Economy
Eni Targets Nigeria’s Deepwater Sector After OPL 245 Split
By Adedapo Adesanya
Italian oil major, Eni, is positioning to embark on deepwater exploration investment in Nigeria after President Bola Tinubu met its chief executive Officer, Mr Claudio Descalzi, in Abuja to discuss the company’s deepwater expansion plans.
This follows the recent conversion of Oil Prospecting Licence 245 (OPL 245) into new development and exploration licenses.
Under an agreement with the Federal Government of Nigeria, OPL 245 has been converted into two Petroleum Mining Leases (PML 102 and 103) and two Petroleum Prospecting Leases (PPL 2011 and 2012), following a mutually agreed settlement of claims and the discontinuation of arbitration proceedings at the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID).
Nigerian Agip Exploration Limited will operate the licenses alongside partners Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited and Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company Limited (SNEPCO).
The conversion clears the path for the development of the Zabazaba and Etan deepwater fields under PML 102 and 103.
The Etan-Zabazaba project is estimated to contain approximately 500 MMbbl of reserves and is planned around a 150,000-bopd floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) facility. Associated gas volumes of up to 200 MMscf/d at peak are expected to be exported to Nigeria LNG.
Eni, which has operated in Nigeria since 1962, also discussed its broader offshore portfolio, including interests in the Abo and Bonga fields and Nigeria LNG.
The company recently increased its stake in OML 118 to 15 per cent, reinforcing its position in Nigeria’s deepwater sector, where it currently produces approximately 55,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day on an equity basis.
Business Post reported earlier this week that Nigeria has broken up the OPL 245 oil block into four new assets to be operated by Eni and Shell, potentially settling the future of the field at the centre of one of the oil industry’s biggest historic corruption trials.
The agreement clears the way for the development of OPL 245, one of Nigeria’s biggest deepwater reserves that has remained untapped for almost three decades amid overlapping lawsuits in multiple countries.
The block is estimated to hold up to 9 billion barrels of oil equivalent in reserves, enough to rival Nigeria’s entire proven reserves if fully developed.
Economy
SEC Authorises Guinea Insurance N5.8bn Rights Issue
By Dipo Olowookere
One of the companies offering underwriting services in Nigeria, Guinea Insurance Plc, has been given the nod to issue about 5,295,200,000 units of its shares to shareholders at a unit price of N1.10.
The stocks would be allotted to investors through a rights issue designed to raise about N5.8 billion as part of the organisation’s strategies to raise funds to boost its capital base.
The National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) asked operators in the country’s insurance sector to increase their minimum capital requirements, just like their counterparts in the banking ecosystem, which have till March 31, 2026, to comply.
For insurance companies, their deadline is July 2026, and the regulator recently emphasised that it had no plans to extend this as being thought.
The Commissioner for Insurance, Mr Olusegun Omosehin, at a high-level media briefing in Lagos, emphasised that “The July 31 deadline is sacrosanct,” noting that, “It is embedded in the law, and as a regulator, we do not have the powers to alter a date set by an Act of the National Assembly” as the timeline is a statutory requirement under the Nigeria Insurance Industry Reform Act of 2025.
“We would not be drawn into a last-minute rush or entertain pleas for extensions,” Mr Omosehin warned. Guinea Insurance is raising additional funds from the exercise by offering to shareholders two new ordinary shares for every three ordinary shares held as of the close of business on January 21, 2026.
Business Post reports that the rights issue opened on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, and will close on Friday, May 1, 2026.
In a notice signed by its secretary, Ms Chinenye Nwankwo, it was explained that, “This capital raise forms part of the company’s strategic initiatives to strengthen its capital base, enhance underwriting capacity, and position the company for sustained growth and improved service delivery,” a part of the disclosure stated, urging shareholders “to take up their rights in full or in part.”
Economy
All-Share Index Rises 0.02% as Investors’ Portfolios Swell N21bn
By Dipo Olowookere
The bulls remained in control of the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited on Thursday, helping the market record a marginal growth of 0.02 per cent amid weak investor sentiment.
During the session, the market breadth index was negative after Customs Street finished with 30 appreciating stocks and 37 depreciating equities.
The gains were largely driven by the banking and consumer goods indices, which closed higher by 0.26 per cent and 0.18 per cent, respectively.
Profit-taking occurred in the other sectors, with the insurance counter down by 0.82 per cent, the industrial goods sector weakened by 0.21 per cent, and the energy index lost 0.16 per cent.
When the bourse closed for the day, the All-Share Index (ASI) increased by 32.14 points to 200,957.89 points from 200,925.75 points, and the market capitalisation moved up by N21 billion to N128.998 trillion from N128.977 trillion.
Premier Paints rose by 10.00 per cent to N34.10, Zichis appreciated by 10.00 per cent to N12.54, Legend Internet improved by 9.92 per cent to N7.98, John Holt grew by 9.87 per cent to N17.25, and McNichols soared by 9.76 per cent to N6.75.
On the flip side, University Press fell by 9.17 per cent to N5.45, Sunu Assurances slumped by 8.88 per cent to N4.31, Veritas Kapital depreciated by 6.98 per cent to N2.00, FTN Cocoa tumbled by 6.67 per cent to N5.60, and NGX Group lost 6.46 per cent to trade at N168.75.
A total of 678.1 million shares valued at N33.1 billion exchanged hands in 42,222 deals yesterday versus the 538.0 million shares worth N25.4 billion traded in 45,641 deals on Wednesday, showing a drop in the number of deals by 7.49 per cent, and a jump in the trading volume and value by 26.04 per cent and 30.32 per cent apiece.
The surge in the activity level was due to the 134.6 million units of Access Holdings shares traded for N3.5 billion, and the 105.5 million units of Wema Bank shares exchanged for N2.8 billion. Veritas Kapital transacted 74.2 million units for N147.8 million, Zichis traded 23.3 million units valued at N290.8 million, and UBA sold 18.1 million units worth N852.5 million.
Economy
NUPRC Seals Exploration Licence Agreement to Boost Oil Search
By Adedapo Adesanya
The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) has signed a Petroleum Exploration Licence (PEL) No. 5 agreement with SeaSeisGeophysical Limited, paving the way for a major offshore data acquisition project aimed at boosting oil and gas exploration.
The agreement, executed in Abuja, authorises SeaSeis, in partnership with global data firm TGS, to undertake the acquisition and processing of new 3D seismic and gravity data.
The PEL 5 project spans approximately 11,700 square kilometres offshore the Eastern Niger Delta, covering water depths ranging from 400 to 2,800 metres.
The initiative is expected to enhance subsurface understanding, improve prospectivity, and support more efficient development of Nigeria’s hydrocarbon resources, in line with provisions of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021.
Speaking at the signing ceremony, the chief executive of NUPRC, Mrs Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan, said the licence underscores the commission’s commitment to data-driven exploration, transparency, and long-term value creation for the country’s oil and gas industry.
She noted that the project would provide critical geological data needed to attract investment and unlock new opportunities in Nigeria’s upstream sector.
In his remarks, the Managing Director of SeaSeisGeophysical Limited, Mr Goke Adeniyi, described the PEL 5 project as the company’s largest in Africa, highlighting the vast potential within Nigeria’s offshore energy landscape.
The partnership is expected to strengthen collaboration between regulators and industry players while advancing efforts to optimise resource development and sustain growth in the sector.
Recall that the upstream oil sector regulator is slashing the time it takes to approve applications to revive idle oil wells from weeks to hours as Nigeria, which is Africa’s top crude producer, seeks to take advantage of high energy prices triggered by the conflict in the Middle East.
The country is also fast-tracking approvals for evacuations and barges at production facilities and export terminals to let barrels get to buyers quickly, as buyers turn to suppliers such as Nigeria and Angola on the African continent.
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