logo
AI Drives Revamp of Ageing Oilfields in Africa

AI Drives Revamp of Ageing Oilfields in Africa

Arabian Post12-06-2025

Africa's ageing oilfields are undergoing a transformation as artificial intelligence technologies unlock new opportunities for enhanced oil recovery. Operators across the continent are leveraging data-driven systems, machine‑learning and regional policy incentives to revive mature reservoirs, boost output and improve efficiency.
Major energy firms have spearheaded this push. SLB opened a 3,200 sq ft Africa Performance Centre in Luanda, Angola on 28 January 2025, designed to offer a collaborative platform for digital tools, AI, new‑energy technology and capacity development for local talent. The centre marks a strategic investment as Angola aims to maintain production above one million barrels per day through to 2030.
Meanwhile, global oilfield service providers—including Baker Hughes and Halliburton—have established bases across Africa. Repsol, operating in Libya, Algeria and Morocco, is also integrating AI methods to support EOR efforts.
ADVERTISEMENT
AI implementation in EOR extends well beyond digital monitoring. It enables predictive modelling, reservoir characterisation and operational optimisation. By analysing geological and production data, AI tools generate more accurate forecasts for reservoir performance and help engineers deploy targeted interventions. Machine‑learning algorithms detect patterns across extensive datasets, revealing insights that traditional models might miss.
Policy frameworks have emerged as critical enablers. Angola's 2024 Incremental Production Initiative introduced tax incentives for reinvestment in legacy fields. The initiative already yielded new discovery results, including ExxonMobil's Likembe‑01 well in Block 15. It underscores how fiscal measures can stimulate investment and catalyse technological adoption in older asset bases.
At a continental level, the African Union Commission, in May 2025, identified AI as a strategic development priority. This decision is anticipated to open pathways for technology providers and oil operators to strengthen digital infrastructure and EOR capabilities.
High‑level platforms such as African Energy Week: Invest in African Energies 2025, scheduled for 29 September to 3 October in Cape Town, underscore this trajectory. Sessions will specifically explore digital transformation, EOR and AI's role in exploration and production.
ExxonMobil will enhance the debate through representation by Katrina Fisher, its Angola managing director. Her participation highlights offshore discoveries like Likembe‑01 and Bavuca Sul‑1, exploration activities on Blocks 17/06 and 32/21 alongside TotalEnergies and Angola's national oil agency, and the impact of fiscal frameworks on production.
The renewed focus on EOR comes amid changing production profiles. Africa's mature assets supply more than 60 percent of global output, a share projected to grow to nearly 80 percent by 2030. As drilling declines or remains flat, enhanced recovery from existing fields becomes vital to sustaining supply.
SLB's Luanda centre is emblematic of that shift. It joins earlier local capacity‑building efforts such as Angola's Integrated Performance Excellence centre, launched in late 2024, devoted to optimising life‑cycle field performance with digital workflows and AI intelligence. SLB is also leveraging its Delfi™ cloud platform and Ora™ deep‑testing solutions to support autonomous drilling and digital reservoir evaluation.
Such technology is already delivering results. Rystad Energy reports that 10 percent year‑on‑year decline rates in mature fields can be mitigated through proactive AI‑driven interventions, while real‑time analytics shorten decision cycles and cut operating expenses.
Geopolitical contexts further support this transition. Angola's licensing round in early 2024 opened 12 blocks and announced nine offshore and four onshore prospects for 2025—steps that complement policy efforts to inject capital and technology into ageing assets.
Challenges remain. Balancing emissions and ageing infrastructure demands that AI deployment aligns with sustainability goals and just energy transition imperatives. African policymakers are under pressure to ensure that AI‑enabled production does not compromise climate targets or deepen energy inequities.
At African Energy Week, debate is expected to centre on reconciling EOR with carbon management, capacity development and economic inclusion. Industry leaders aim to forge integrated strategies that couple technological modernisation with environmental stewardship and local benefits.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Can Zero Tariffs Drive Real Change? China's New Trade Policy and Africa's Energy-Led Future
Can Zero Tariffs Drive Real Change? China's New Trade Policy and Africa's Energy-Led Future

Zawya

time2 days ago

  • Zawya

Can Zero Tariffs Drive Real Change? China's New Trade Policy and Africa's Energy-Led Future

China's zero-tariff policy for African goods has expanded rapidly in recent years, with 53 of the continent's countries now eligible to export their taxable goods to the Chinese market duty-free. Promoted as a vehicle for deeper Sino-African cooperation and shared prosperity, the policy has gained attention for its potential to open access to one of the world's largest consumer markets. But as the continent looks to secure long-term development and industrial transformation, a central question arises: will trade preferences like this serve as a catalyst for Africa's economic evolution, or simply reinforce its role as a low-value commodity supplier? Eswatini – one of the few African countries that maintains diplomatic ties with Taiwan – was excluded from the tariff breaks, underscoring that access to China's market remains conditional. The expanded duty-free and tax incentives also appear as a counter to the Trump-era tariffs, placing Africa in the throes of the China-U.S. trade war. As African Energy Week (AEW) 2025: Invest in African Energies prepares to convene in Cape Town from September 29 to October 3, the broader question for the continent is whether these expanding trade policies can deliver tangible, scalable benefits. Africa's ability to meet its development and energy access goals will depend not only on increased trade, but on how effectively such policies translate into investment in infrastructure, energy, and industrial growth. The Promise and Limits of Zero-Tariff Access On paper, zero-tariff access is a welcome opportunity. For African countries seeking to diversify export destinations and boost agricultural, mineral and energy-based trade, the initiative offers a cost advantage that could help expand trade volumes. For oil and gas producers, there may be openings to increase exports of refined products, petrochemicals or fertilizers, if the necessary processing capacity exists. But therein lies the challenge. Most African countries lack the industrial and energy infrastructure to capitalize on such preferences. Many exports continue to be raw or semi-processed materials with limited value retention on the continent. Tariff-free access does little to change that if non-tariff barriers, unreliable power supply or inadequate transport logistics continue to undermine competitiveness. Energy sits at the core of that equation. Africa's path to economic sovereignty depends on its ability to convert natural resources into industrial products – a process that begins with investment in upstream development and extends through midstream logistics and downstream transformation. Whether it's building pipelines and LNG infrastructure, electrifying industrial corridors or developing fertilizer and plastics manufacturing hubs, Africa's energy systems must evolve to support trade ambitions. Africa's Path to Integrated Energy and Industrial Growth Several countries are already moving in that direction. Nigeria is pushing forward with its gas commercialization strategy; Mozambique is scaling up LNG; Senegal and Mauritania are emerging as cross-border gas hubs. These projects not only generate export revenue, but create the foundation for broader economic diversification, from petrochemical industries to power generation for local factories. Meanwhile, the African Continental Free Trade Area provides the framework to harmonize standards, reduce internal tariffs and build common infrastructure, such as pipelines, ports and refineries, thereby enabling economies of scale and intra-African trade. If combined with external access like China's zero-tariff policy, this dual approach could allow African nations to integrate vertically and horizontally, moving from fragmented markets to unified production ecosystems. Still, risks remain. Trade with China remains heavily skewed toward raw materials, with manufactured imports often undercutting local industries. Without targeted support for African manufacturing, technology transfer and local content, tariff preferences risk entrenching the continent's supplier status rather than overturning it. African governments must therefore ensure that policies – both trade- and energy-related – are designed to channel benefits inward, not just extract them outward. 'That is the true promise of AEW 2025. As leaders, investors and institutions gather in Cape Town, the conference will not only facilitate deals and investment flows, but ask complex questions about how Africa can seize agency in its global partnerships. Energy security, industrialization and trade access must be viewed not in silos, but as interconnected levers for long-term prosperity,' says NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman, African Energy Chamber. AEW: Invest in African Energies is the platform of choice for project operators, financiers, technology providers and government, and has emerged as the official place to sign deals in African energy. Visit for more information about this exciting event. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

African Energy Week (AEW) 2025 Promotes Africa-Centric Energy Transition with Dedicated Program Track
African Energy Week (AEW) 2025 Promotes Africa-Centric Energy Transition with Dedicated Program Track

Zawya

time5 days ago

  • Zawya

African Energy Week (AEW) 2025 Promotes Africa-Centric Energy Transition with Dedicated Program Track

The African Energy Week (AEW): Invest in African Energies conference – taking place on September 29 to October 3 in Cape Town – is organized under a mandate to make energy poverty history by 2030. As such, the event connects financiers with African projects, promoting energy development across the entire energy sector and its value chain. A dedicated Energy Transition Track at this year's event offers attendees insight into the continent's energy transition strategy, with panel discussions covering a series of topics, from natural gas as a clean cooking fuel to carbon capture and storage solutions to green hydrogen and renewable energy rollout. AEW: Invest in African Energies is the platform of choice for project operators, financiers, technology providers and government, and has emerged as the official place to sign deals in African energy. Visit for more information about this exciting event. With over 900 million people living without access to clean cooking solutions in Africa, many countries are adopting bold strategies to advance the adoption of natural gas products such as LPG. Kenya, for example is rolling out LPG expansion, electric cooking and bioethanol alternatives with support from private sector investment, Tanzania is integrating clean cooking solutions into its national electrification plan and broader energy transition strategy while Ghana has adopted a multi-pronged approach, enhancing LPG affordability and scalability. The AEW: Invest in African Energies 2025 Energy Transition Track will feature panel discussions focused on Africa's burgeoning LPG market. Sessions include From Firewood to Freedom: Promoting Clean Cooking in Africa; Monetizing LPG to Enhance the Value of the Barrel in Africa's Inland Markets; and Gas-to-Liquids Market Opportunities in Africa. Given the pressing energy access challenges faced across the continent, Africa has long-advocated for an energy transition strategy that takes into account the continent's energy and climate needs. In this regard, many countries are pursuing a just transition, which utilizes a variety of solutions from low-carbon oil to non-associated gas to renewable energy and integrated power systems. According to the International Energy Agency, meeting Africa's energy demand will require annual investments to more than double by 2030, reaching $240 billion annually. The Energy Transition Track at AEW: Invest in African Energies 2025 not only offers a platform to discuss Africa's just transition strategy, but lays out strategic investment prospects across the entire energy value chain. Sessions include Just Energy Transition Dialogue: Harnessing Africa's Resource Wealth to Establish Energy Sovereignty; Forging the Path for a Green Hydrogen Economy: Shifting from Planning to Meeting Global Market Demands; and Overcoming Infrastructure Gaps: Innovations in Road, Rail and Transport Connectivity Across Africa. The AEW: Invest in African Energies 2025 Energy Transition Track goes beyond promoting investments in energy projects to include strategic sessions on local content, inclusive participation and collaborative leadership. With a rapidly growing population, increased urbanization and soon-to-be the world's largest workforce, Africa requires strategic commitments by governments and companies to accelerate capacity building, skills development and inclusive work practices. By 2050, Africa's population is projected to increase to 2.5 billion people. As such, local content will serve as a catalyst for sustainable and equitable development. During the event, sessions will address these topics, including Energy Security in Africa: Why Women's Participation in Africa's Resource Governance Matters; From Start-Ups to Scale-Ups: Why SMEs are Africa's Game Changers; and Collaborative Leadership: Operator Strategies for Local Content Development. The Energy Transition Track will also feature an Invest in Uganda session, which offers exclusive insight into the country's $10 billion energy portfolio, comprising a mix of hydrocarbon, infrastructure and renewable energy projects. The discussion will unpack how supportive policies, a stable regulatory environment and untapped resources have made the country an attractive market to invest in. Beyond panel discussions, the track will also feature a series of Fireside Chats. These sessions aim to provide insight into the respective investment strategies of various companies, with discussions paving the way for collaborations and deals. 'AEW: Invest in African Energies 2025 takes place under a mandate to make energy poverty history, and as such, advocates for a just energy transition which encompasses the development of a variety of energy sources. The Energy Transition Track serves as a catalyst for this goal by uniting players from the renewable energy, natural gas, regulatory and infrastructure sectors to discuss strategies for securing investment and advancing projects in Africa,' states Verner Ayukegba, Senior Vice President, African Energy Chamber. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

Qatar holds talks with energy companies on risk of Israel-Iran conflict, sources say
Qatar holds talks with energy companies on risk of Israel-Iran conflict, sources say

Zawya

time20-06-2025

  • Zawya

Qatar holds talks with energy companies on risk of Israel-Iran conflict, sources say

Qatar held crisis talks this week with energy majors after Israeli strikes on Iran's huge gas field, which it shares with Qatar, an industry source and a diplomat in the region told Reuters. Saad Al Kaabi, CEO of state-owned QatarEnergy and the Gulf Arab state's energy minister urged companies to warn the U.S., British and European governments about the risks the conflict poses to gas exports from Qatar and the increasing threat to the global gas supply, they said. An interruption to Qatar's liquefied natural gas (LNG) operation could cut off around 20% of the global supply, which Doha exports from the world's largest gas reservoir. "QatarEnergy is making sure that foreign governments are fully aware of the implications and repercussions the situation and further escalation pose to gas production from Qatar,' said the diplomat, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation. QatarEnergy did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Kaabi also met this week in Doha with ambassadors representing countries whose companies are involved in QatarEnergy's North Field expansion project, the diplomat said. U.S. majors ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips, Britain's Shell, Italy's Eni and France's TotalEnergies all have stakes in the expansion, which is set to boost exports from Qatar by around 82% in the coming years. So far, there have been no disruptions to QatarEnergy's exports and cargo deliveries are on schedule. (Reporting by Andrew Mills and Marwa Rasahd Editing by Tomasz Janowski and Louise Heavens)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store