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Tripoli Prepares to Host Libya’s Premier Energy & Economic Summit This Week

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Energy Capital

With one week to go, LEES 2026 positions Libya as a high-impact destination for energy, infrastructure and investment partnerships

TRIPOLI, Libya, January 19, 2026/APO Group/ –Under the theme Infrastructure & Investment Driving Energy Growth, the fourth edition of the Libya Energy & Economic Summit (LEES) returns to Tripoli this week on January 24-26. As the country’s flagship investment forum, LEES 2026 arrives at a critical juncture in Libya’s economic recovery, providing a dedicated platform to unlock the capital and technical expertise required to revitalize national infrastructure and accelerate production across the energy value chain.

 

Organized by Energy Capital & Power and officially endorsed by the Office of the Prime Minister, the Ministry of Oil and Gas and the National Oil Corporation, the 2026 edition will, for the first time, span three full days, reflecting rising international interest in Libya’s energy and infrastructure opportunities.

A Summit Aligned with Libya’s Growth Ambitions

LEES 2026 takes place as Libya targets increasing oil production from 1.4 million barrels per day (bpd) to 1.6 million bpd by end-2026, with a longer-term ambition of 2 million bpd. Central to discussions is an estimated $18 billion pipeline of oil, gas, power and infrastructure projects, alongside Libya’s first international upstream licensing round in nearly two decades, offering 22 on- and offshore blocks.

Beyond hydrocarbons, the summit places strong emphasis on renewable energy and power infrastructure, showcasing projects such as the 500 MW Sadada solar plant – led by TotalEnergies – and Libya’s broader 4 GW renewables ambition, supported by the Renewable Energy Authority of Libya.

High-Level Speakers, Strategic Dialogue

The opening ceremony will feature keynote addresses from Libya’s Prime Minister Abdulhamid Al-Dbeibeh, Minister of Oil and Gas Dr. Khalifa Abdulsadek and Chairman of the state-owned National Oil Corporation, Masoud M. Suleman. Minister Abdulsadek will be joined during a Ministerial Panel Discussion by international counterparts from Turkey, Malta and Algeria.

Industry leadership at LEES 2026 reflects the depth of international engagement in Libya’s energy resurgence, with strong participation from Europe, North America and the Mediterranean region. Major energy-producing nations including France, Italy, Spain and the U.S. will be represented through national and international oil companies, including the likes of TotalEnergies, Eni, Repsol and ConocoPhillips, among others. All these firms have actively engaged the country to advance upstream development, gas monetization and energy security initiatives in Libya.

What to Expect

LEES 2026 will deliver a multi-track agenda specifically designed to accelerate investment and translate dialogue into executable projects. A series of themed panel discussions will address Libya’s strategic priorities, including gas monetization and flare reduction, power and grid modernization, and marginal field development, offering investors and operators clean insights into near-term opportunities and long-term sector reform.

Meanwhile, central to the event’s three-day agenda are the bilateral national roundtables, including U.S.-Libya, Italy-Libya, France-Libya and UK-Libya sessions, which provide structured platforms for high-level government engagement, private sector dialogue and B2B matchmaking. These roundtables are tailored to deepen trade relations, advance infrastructure recovery and unlock new partnerships across Libya’s oil, gas, power and logistics value chains.

Complementing the diplomatic and commercial discussions, the summit introduces a dedicated technical workshops day, featuring in-depth sessions on upstream optimization, enhanced oil recovery, AI-enabled monitoring and digital infrastructure, inspection, maintenance and repair, as well as renewable energy integration and grid performance.

Sponsors and Market Confidence

The depth of sponsorship at LEES 2026 underscores strong market confidence in the country. Diamond Plus Sponsor Assail Drilling Company is joined by Diamond Sponsors Eni, TotalEnergies, Repsol, OMV, ConocoPhillips and Melltiah Oil & Gas. SLB, NESR and Delta United Group headline the Gold tier, with broad support across Silver, Bronze and National sponsor levels.

With one week to go, LEES 2026 stands as the definitive platform for investors, operators and policymakers seeking direct access decision-makers, bankable projects and first-mover advantage in one of Africa’s most strategically important energy markets.

Join industry leaders at the Libya Energy & Economic Summit 2026 in Tripoli and explore investment opportunities in one of North Africa’s most dynamic energy markets. LEES 2026 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.

Energy

Rand Refinery Joins African Mining Week (AMW) as Silver Sponsor Amid Regional Market Expansion Strategy

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Energy Capital

African Mining Week 2026 will showcase lucrative investment, partnership, and knowledge-exchange opportunities across Africa’s gold downstream sector, as Rand Refinery intensifies its investment and expansion strategy across the continent

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, May 19, 2026/APO Group/ –Amid a strategy to expand from a South Africa-focused refiner into a pan-African downstream leader, Rand Refinery has joined African Mining Week (AMW), an Influential African Mining Conference, scheduled for October 14-16, 2026 in Cape Town, as a silver sponsor.

Rand Refinery’s participation reflects a broader strategic alignment between the company’s expansion agenda and AMW’s focus on supporting and enabling local beneficiation and promoting artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) responsible sourcing frameworks.

 

In terms of volumes, the latest market information indicates that Africa produces 1000tpa of mined gold (more than any other continent), with large-scale mining (LSM) and ASM being almost evenly balanced (500tpa production each). On its current trajectory, African ASM volumes are expected to eclipse those of LSM.

 

The focus on ASM as a transformational imperative is valid, and Rand Refinery is an active participant in the precious metals supply chain, working alongside other upstream and downstream actors to ensure that the communities and countries with gold resources benefit in a sustainable manner.

 

Under the theme Mining the Future: Unearthing Africa’s Full Mineral Value Chain, AMW 2026 offers a critical interface between refiners, miners, regulators, and financial institutions, as African countries intensify efforts to capture more value from responsible mineral production.

 

A key pillar of Rand Refinery’s 2026 strategy is its expansion into high-growth gold markets beyond South Africa. In January 2026, the company partnered with Ghana’s Gold Coast Refinery (GCR) to support the Ghana Gold Board to locally refine artisanal and small-scale (ASM) gold and elevate responsible sourcing standards in West Africa. The partnership also positions Rand Refinery in a rapidly growing and historically fragmented supply segment: ASM operations, enabling the company to enhance traceability and strengthen compliance with global standards for ethical sourcing and anti-money laundering.

 

The partnership potentially allows the monetization of ASM supply streams in the formal gold ecosystem, complementing Rand Refinery’s established role in refining output from responsible large-scale producers. AMW 2026 represents a timely platform for the company to provide an update on its projects and contribution to Africa’s gold sector.

 

As demand for regional refining capacity expands, along with central bank buying programs, companies such as Rand Refinery will be crucial.

 

Central bank gold purchases are projected to average around 585 tons per quarter in 2026, underscoring sustained global demand. In Africa, gold now accounts for approximately 17% of total reserves – up from less than 10% in 2022–2023 – while physical holdings increased from 663 tons in 2022 to an estimated 738 tons in 2025.

 

This upward trajectory is driving demand for trusted refining and value addition services, positioning Rand Refinery as a key partner in the region. Against this backdrop, AMW provides a strategic platform for central banks and gold buyers to engage directly with one of the world’s largest integrated single-site precious metals refining and smelting complexes and strengthen regional beneficiation and national reserve strategies.

 

At AMW, Rand Refinery executives will participate in panel discussions and networking sessions, engaging stakeholders on partnership opportunities that support a more integrated, transparent and value-driven African gold ecosystem.

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

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Energy

Mining Services Companies Drive Africa’s Next Phase of Industrial Mining Growth

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Energy Capital

African Mining Week will highlight how mining services companies are becoming central to transforming Africa’s vast mineral endowment into investment-ready projects

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, May 19, 2026/APO Group/ –African Mining Week (AMW) – taking place on October 14 to 16 in Cape Town – will highight the growing role of mining services companies as critical enablers of Africa’s transition from resource – rich to project – ready. As the continent works to unlock an estimated $8.5 trillion in untapped mineral wealth, these firms are emerging as key drivers of capital mobilization, technical delivery and accelerated project timelines.

 

A structural shift is underway. Mining services companies are no longer confined to contractor roles – they are evolving into integrated project partners, shaping how mines are financed, engineered, built and operated. Their influence now sits at the intersection of capital markets, infrastructure development, energy systems and industrial policy, positioning them as central players in Africa’s next phase of mining – led growth.

This evolution is already visible in project activity across the continent. In April 2026, Metso inaugurated a new regional hub in Cape Town, strengthening its bulk material handling and services capabilities across Africa. The facility enhances automation, logistics and lifecycle services across key commodity value chains – including coal, platinum group metals and manganese – directly supporting South Africa’s strategy to scale mineral exports and industrial output.

Geopolitics is further amplifying this trend. Major global economies are increasingly leveraging their EPC and mining services companies as strategic tools to secure supply chains and expand influence. Institutions such as the Export-Import Bank of the United States are backing American participation in African mining, while China, Europe, Canada and Australia continue to embed their services companies into financing and development frameworks across the continent.

Australia’s Lycopodium is advancing Namibia’s Twin Hills project, while China’s JCHX Mining Management is supporting copper production at Botswana’s Khoemacau Mine. In Guinea, XCMG Machinery is contributing to development at the Simandou iron ore project – one of the largest untapped deposits globally.

Across key mining jurisdictions, this shift is accelerating project pipelines. Countries such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Zambia, Ghana, Liberia and South Africa are increasingly relying on mining services firms to fast-track national geomapping exercises, exploration, scale production and advance beneficiation.

Against this backdrop, AMW will bring together global EPC firms, mining services providers, investors and African developers. The event is set to catalyze partnerships and deal-making, with a focus on strengthening execution capacity, unlocking financing and accelerating the delivery of mining projects that can anchor Africa’s industrial growth and global supply chain integration.

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

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Energy

Offtake Agreements Reshape Africa’s Next Phase of Mining Investment

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Energy Capital

African Mining Week will highlight how offtake agreements are bridging Africa’s mineral wealth with global capital, turning geological potential into bankable mining projects

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, May 18, 2026/APO Group/ –Multinational commodities company Trafigura signed an offtake agreement in April 2026 with Ghana’s Heath Goldfields for the Bogoso-Prestea Gold Mine, committing to purchase around 700,000 ounces of gold. The deal provides immediate commercial certainty for the project while improving its financing profile by guaranteeing a long-term buyer, addressing one of the sector’s most persistent constraints: access to capital.

The move reflects a broader trend across Africa’s mineral sector whereby projects are turning to offtake agreements to secure capital and advance production. As Africa accelerates the development of its estimated $8.5 trillion in untapped mineral wealth, offtake agreements are emerging as an effective tool to unlock financing and de-risk projects.

This dual function – market assurance and capital enablement – is increasingly central to Africa’s mining financing landscape. By reducing demand risk, offtake agreements help unlock debt and equity financing that would otherwise be difficult to secure in early-stage or restart projects.

Similar structures are being replicated across the continent. In Sierra Leone, an offtake-backed arrangement involving Trafigura and FG Gold Limited helped unlock financing for the Baomahun Gold Project, marking a critical step in de-risking one of the country’s flagship mining developments and enabling financial close for large-scale gold production.

In the battery minerals space, NextSource Materials extended its offtake agreement in March 2026 with Mitsubishi Chemical Corporation to supply graphite from the Molo project in Madagascar. The arrangement provides predictable long-term demand for 9,000 tons per annum of graphite, while simultaneously supporting project financing and expansion plans tied to global battery supply chains.

Similarly, Bannerman Energy has secured offtake agreements with North American utilities for uranium from its Etango project, providing multi-year revenue visibility from 2029 to 2033 and strengthening the project’s long-term investment case.

These transactions reflect a broader structural shift in African mining finance: offtake agreements are no longer just sales contracts, but core instruments of project development, risk allocation and capital mobilization. For other markets seeking finance and long-term buyers, these examples demonstrate the viability of offtake contracts – not only for project commissioning phases but as tools for early-stage development.

Notably, in South Africa, where the government is targeting R2 trillion in investment to unlock its critical minerals potential, offtake structures could play a central role in de-risking projects. Similarly, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which holds an estimated $24 trillion in untapped mineral wealth, offtake agreements could accelerate the monetization of its vast copper, cobalt and strategic mineral reserves.

Against this backdrop, the upcoming African Mining Week (AMW) Conference and Exhibition – taking place from October 14–16 in Cape Town – will showcase how offtake-driven financing models can be scaled to accelerate project delivery and strengthen Africa’s position in global minerals supply chain. Uniting stakeholders from across the entire African mineral value chain, the event offers a platform to examine strategic financing, mechanisms to accelerate production and positioning the continent at the forefront of global mining investment.

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

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