
Africa Energy sees first output from South Africa's largest gas field by 2033
The company is awaiting regulatory approval for a reworked environmental authorisation to survey Block 11B/12B off South Africa's southern coast.
Using domestic gas is a key part of South Africa's strategy to diversify away from coal-fired power generation, with a flurry of new projects being pursued, including the country's first liquefied natural gas import terminal along the east coast.
"Our 11B/12B indigenous gas should be very competitive versus imported LNG," Robert Nicolella said from the Africa Energy offices in Cape Town.
Nicolella said the company was studying various ways to market the gas, although its preference is to supply a gas-to-power plant. South Africa is targeting 6,000 megawatts of new gas power projects.
The CEO said Africa Energy is currently in talks with former national oil company PetroSA to use some of its infrastructure to land gas from the Brulpadda and Luiperd fields at Mossel Bay.
TotalEnergies first mooted using PetroSA's infrastructure, which includes the FA offshore platform in Block 9, to help accelerate production.
The idea was to connect Block 11B/12B to existing subsea pipelines that run to the FA platform and from there onwards to Mossel Bay.
"It could be a commercial alternative. It's an option, without a doubt," Nicolella said of using PetroSA infrastructure.
Africa Energy's majority-owned local subsidiary Main Street 1549 was left as operator of Block 11B/12B after TotalEnergies and joint venture partners QatarEnergy and Canadian Natural Resources decided to leave the project last year.
Announcing its withdrawal last July, TotalEnergies said it appeared to be "too challenging to economically develop" and monetise the gas discoveries for the domestic market, without elaborating.
Main Street will hold a 75% participating interest in the block and Arostyle Investments the remainder, according to Africa Energy Corp's website.
Syndigate.info).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Zawya
13 hours ago
- Zawya
MTN introduces rent-to-own smartphones in South Africa
MTN MoMo South Africa has introduced a Handset Rent-to-Own solution aimed at increasing access to 4G and 5G smartphones for users who may be unbanked or underserved. Flexible, no-credit-check financing The offering allows customers to acquire smartphones starting from R10 per day, with no credit checks or paperwork required. The process uses AI-driven affordability assessments tailored to South Africa's informal economy. Customers can select payment plans ranging from three to twelve months, after which the device is owned outright. Partnership and technology The solution is powered by MTN's fintech platform in partnership with Airvantage. It follows MTN's previous initiatives like Smartphone For All and Shesh@ 5G SIM Delivery, targeting challenges around smartphone affordability and digital inclusion. Customer-focused approach Kagiso Mothibi, CEO: Fintech SA at MTN South Africa, said: 'This offering empowers users, especially the unbanked and underserved, to own a 4G or 5G smartphone affordably, from as little as R10 a day, with no credit checks or paperwork required.' Tandi Kuper, CEO of Airvantage, added: 'Together with MTN, we're using data science and fintech to democratise access to smartphones. It's technology with purpose, at scale.' How to access the service - Download or open the MTN MoMo App - Select Handset Rent-to-Own - Apply via a few simple steps - Pay a deposit - Choose a payment plan - Receive the device - Own it after final payment The launch currently features 4G Samsung smartphones, with plans to include more brands. All rights reserved. © 2022. Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (


Zawya
13 hours ago
- Zawya
South Africa factory mood lifts in July, Absa PMI shows
JOHANNESBURG - South African manufacturing sentiment improved in July, a survey showed on Friday, pointing to improved business conditions in the sector for the first time in nine months. The seasonally-adjusted purchasing managers' index (PMI) sponsored by South African bank Absa rose to 50.8 points in July from 48.5 in June. It was the first time the headline PMI has been above the 50-point mark that separates expansion from contraction since October 2024. The rise was driven by a recovery in demand, with the new sales orders sub-index rising 9.8 points to 55.9 points, the third consecutive month of improvement. But sub-indices tracking employment and expected business conditions in six months' time fell by 6 points and 6.1 points, respectively, suggesting a full recovery in the sector is still some way off. Absa said in a statement that this was an indication of growing caution over issues like volatile global trade policy. South Africa faces a 30% tariff on its exports to the U.S. starting next week, a move expected to cost tens of thousands of jobs after it failed to secure a trade deal before a deadline set by U.S. President Donald Trump.


Zawya
13 hours ago
- Zawya
South Africa faces 30% US tariff after failing to reach trade deal
JOHANNESBURG - South Africa faces a 30% tariff on its exports to the United States starting next week, a move expected to cost tens of thousands of jobs after the country failed to secure a trade deal before a deadline set by U.S. President Donald Trump. In an executive order on Thursday, Trump slapped new tariff rates ranging from 10% to 41% on dozens of countries as he seeks to reshape global trade on more favourable terms for the U.S. The order said the higher import duty rates would take effect in seven days. South Africa has tried for months to negotiate a deal with Washington and offered to buy U.S. liquefied natural gas and invest $3.3 billion in U.S. industries in exchange for lower tariffs. But the effort was unsuccessful, even after Pretoria made a last-minute attempt to improve its offer. South Africa's Trade Minister Parks Tau said the higher tariff was a threat to the country's export capacity, particularly in key sectors such as automotive, agro-processing, steel, and chemicals. "We are working with urgency and resolve to implement real, practical interventions that defend jobs and position South Africa competitively in a shifting global landscape," Tau said in a statement late on Thursday. The U.S. is South Africa's second-largest bilateral trading partner after China. South Africa's top exports to the U.S. include cars, iron and steel products, and citrus fruits. The tariff hike underscores how South Africa's strained relations with Washington are now having economic consequences. South African officials have said that their trade negotiations with the U.S. were closely intertwined with geopolitical and even domestic policy issues, including South Africa's affirmative action law which Trump disapproves of. The U.S. government is also unhappy with South Africa for bringing a genocide case against Israel at the World Court, and for its land reform policy which aims to address racial inequality in land ownership that is a legacy of apartheid. Trump has falsely claimed that the South African government is seizing white farmers' land.