systems. The participation of Nikki Martin, President & CEO of EnerGeo Alliance; Anibor Kragha, Executive Secretary of the African Refiners & Distributors Association (ARDA); and Carol Koech, Vice President for Africa at the Global Energy Alliance for People and Planet (GEAPP), signals a shift toward deeper coordination across the full energy value chain – from subsurface data and upstream investment to downstream infrastructure and universal energy access.

 

EnerGeo Alliance, under Martin’s leadership, has been advancing the role of geoscience and data-driven exploration in de-risking investments across frontier markets. Its recent strategic engagements, including partnerships supporting renewed exploration activity in countries such as Libya, reflect a broader push to bring technical rigor and investor confidence back into African upstream sectors. By strengthening the link between subsurface intelligence and policy decisions, EnerGeo is helping governments position their resources more competitively in a capital-constrained global market.

 

Complementing this upstream focus, ARDA has been at the forefront of reinforcing Africa’s downstream resilience. At its 2026 annual conference, the association underscored energy security as a top priority, with refiners across the continent moving to shield themselves from global market volatility and supply disruptions. This comes as Africa continues to expand refining capacity and reduce dependence on imported petroleum products, a shift that is critical not only for economic sovereignty but also for stabilizing domestic energy markets. ARDA’s work increasingly intersects with broader industrialization goals, positioning refining and distribution networks as key enablers of growth.

 

The participation of organizations like EnerGeo Alliance, ARDA and GEAPP reflects the increasing alignment we are seeing across the global energy landscape

Bridging these traditional energy systems with the continent’s long-term transition ambitions is GEAPP, where Koech leads the organization’s Africa strategy. The alliance has rapidly emerged as a central force in mobilizing blended finance for large-scale electrification and renewable deployment. In 2026, GEAPP and its partners surpassed $100 million in commitments to support Mission 300 – an initiative aimed at connecting 300 million Africans to electricity by 2030 – while simultaneously working to unlock far greater flows of public and private capital. Through technical assistance, project development and market-shaping interventions, GEAPP is helping translate high-level ambition into bankable projects across nearly two dozen countries.

 

“African Energy Week has always been about bringing together the right partners at the right time,” said NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber. “The participation of organizations like EnerGeo Alliance, ARDA and GEAPP reflects the increasing alignment we are seeing across the global energy landscape. These are institutions that are not only shaping policy and investment, but actively delivering solutions on the ground – and their engagement at AEW 2026 will be instrumental in advancing Africa’s energy ambitions.”

 

As AEW continues to evolve into a platform for integrated energy dialogue, the inclusion of these global associations reinforces its role as a convening point for the partnerships that will define Africa’s next phase of growth. Their participation reflects the growing recognition that Africa’s energy future cannot be addressed through fragmented approaches, but through coordinated action across sectors, institutions and geographies.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

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From Megawatt (MW) to Gigawatt (GW): Why Africa Must Think in Grid-Scale Power to Compete in the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Economy

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African Energy Chamber

As AI infrastructure drives power demand into the gigawatt range, Africa must move beyond incremental energy planning – placing grid-scale generation at the center of discussions at African Energy Week 2026’s AI and Data Center Track

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, May 11, 2026/APO Group/ –The rapid expansion of artificial intelligence is fundamentally reshaping global energy demand, with implications that extend well beyond traditional power planning. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the growing energy footprint of data centers. Facilities that once required tens of megawatts are now being developed at 100–200 MW scale, with hyperscale campuses increasingly aggregating demand into the gigawatt range.

 

This shift presents a structural challenge for Africa. While the continent is rich in energy resources, its planning frameworks remain largely oriented around incremental, megawatt-scale additions – often tied to localized demand or short-term capacity gaps. In the context of AI-driven infrastructure, this approach is increasingly misaligned with the scale and concentration of future demand.

Africa’s data center sector, while growing, remains at an early stage. Operational capacity currently stands at approximately 300–400 MW, with projections reaching 1.5–2.2 GW by 2030. At the same time, demand is accelerating rapidly: electricity consumption from data centers is rising at 20–25% annually and is expected to reach around 8,000 GWh in the near term. This growth mirrors a broader global surge, with data center power demand projected to approach 945 TWh by 2030, driven largely by AI workloads.

This is ultimately about aligning Africa’s energy strategy with where global demand is heading

What distinguishes AI-related demand is not only its scale, but its concentration and consistency. Unlike many traditional industrial loads, data centers require uninterrupted, high-quality power, often with built-in redundancy. This places new demands on grid design, prioritizing stability, capacity and long-term scalability over incremental expansion.

Meeting these requirements will require a departure from conventional planning models. Rather than adding capacity in small increments, there is a growing case for developing gigawatt-scale generation aligned with emerging digital infrastructure hubs. This means integrating power generation, transmission and data center development into coordinated investment strategies, particularly in markets with strong resource bases and improving regulatory environments.

It also requires a shift in how excess capacity is viewed. In many African power systems, surplus generation has historically been treated as a financial inefficiency. In the context of AI and digital infrastructure, however, maintaining a margin of available capacity can enhance grid stability, reduce outages and provide the flexibility needed to support rapid load growth, while creating a foundation for broader industrial development.

A useful benchmark can be seen in Northern Virginia, the world’s largest data center market, where installed capacity has now exceeded 4 GW and more than 1 GW of new supply was added in a single year, reflecting the rapid pace at which hyperscale infrastructure is being deployed. Driven by major cloud and AI players, demand has tightened the market significantly, with vacancy rates approaching zero and most new capacity released well in advance. The scale and speed of development highlight how quickly data center demand is expanding – and underscore the level at which infrastructure must be planned.

These dynamics are increasingly shaping the policy conversation. At African Energy Week 2026, the AI and Data Center Track will focus on the infrastructure required to support this transition, with a particular emphasis on aligning energy planning with digital economy objectives. As AI infrastructure scales, reliable and abundant power is no longer a supporting factor, but a prerequisite.

“This is ultimately about aligning Africa’s energy strategy with where global demand is heading,” says NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber. “If we continue to plan in megawatts, we will struggle to compete in an economy that is already moving at the gigawatt scale. Building larger, more resilient power systems is not just about meeting demand – it is about creating the conditions for investment, innovation and long-term growth.”

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

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