South Africa Launches Oil Giant to Revive Energy Sector

South Africa has officially launched the South African National Petroleum Company (SANPC), a new state-owned oil enterprise designed to consolidate and energize the country’s long-stalled hydrocarbons sector. Formed from the merger of PetroSA, iGas, and the Strategic Fuel Fund, SANPC will operate under the Central Energy Fund and is already integrating staff and assets to streamline operations. The aim? Reducing oil imports, bolstering energy security, and tapping into over R95 billion in potential investment.

The move comes just months after South Africa quietly allowed several of its coal-fired plants to exceed emissions limits in a desperate bid to avoid more blackouts. With the country still generating 85% of its electricity from coal and facing a chronic energy shortfall, SANPC represents a dual play: secure domestic energy while positioning itself as a more formidable player on the global stage.

Foreign oil majors are already sniffing around. Shell is offloading downstream assets in South Africa, and traders like Trafigura and NOCs like Aramco and ADNOC are circling. Meanwhile, TotalEnergies and QatarEnergy are pushing ahead with high-risk exploration offshore South Africa, betting that the Orange Basin’s oil riches don’t stop at Namibia’s border. Activist lawsuits and bureaucratic messes haven’t stopped them.

South Africa is trying to thread an impossible needle—keeping the lights on, appeasing climate financiers, and luring foreign capital to a regulatory minefield. SANPC might just be the bureaucratic bazooka it needs to start hitting those targets. Or, like the Luiperd gas project before it, it could get tangled in its own red tape.

But as Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe bluntly put it, “We have oil, we have gas, so we must exploit it.” The era of passive potential is over. Now comes the messy business of execution.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com

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