The African Energy Chamber (AEC) and S&P Global have been reported as planning a webinar to present findings from the State of African Energy 2026 Outlook. The session is described as bringing together senior analysts and industry leaders to assess production trajectories, capital flows, and the infrastructure gap that continues to constrain the sector.
According to available reporting, Africa’s total oil production (excluding condensate) stood at approximately 4.2 million barrels per day in 2023 per IEA data; hydrocarbon output including gas expressed in barrels of oil equivalent would be higher, though specific forward projections for 2026 vary by source. African upstream capital expenditure estimates also differ across analysts, with firms such as Wood Mackenzie reporting approximately $15–20 billion in annual upstream capex in recent years; broader figures cited in some industry outlooks have not been independently confirmed. These data points nonetheless position the continent as a material contributor to global supply over the medium term.
Industry analysis has highlighted that deepwater assets account for 74% of recent hydrocarbon discoveries across the continent. This concentration underscores the growing technical and financial complexity of African upstream development. It also reinforces why infrastructure — not exploration alone — is now the critical bottleneck.
Speakers associated with the event have been identified as including Verner Ayukegba, Justin Cochrane, Simon Wood, Rehan Burger, Ross Embleton, and Stanislas Drochon. Their collective assessment points to a structural opportunity: the resource base is largely identified, but monetisation depends on converting discoveries into producing assets through sustained infrastructure investment.
According to the latest IEA data, approximately 590 million people in Africa lacked access to electricity as of 2023. This figure frames the dual mandate facing governments and investors alike: expanding export-oriented production while simultaneously extending domestic energy access. The two objectives are not mutually exclusive, but they require coordinated capital deployment and policy alignment.
The 2026 outlook also referenced a geopolitical backdrop shaped by instability in the Middle East, which has increased the strategic premium attached to African supply. Buyers seeking supply-chain diversification are looking more closely at the continent’s producing basins and the infrastructure needed to bring volumes to market reliably.
The central argument from the AEC and S&P Global is that Africa’s next energy boom will be won through infrastructure, not exploration alone. Pipelines, processing facilities, LNG terminals, and power transmission networks are the assets that will determine whether current capex commitments translate into sustained production growth or remain stranded in project pipelines.
Further details are expected to be available via the African Energy Chamber newsroom. Investors and policymakers should monitor how upstream capex is allocated between deepwater development and domestic energy access projects over the next 12 to 18 months — that balance will signal whether Africa’s energy ambitions are being built for export markets alone or for broader economic transformation.
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