探索/发现

非洲成为高影响力勘探的中心

Rystad Energy 预计,到 2026 年,随着运营商追求规模和未开发的资源,北美大陆将占据前沿和盆地开挖井的最大份额。

非洲纳米比亚沃尔维斯湾石油工业停车场
纳米比亚海岸附近的一艘半潜式钻井平台和一艘钻井船。
图片来源:Getty Images。

根据Rystad Energy于1月28日发布的一份报告,预计今年非洲将引领全球高影响力勘探钻井活动,约占全球计划钻探的42口高影响力井的40%。此外,除近期宣布的格陵兰岛近海前沿勘探项目外,预计2026年计划开展的几乎所有陆上高影响力钻井活动都将在非洲进行。

这家总部位于奥斯陆的咨询公司表示,大部分勘探活动预计将在南部非洲的奥兰治盆地和西非几内亚湾近海进行。Rystad公司通过评估勘探前景规模、在前沿或新兴区域的盆地开发潜力以及其对运营商的战略意义,对高影响力油井进行分类。

“我们看到,2026年运营商的资本部署意愿发生了明显转变,”Rystad勘探主管Aatisha Mahajan表示。“超深水和前沿油气勘探仍然是资本密集型的​​,但在传统油气机会日益受限的当下,它们也提供了规模优势和巨大的增值潜力。非洲尤为突出,因为它仍然兼具地质潜力和发现大型、具有商业意义油气藏的前景,尤其对于那些希望在全球供应日益紧张的环境下确保长期资源储量的运营商而言。”

尽管Rystad并未重点提及尼日利亚,但作为非洲最大的液体燃料生产国,尼日利亚也在积极调整战略,以期重振上游业务。尼日利亚上个月启动了推迟至2025年的油气勘探许可证发放程序,并已采取措施降低准入门槛,例如降低签约奖金要求,以此作为振兴勘探活动的整体举措之一。

尼日利亚正努力克服多年来上游投资不足和安全挑战,其产量目标设定为到 2027 年达到 270 万桶/日,到 2030 年达到 300 万桶/日,高于目前的约 171 万桶/日。

根据修订后的条款,尼日利亚上游石油监管委员会(NUPRC)将每个已授予区块的签约奖金降至300万至700万美元,低于2024年招标轮次的1000万美元,以及此前几轮招标的近2亿美元。官员们在1月28日与潜在投资者举行的网络研讨会上表示,修订后的条款旨在优先考虑技术能力并加快生产进度。

监管机构最近强调,本轮许可审批将遵循与 2024 年招标相同的反腐败监督框架,包括数据访问和投标提交的完全数字化流程。

北约石油资源委员会(NUPRC)本轮招标提供50个油气区块,包括15个陆上区块、19个浅水区块、15个前沿盆地区块和1个深水区块。雪佛龙公司去年12月表示计划参与本轮招标,道达尔能源公司也表达了参与意向。

在雪佛龙公司与尼日利亚国家石油公司 (NNPC) 的合资企业完成尼日尔三角洲西部浅海海域的 Awodi-07 评价和勘探井之后,发布了许可证公告。

钻探工作于11月下旬开始,12月中旬结束。尼日利亚国家石油公司(NNPC)表示,经过测试、测井和数据采集,确认多个储层中存在油气资源后,该井已安全封堵。

该公司没有公布产量或资源估算数据,但称结果“非常令人鼓舞”。根据合资结构,雪佛龙持有 40% 的股份,而尼日利亚国家石油公司 (NNPC) 持有剩余的 60% 股份。

在非洲大陆的其他地方,利比亚官员于1月24日表示,他们已与道达尔能源公司和康菲石油公司签署了一项价值200亿美元的协议,以提高目前日产量约为37万桶油当量(BOE/D)的资产的产量。道达尔能源公司表示,该协议预计将包括进一步开发北贾洛油田,潜在增产幅度高达日产量10万桶油当量(BOE/D)。

近几个月来,分析师们的注意力日益转向非洲更广泛的上游潜力。伍德麦肯兹在11月的一份报告中估计,非洲已探明的油气资源中只有约三分之一实现了商业化。虽然现有活动预计每年可为政府带来约1090亿美元的收入,但未开发资源的规模之大凸显了仍有许多潜在价值尚未实现。

原文链接/JPT
Exploration/discoveries

Africa Emerges as Center of Gravity for High-Impact Exploration

Rystad Energy expects the continent to account for the largest share of frontier and basin-opening wells in 2026 as operators pursue scale and untapped resources.

Oil industry parking, Walvis Bay, Namibia, Africa
A semisubmersible drilling unit and a drillship off the coast of Namibia.
Source: Getty Images.

Africa is expected to lead global high-impact exploration drilling this year, accounting for about 40% of the 42 high-impact wells planned worldwide, according to a report published on 28 January by Rystad Energy. Additionally, nearly all onshore high-impact drilling campaigns planned for 2026 are expected to take place in Africa, with the exception of a recently announced frontier exploration project offshore Greenland.

The Oslo-based consultancy said most of the activity is expected to take place in the Orange Basin in southern Africa and the Gulf of Guinea offshore West Africa. Rystad categorizes high-impact wells by assessing prospect size, basin-opening potential in frontier or emerging areas, and their strategic relevance to operators.

“What we are seeing in 2026 is a clear shift in where operators are willing to deploy capital,” said Aatisha Mahajan, head of exploration at Rystad. “Ultra-deepwater and frontier plays remain capital-intensive, but they also offer scale and material upside at a time when conventional opportunities are increasingly limited. Africa stands out because it still combines geological potential with the prospect of large, commercially meaningful discoveries, particularly for operators looking to secure long-life resources in a tightening global supply environment.”

While Nigeria was not highlighted by Rystad, Africa’s largest liquids producer is also moving to reposition itself for renewed upstream activity. Nigeria, which launched its delayed 2025 licensing round last month, has moved to lower financial barriers to entry by cutting signature bonus requirements as part of broader efforts to revive exploration.

Nigeria is seeking to overcome years of upstream underinvestment and security challenges, with production targets set at 2.7 million B/D by 2027 and 3 million B/D by 2030, up from about 1.71 million B/D today.

Under the revised terms, the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) lowered the required signature bonus for each awarded block to a range of $3 million to $7 million, down from $10 million in the 2024 round and nearly $200 million in earlier licensing rounds. Officials said during a webinar with potential investors on 28 January that the revised structure is intended to prioritize technical capability and accelerate production timelines.

The regulator recently emphasized that the licensing round will follow the same anti-corruption oversight framework used in the 2024 bid round, including a fully digital process for data access and bid submissions.

The NUPRC is offering 50 oil and gas blocks in the round, including 15 onshore areas, 19 shallow-water blocks, 15 frontier basin licenses, and one deepwater block. Chevron said in December that it plans to participate in the round, while TotalEnergies has also expressed interest.

The licensing announcement followed news that a Chevron-operated joint venture with the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) completed the Awodi-07 appraisal and exploration well in the shallow offshore western Niger Delta.

Drilling began in late November and concluded in mid-December. NNPC said the well was safely secured following testing, logging, and data acquisition, confirming the presence of hydrocarbons across multiple reservoir zones.

No production rates or resource estimates were shared, but the company described the results as “highly encouraging.” Under the joint venture structure, Chevron holds a 40% interest, while NNPC owns the remaining 60%.

Elsewhere on the continent, Libyan officials said on 24 January that they had signed a $20-billion agreement with TotalEnergies and ConocoPhillips to increase production from assets currently producing about 370,000 BOE/D. TotalEnergies said the deal is expected to include further development of the North Gialo field, with potential additions of up to 100,000 BOE/D.

In recent months, analyst attention has increasingly turned to Africa’s broader upstream potential. In a November report, Wood Mackenzie estimated that only about one-third of the continent’s discovered hydrocarbon resources have been commercialized. While existing activity is expected to generate roughly $109 billion per year in government revenues, the scale of the undeveloped resource base highlights how much potential value remains unrealized.