The Managing Director, Seplat Petroleum Development Company, Mr. Austin
Avuru, has described West Africa as a prime petroleum province in the
world.
He made the submission in London in a paper he presented at the just
concluded International Petroleum Week 2013 organised by the Energy
Institute.
To buttress his point, Avuru pointed to the fact that “Africa’s
contribution to world reserves has increased from 7.0 per cent in 1995
to 8 per cent in 2011 with estimated 2.8 percent of world oil (68 bn
barrels) in Sub-Saharan Africa and 44 bn barrels of those in the Gulf
of Guinea.”
He also highlighted growing reserves in Libya, Nigeria and Angola while
noting that it is a “trend likely to continue with new discoveries
announced in Ghana, Egypt, Algeria, Libya, Tunisia, Mozambique, and
Uganda in 2011.”
Highlighting the strategic position of West Africa in the global
petroleum game, Avuru noted that West African countries such as Nigeria,
Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and Chad have
cumulative oil reserves of over 60bbls of oil and over 208 tcf of gas,
making them a key resource base for oil and gas exploration with
potential for significant spikes in reserves.
Taking a broad view, Avuru noted that oil and gas activity on the
continent extends from Mauritania to Angola with Nigeria and Angola
accounting for the lion share, an impressive 80 percent of the total
sub-region’s reserves as at January 2012. New producing countries have
also joined the big players following the discovery of oil in commercial
quantities in Chad, Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire, Liberia, Mauritania.
As if to dispel the cynicism of naysayers, Avuru noted that the
potential for growth remains high while explaining that latest findings
indicate that future growth will come from West Africa because since
2007, West Africa has seen more success in exploration than other
regions of the world – making it attractive for investment with the
transformation of margin, deep water West Africa, and offshore East
Africa as the core areas currently attracting most exploration interest.
Avuru informed the gathering that since the Jubilee discovery in 2007,
companies are exploring other parts of region (Ghana to Mauritania),
looking for analogous Cretaceous turbidite prospects with Offshore
explorations in Sierra Leone and Cote d’Ivoire look promising, making
them high potential investment destinations beyond Nigeria and Angola.
Concluding his argument in favour of West Africa as new prime
destination, Avuru informed his audience that an estimated 40bn plus
barrels of oil exists in technical reserves – most of it in the Niger
Delta Basin of Sub-Saharan Africa with another estimated 55bn barrels in
yet-to-find resources making the sub region the second biggest region
in the world after Latin America.
Avuru ended his presentation by pointing out the investment upsides for
investors. He told the gathering that opportunities exist for mid-sized
companies to enter the market at the beginning of its growth and
therefore maximise returns while companies with positions in frontier
regions stand to gain as plays mature.
He also highlighted the opportunities for divestment over the coming
years as larger companies give way to smaller independents and
indigenous companies due to local content policies and asset
rationalisation goals.
Finally, he forecast more mergers and acquisitions in future driven by
majors because according to him as opportunities are further squeezed,
consolidation will accelerate across the sector while competition
continues to intensify.
No comments:
Post a Comment