非洲上游行业展望2026年谨慎复苏

来源:www.gulfoilandgas.com,2025年10月29日,地点:非洲

非洲能源商会最新发布的《非洲能源展望》详细阐述了勘探和生产趋势、不断涌现的机遇以及在2026年非洲能源周召开前夕建立战略伙伴关系的重要性。根据非洲能源商会

(AEC)
发布的《2026年非洲能源展望》,非洲上游油气行业正进入谨慎复苏期,这主要得益于成熟产油国投资的增加以及新兴勘探热点的出现。该报告于本月初在开普敦举行的2025年非洲能源周上发布,重点阐述了塑造非洲大陆能源未来的机遇和挑战。

包括阿尔及利亚、尼日利亚、利比亚、埃及和安哥拉在内的老牌产油国继续主导着非洲的石油产量,但它们也面临着基础设施老化和油田日渐枯竭带来的日益增长的压力。相比之下,科特迪瓦和纳米比亚等新兴投资目的地正因近期的勘探发现和巨大的潜在收益而备受关注,尤其是在财政条件优惠的前沿盆地。地震采集、处理技术和深水钻井能力的进步推动了勘探工作,使运营商能够勘探日益复杂的油藏。

在北非,地中海盆地上新世蒸发岩下的勘探已释放出超过50万亿立方英尺的天然气储量,而埃及海域的佐尔油田等油田则凸显了礁体结构多变带来的挑战。在大西洋沿岸,安哥拉刚果扇的阿戈戈油田等发现展现了盐下油藏的潜力,预计加蓬沿海盆地和安哥拉宽扎盆地也将有类似的勘探前景。纳米比亚的奥万博盆地和津巴布韦的鲁芬萨盆地等陆上前沿地区尚未取得重大发现,这进一步印证了有意义的发现越来越与成熟地区的基础设施主导的勘探活动相关这一趋势。


“非洲上游行业正在快速发展,”非洲能源委员会(AEC)执行主席NJ Ayuk表示,“边远地区和新兴盆地蕴藏着巨大的潜力,但要实现这一潜力,需要有针对性的投资、创新的财政框架以及能够降低技术复杂项目风险的合作伙伴关系。2026年非洲能源周将是探讨非洲大陆如何可持续地开发这些资源的关键论坛。”

预计到2026年,非洲油气总产量将保持稳定,约为每日1140万桶油当量(MMboe/d),而新项目预计将在2030年之前将产量提高到约1360万桶油当量/日。预计北非将贡献其中约60%的产量,其余部分由撒哈拉以南非洲地区供应。虽然海上深水开发正在取得进展,但陆上生产仍然发挥着至关重要的作用,尤其是在阿尔及利亚和利比亚。预计到2026年,液态烃产量将占总产量的63%,天然气产量占37%。天然气产量的增长主要得益于全球需求的上升以及莫桑比克、尼日利亚和塞内加尔等国新建的液化天然气基础设施。

然而,由于技术和地质方面的挑战,某些油田面临着资产搁浅的潜在风险。在埃及,Hoda、Notus和Satis油田的可采储量合计超过5.2亿桶;塞拉利昂的Jupiter油田和安哥拉的Catchimanha油田则是重要的跨大西洋边缘油田。在南部非洲,Brulpadda、Luiperd和Venus等油田由于财政条款的限制和工业化方面的挑战而面临商业制约,这凸显了监管和合同框架在释放非洲资源潜力方面的关键作用。

非洲能源格局的一个日益显著的特征是国家石油公司(NOC)的作用不断增强,目前其产量约占总产量的53%。相比之下,国际石油公司贡献约30%,这反映出资源民族主义倾向日益增强,以及东道国政府对石油运营的参与度不断提高。尼日利亚等国正积极提升国家石油公司(NOC)的能力,以便独立或通过合资企业运营大型资产,这凸显了在吸引外资的同时培养本土专业人才的必要性。


与此同时,非洲钻井平台市场正经历着微妙的变化。浮式钻井平台市场正逐渐萎缩,而自升式钻井平台市场预计在未来三年内将保持相对平稳。钻井船的需求可能从2027年初开始有所改善,但承包商将面临更加激烈的竞争环境,日租金下降和产能过剩将挤压利润空间。在西非,高规格超深水钻井平台的租金可能降至40万美元出头,这为运营商以更具吸引力的成本推进钻井作业提供了机会。

展望未来,下一届非洲能源周将于2026年10月12日至16日在开普敦举行,届时将为深入探讨这些趋势提供一个重要的平台,汇聚投资者、运营商和政策制定者。论坛将探讨勘探突破、开发挑战以及投资吸引力与技术复杂性之间的关键平衡。随着非洲进入能源转型的下一阶段,《非洲经济共同体展望》强调了战略伙伴关系、创新财政框架和能力建设举措对于充分释放非洲大陆上游潜力的重要性。

安哥拉勘探新闻 >>



加蓬 >> 2025年10月30日 - 该谅解备忘录为在加蓬深水和超深水近海区域开展勘探活动铺平了道路。

能源巨头英国石油公司(bp)已签署一份备忘录……

纳米比亚 >> 2025年10月30日 - 88 Energy Limited(简称“88 Energy”、“88E”或“公司”)提供截至2025年9月30日止季度的以下业务活动概要。

唉……


安哥拉 >> 2025年10月29日 - 非洲能源商会最新发布的《非洲能源展望》详细介绍了勘探和生产趋势、不断涌现的机遇以及其重要性……
南非 >> 2025年10月28日 - 考虑到南非大部分地区位于西海岸附近,这片海域蕴藏着丰富的经济机遇……

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原文链接/GulfOilandGas

Africa’s Upstream Sector Eyes Cautious Resurgence in 2026

Source: www.gulfoilandgas.com 10/29/2025, Location: Africa

The African Energy Chamber’s latest State of African Energy Outlook details exploration and production trends, rising opportunities and the importance of strategic partnerships ahead of African Energy Week 2026.

AEC 2026 Outlook
Africa’s upstream oil and gas sector is entering a period of cautious resurgence, driven by a combination of renewed investment in mature producing nations and the emergence of new exploration hotspots, according to the African Energy Chamber’s (AEC) State of African Energy 2026 Outlook. The report, which was launched earlier this month at African Energy Week 2025 in Cape Town, underscores both the opportunities and challenges shaping the continent’s energy future.

Established producers, including Algeria, Nigeria, Libya, Egypt and Angola, continue to dominate Africa’s output, yet face mounting pressures from aging infrastructure and maturing fields. In contrast, emerging investment destinations such as Ivory Coast and Namibia are attracting attention thanks to recent discoveries and the potential for high upside, particularly in frontier basins offering favorable fiscal terms. Advancements in seismic acquisition, processing technologies and deepwater drilling capabilities have bolstered exploration efforts, allowing operators to target increasingly complex reservoirs.

In North Africa, exploration beneath Upper Miocene evaporites in the Mediterranean basin has unlocked over 50 TCF of gas, while fields such as Zohr in Egyptian waters highlight the challenges of variable reef structures. Along the Atlantic margin, discoveries like Angola’s Agogo field in the Congo Fan illustrate the potential of pre-salt reservoirs, with similar prospects anticipated along the Gabon Coastal Basin and Kwanza Basin in Angola. Onshore frontier areas such as Namibia’s Owambo Basin and Zimbabwe’s Rufunsa Basin have yet to deliver significant discoveries, reinforcing the trend that meaningful finds are increasingly tied to infrastructure-led exploration in more mature areas.


“The African upstream sector is evolving rapidly,” says NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the AEC. “Frontier and emerging basins present enormous potential, but realizing that potential requires targeted investment, innovative fiscal frameworks and partnerships that can de-risk technically complex projects. African Energy Week 2026 will be a key forum for shaping how the continent can sustainably unlock these resources.”

Africa’s overall hydrocarbon production is expected to remain stable at approximately 11.4 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (MMboe/d) in 2026, with new projects projected to raise output to roughly 13.6 MMboe/d by 2030. North Africa is anticipated to contribute around 60% of this volume, with sub-Saharan Africa supplying the remainder. While offshore deepwater developments are gaining ground, onshore production continues to play a critical role, particularly in Algeria and Libya. Liquids will account for an estimated 63% of 2026 output, while natural gas represents 37%, with gas growth driven by rising global demand and new LNG infrastructure in countries including Mozambique, Nigeria and Senegal.

Certain fields, however, face potential risks of asset stranding due to technical and geological challenges. In Egypt, the Hoda, Notus and Satis discoveries collectively hold over 520 million barrels of recoverable reserves, while Sierra Leone’s Jupiter and Angola’s Catchimanha discoveries represent significant Atlantic margin assets. Across Southern Africa, fields such as Brulpadda, Luiperd and Venus face commercial constraints due to restrictive fiscal terms and industrialization challenges, highlighting the critical role of regulatory and contractual frameworks in unlocking Africa’s resource potential.

A growing feature of the African energy landscape is the increasing role of National Oil Companies (NOCs), which now account for roughly 53% of total production. By contrast, International Oil Companies contribute about 30%, reflecting a shift toward resource nationalism and greater operational involvement by host governments. Countries such as Nigeria are actively expanding NOC capabilities to operate major assets independently or through joint ventures, emphasizing the need to build local expertise alongside attracting foreign investment.


Meanwhile, the African rig market is experiencing nuanced shifts. The floater sector is in gradual decline, while the jackup segment is expected to remain relatively flat over the next three years. Drillship demand may improve from early 2027, but contractors face a more competitive environment, with reduced day rates and excess capacity pressuring margins. In West Africa, high-spec ultra-deepwater fixtures could see rates fall to the low $400,000s, offering opportunities for operators to advance drilling campaigns at more attractive costs.

Looking ahead, the next edition of African Energy Week, scheduled for October 12-16, 2026 in Cape Town, will provide a premier platform for discussing these trends in depth, bringing together investors, operators and policymakers. The forum will explore exploration breakthroughs, development challenges and the crucial balance between investment attractiveness and technical complexity. As Africa advances through the next phase of its energy transition, the AEC Outlook highlights the importance of strategic partnerships, innovative fiscal frameworks and capacity-building initiatives to fully unlock the continent’s upstream potential.

Exploration News in Angola >>



Gabon >>  10/30/2025 - The MOU paves the way for exploration activities across Gabon’s deep- and ultra-deepwater offshore areas.

Energy major bp has signed a Memo...

Namibia >>  10/30/2025 - 88 Energy Limited (88 Energy, 88E or the Company) provides the following summary of activities for the quarter ended 30 September 2025.

Alas...


Angola >>  10/29/2025 - The African Energy Chamber’s latest State of African Energy Outlook details exploration and production trends, rising opportunities and the importance...
South Africa >>  10/28/2025 - The waters off South Africa’s west coast represent a veritable treasure trove of economic opportunity for the country, considering that its majority s...

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