OPEC woos Namibia it starts production from 2030
The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)+ oil producers group, having lost Angola and other players in recent years, is eyeing Namibia for possible membership as it sets up what could be Africa’s fourth-largest output by the next decade, an African industry official and sources told Reuters.
TotalEnergies and
Shell in recent years have made discoveries estimated at 2.6 billion
barrels, setting the stage for the southern African country to plan production
from about 2030.
The initial focus for OPEC+ would be to see Namibia join its Charter of Cooperation, the sources said, a grouping that engages in longer-term dialogue about energy markets. Brazil joined the charter in January.
Eventually OPEC, the core
oil exporters group that with Russia and others forms OPEC+, would like to see
Namibia become a full member, said NJ Ayuk, executive chairman of the African
Energy Chamber, which he said had been involved in facilitating talks between
the two sides.
OPEC has begun its
"charm offensive", he said, adding that the outcome of the talks were
unclear at this stage.
OPEC did not immediately
respond to a request for comment. OPEC Secretary-general Haitham Al Ghais was
quoted in February as saying OPEC was holding talks with several nations on
joining the charter, without naming them.
OPEC in a tweet at the
time said Al Ghais met Namibian Minister of Mines and Energy Tom Alweendo at a
conference in Nigeria where the prospect of OPEC and Namibia working together
"under the umbrella of the charter of cooperation" was raised.
Last year, Namibian
Petroleum Commissioner Maggy Shino expressed interest in joining the OPEC
"family", according to a report by S&P Commodity Insights, known
as Platts.
Yet in March, minister
Alweendo told Reuters that OPEC membership was not on the cards and did not
want to be drawn on whether Namibia was considering joining the charter.
"We haven't been
approached by anyone to join OPEC. OPEC members are petroleum exporting
countries and we are not there yet," he said. "That is a
consideration only after we have started to produce."
Talks between OPEC
and the Namibian government will likely continue in late April, however, when
OPEC's Al Ghais is scheduled to deliver an address to a Namibian energy
conference, said Ayuk, who is also a speaker at the event.
About 2.6 billion
barrels of oil have been discovered in Namibia this decade so far, Pranav Joshi
of energy consultancy Rystad Energy told Reuters.
In addition to
Total and Shell, firms including Chevron, Rhino Resources, Eco Atlantic Oil
& Gas and Galp Energia are conducting exploration and appraisal
activities.
Based on the
existing discoveries, Namibia is looking at 700,000 barrels per day (bpd) of
peak production capacity by the next decade, Joshi estimated.
That is smaller
than Angola's output of some 1.1 million bpd but Joshi noted Namibia's number
could rise with further successful exploration.
Angola quit OPEC in
December of last year over a lower-than-expected output ceiling it received
from OPEC+ whose members are curbing production to help support prices.

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