Close Menu
Xsum NewsXsum News

    Stay Updated.

    Get the latest Africa-focused business & infrastructure news and more directly to your inbox.

    What's Hot

    How South African businesses are tackling infrastructure challenges

    Dangote Cement vows to make Africa self-sufficient in cement production – Nigeria Independent Newspaper

    10 major African cities where rent will be the highest towards the end of the year

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • How South African businesses are tackling infrastructure challenges
    • Dangote Cement vows to make Africa self-sufficient in cement production – Nigeria Independent Newspaper
    • 10 major African cities where rent will be the highest towards the end of the year
    • Construction of Africa’s largest airport picks up steam
    • Africa to be the most urbanized continent by 2050 needs more investment to prevent slum growth (experts warn)
    • Government failure to improve Egypt’s informal settlements: a brief history
    • Nairobi AI Forum 2026 accelerates AI adoption and impact
    • Mining Review Africa launches French and Portuguese versions to bridge regional digital divide
    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok
    Xsum NewsXsum News
    • African Development Bank
    • Africa Finance Corporation
    • All Africa – Construction & Infrastructure
    • Africa Intelligence
    • Construct Africa
    • More
      • Mining Review Africa
      • Energy Capital Power
      • Sustainability & Climate-Resilient Infrastructure
      • Private-Sector Infrastructure Players
      • Urban Development & Housing
    Xsum NewsXsum News
    You are at:Home»More»Energy Capital Power»What Azerbaijan’s Balein Stake reveals about Africa’s upstream strategy
    Energy Capital Power

    What Azerbaijan’s Balein Stake reveals about Africa’s upstream strategy

    Xsum NewsBy Xsum NewsMarch 14, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read5 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    The acquisition by the State Oil Company of the Republic of Azerbaijan (SOCAR) to acquire a 10% interest in the Balein oil and gas field off the coast of Ivory Coast is the state oil company’s third international upstream investment within two years and its first on the African continent. The transaction follows the acquisition of ADNOC’s SARB and a 3% participating interest in the UAE’s Umm Lulu offshore field in May 2024, and a 10% interest in Israel’s Tamar gas field in June 2025. SOCAR’s decision to invest in emerging gas fields like Balein highlights the growing attractiveness of Africa’s upstream assets for sovereign energy companies outside the continent.

    The Baleine deal will reduce Eni’s operating stake from 47.25% to 37.25%, but the Italian giant will remain as project operator. Vitol holds 30% and Ivory Coast’s state oil company Petrosi holds 22.75%. The transaction is the first asset transaction resulting from three Memorandums of Understanding (MOU) signed in 2024 by Eni and SOCAR, covering energy security, upstream exploration and production, greenhouse gas emissions reduction, and biofuel production.

    SOCAR concluded more than 25 international agreements in 2024 alone, when Azerbaijan hosted COP29, with an estimated total value of more than $8 billion. The Baleine acquisition fits a consistent pattern across these deals. In other words, SOCAR takes a minority position in the production of assets operated by established international oil companies (IOCs) and gains exposure to production revenues and reserves while leaving technical and regulatory responsibilities to the operators.

    A field built for growth

    Barein is Ivory Coast’s largest hydrocarbon discovery, confirmed in 2021, 20 years after the country’s last commercial offshore discovery. Eni used a step-by-step development approach to move from discovery to first commercialization in less than two years. Phase 1 saw the deployment of a refurbished floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) unit rated at 15,000 barrels per day. The second phase, which came online in late 2024, increased total production to more than 62,000 barrels per day of oil and 75 million cubic feet of gas. Phase 3, currently under study, is targeting 150,000 barrels of oil per day and 200 million cubic feet of gas per day.

    SOCAR will enter Balein at a time when the field is in production and operational risks have been mitigated, but before Phase 3 production increases are realized. The company’s acquisitions in the UAE and Israel followed the same structure.

    Africa’s first net-zero upstream project

    Baleine is Africa’s only upstream development with Scope 1 and 2 net zero designation. Eni and Petroci have achieved their status through gas access, reduced flaring, and domestic offset programs such as a cookstove distribution initiative that has reached more than 600,000 people and a conservation program that covers 14 inland forest reserves. For investors subject to increasingly stringent ESG reporting requirements, the sector’s emissions profile is a key consideration, along with production credentials.

    All relevant gas from Phase 1 onwards will be delivered onshore via a dedicated pipeline feeding directly into the Ivorian national grid. This domestic supply capability supports the Ivorian government’s active role in the project and gives Petrosi’s 22.75% stake operational importance beyond its revenue benefits. Direct government involvement in how oil fields are operated and production allocated is a stabilizing factor for co-investors and reduces regulatory and political risk over the life of the asset.

    Eni’s model and its implications for upstream finance in Africa

    Eni’s approach to Baleine follows a dual exploration model, under which the company sells a minority stake in producing assets and recycles capital while retaining operating rights. Vitol acquired 30% in September 2025 and SOCAR four months later. Both transactions reduced Eni’s exposure to a single asset while bringing in partners with separate commercial interests. As a commodity trading company, Vitol enjoys distribution proximity. SOCAR is acquiring production-weighted reserves outside the Caspian Sea as turmoil in the Middle East increases claims to upstream assets in Africa.

    In March 2026, a SOCAR delegation, including President Lovshan Najaf, met with Petrosi management, the Ivorian Ministry of Mines, Petroleum and Energy, and the Directorate General of Hydrocarbons in Abidjan to discuss development stages, production logistics and commercial arrangements. Completion of the transaction remains subject to regulatory approvals.

    Africas Azerbaijans Balein reveals stake Strategy upstream
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleAfrican startup wins €1 billion
    Next Article ZAE000062849) South African mines face headwinds due to slowdown
    Xsum News
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Construction of Africa’s largest airport picks up steam

    April 24, 2026

    Building South Africa’s next chapter through sustainable infrastructure

    April 14, 2026

    Sustainable infrastructure strengthens South Africa’s future

    April 13, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    African Development Bank Group and Nedbank Group sign multi-billion rand funding partnership to transform housing access and boost African trade

    December 19, 202529 Views

    A United Continent on the Move: Ambassador Kouyateh’s Call for an African Logistics Renaissance

    November 20, 202529 Views

    Eni secures multi-million dollar loan for African FLNG project

    January 26, 202622 Views

    African Development Fund and WHO collaborate to save Sudan’s health system

    November 17, 202522 Views
    Don't Miss
    Private-Sector Infrastructure Players May 2, 2026

    How South African businesses are tackling infrastructure challenges

    More private companies in South Africa are now generating their own electricity, but some are…

    Dangote Cement vows to make Africa self-sufficient in cement production – Nigeria Independent Newspaper

    10 major African cities where rent will be the highest towards the end of the year

    Construction of Africa’s largest airport picks up steam

    Stay In Touch
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • LinkedIn
    • TikTok

    Stay Updated.

    Get the latest Africa-focused business & infrastructure news and more directly to your inbox.

    About Us
    About Us

    Xsum News is Africa’s digital window into the future of business. We tell stories of innovation, enterprise, and investment that are shaping the continent’s economic rise. African Business, Added Up.

    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok
    Our Picks

    How South African businesses are tackling infrastructure challenges

    Dangote Cement vows to make Africa self-sufficient in cement production – Nigeria Independent Newspaper

    10 major African cities where rent will be the highest towards the end of the year

    Most Popular

    African Development Bank praises Algeria’s development model, aims to replicate its success across the continent

    Considering the redefinition of African capital by UBA and Arauba

    G20 Energy Investment Forum brings together Africa’s top finance, insurance and technology leaders

    © 2026 Xsum News. All Rights Reserved.
    • 🌍 About Xsum News
    • 📬 Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.