China’s NOCs plan renewed African growth
The current wave of investment comes after Africa’s importance as an energy supplier to China has declined in recent years
China’s NOCs are continuing to expand their upstream footprint in Africa—underscored by CNOOC’s recent bagging of contracts to explore blocks offshore Mozambique—as Beijing looks to help shore up African production to lock in future supplies. African hydrocarbons have remained of key interest to PetroChina, Sinopec and CNOOC since they were tipped four years ago to become collectively the fourth-biggest upstream investor in Africa over 2019–23, behind BP, Shell and Eni. Africa stood to capture nearly 30% of overseas upstream capex by the NOCs, amounting to c.$15b, consultancy GlobalData predicted in mid-2019. It is unclear if the NOCs have lived up to the billing, but they have not shied awa
Also in this section
1 April 2026
Golden Pass’s startup offers QatarEnergy a timely boost but may also force a difficult choice between honouring disrupted contracts and capitalising on soaring spot LNG prices
1 April 2026
It is not a case of if or when, but the length and magnitude of economic damage from elevated oil prices
1 April 2026
The US-Iran conflict demonstrates the need for diversification in several senses of the word. It also exposes the limits of Washington applying pressure on major oil and gas producers it considers geopolitical adversaries
31 March 2026
Disappointing results in its bidding round are a reality check for Libya, and global exploration generally






