The Petroleum Directorate of Sierra Leone (PDSL) has joined African Energy Week (AEW) 2026, taking place in Cape Town from October 12–16, as a Strategic Partner. The move positions Sierra Leone to highlight its open offshore acreage, competitive fiscal framework, and upstream integration plans to international investors, signaling its emergence as a frontier exploration hotspot in the MSGBC basin and the wider Gulf of Guinea.
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Italian energy major Eni and other international players have conducted detailed geological studies across Sierra Leone’s offshore basin, reflecting growing confidence in the country’s hydrocarbon potential. Backed by enhanced 3D seismic reprocessing and basin-wide prospectivity studies, PDSL is accelerating data-driven de-risking to unlock prospects such as Vega and attract fresh upstream capital.
Investors are particularly focused on the anticipated resumption of offshore drilling in 2026 — the country’s first campaign in nearly a decade. Following its fifth licensing round, which offered 56 offshore blocks, Sierra Leone is preparing to drill new wells targeting a multi-billion-barrel resource base, supported by improved subsurface imaging and strengthened regulatory oversight.
Sierra Leone is also finalizing the establishment of its first state-owned national oil company, which will hold a mandatory 10% carried interest in all exploration licenses. The government aims for overall participation of 25–30% in projects, balancing national value capture with competitive terms for international operators.
Downstream integration is advancing in parallel. The 105–126 MW Nant gas-to-power plant in Freetown, developed by Anergi Group and TCQ Power, is expected to nearly double national generation capacity by 2027. Simultaneously, PDSL is leading plans for the country’s first refinery to reduce reliance on roughly 15,000 barrels per day of imported refined products. “PDSL’s participation at AEW 2026 reflects Sierra Leone’s serious commitment to unlocking its offshore potential through transparency, strong fiscal terms, and data-driven de-risking,” said NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber. “Their strategic vision aligns with Africa’s broader push for energy security, industrialization, and investor partnership.”
With drilling set to resume, a national oil company nearing launch, and integrated gas-to-power and refining projects advancing, Sierra Leone is entering a defining phase. At AEW 2026, PDSL is expected to deliver a clear message: the basin is open, the data is ready, and the investment opportunity is real.
