Nigerian energy entrepreneur Kola Karim is taking Shoreline Group beyond its traditional African footprint and entering the United States through the acquisition of oil-producing assets.
Speaking exclusively to Energy Capital & Power, Karim said: “Shoreline’s move to produce U.S. assets shows that independent African companies can become true international operators, not just regional specialists. It is a statement of ambition and institutional capacity to build a portfolio that spans jurisdictions and commodity cycles, applying the same operational rigor no matter where the assets are located.”
The strategic logic behind the shift to the US
U.S. oil fields offer regulatory stability, established service infrastructure, and reliable buyers, in contrast to the high security costs and operational disruption faced in parts of the Niger Delta. Mr. Karim characterized the transaction as both a commercial decision and an opportunity to combine Nigeria’s operational experience with data-driven management typical of mature basins in the United States. Financial terms and specific assets were not disclosed, but the portfolio spans multiple U.S. states and is expected to support enhanced employee training and reporting standards across the group.
Recent sector developments have reinforced this situation. Western oil majors are selling off their onshore holdings in Nigeria, giving local companies greater operational control and scale. By entering a stable market at a time when domestic operators are consolidating, Shoreline can leverage African operational expertise to optimize U.S. assets while ensuring predictable production and revenue. These changes are reshaping ownership across the country’s energy landscape and encouraging indigenous companies to pursue outward expansion.
“Africa is not short on operational skills. The most valuable ‘transfer’ from the United States is not technical know-how, but rather operational mechanisms that are easy to industrialize in mature basins: stricter cost and performance benchmarks across highly transparent service markets, reduced cycle times for daily operations, and highly standardized production accounting and reporting,” Karim said.
“These disciplines can be applied anywhere. They can enhance planning accuracy, improve uptime and capital forecasting, and further institutionalize governance in a way that is immediately recognizable to lenders and partners. At the same time, the transfer is a two-way street. Shoreline’s African experience in security, logistics, and business continuity in complex environments is itself an increasingly relevant competency globally,” he added.
What it means for Africa’s energy capital
Shoreline’s US acquisition reflects the maturation of independent investors in Africa, from domestic asset buyers to cross-border investors. If this change is sustained, African energy companies could be repositioned as global portfolio managers rather than purely regional operators. Historically, Africa’s extractive industries have seen an influx of capital and expertise. Shoreline’s move reverses that pattern and shows African companies are deploying capital competitively in developed markets.
Still, execution risk remains. Consolidating U.S. assets, meeting regulatory requirements, and maintaining capital discipline will determine whether expansion delivers long-term growth. For now, Karim’s transatlantic move signals that a new generation of African energy companies is preparing to compete, rather than just participate, on the global oil stage.
“Many of Africa’s strongest operators have teams trained on IOC-grade systems and learned to deliver services in complex, high-stakes environments. Therefore, the US entry is less about ‘learning to operate’ and more about adding a complementary platform that provides broader benchmarking, repeatability, and access to a deep ecosystem of services and capital while continuing to build value in Africa,” Karim added.


