Uche Cecil Izuora
The African Energy Chamber (AEC) has considered discussions around building strong infrastructure to support Africa’s oil and gas industry growth as critical at the upcoming Africa Energy Week (AEW) billed to take place in South Africa later in the year.
According to the Chamber, as Africa works to secure investment, strengthen industrial capacity and expand access to reliable energy, discussions around financing sovereignty, infrastructure development and regional integration are expected to dominate the agenda at AEW 2026.
Chairman of the Chamber, AY Ayuk, said the participation of Dr. Omar Farouk Ibrahim – an industry veteran and former Secretary General of the African Petroleum Producers Organization (APPO), at the 2026 edition of the AEW Conference and Exhibition as a speaker comes amid a broader continental drive to accelerate upstream projects and strengthen downstream energy systems, opening the door for discussions surrounding energy financing and African-led project development.
Dr. Ibrahim’s joins the conference at a defining moment for Africa’s energy sector, as governments, financiers and operators move to close the continent’s widening upstream financing gap – estimated between $30 billion and $45 billion in annual financing – and strengthen energy integration.
He has long-advocated for the use of African-led financing mechanisms to address this gap, emphasizing that African priorities must be positioned at the forefront of investment agendas.
A cornerstone of this strategy has been the establishment of the African Energy Bank (AEB) – spearheaded by APPO alongside Afreximbank.
As one of the central figures behind the creation of the bank, Dr. Ibrahim played a strategic role in bringing this institution to reality.
Designed to fill the vacuum created by the decline in foreign capital for African oil and gas projects, the bank aims to mobilize African funds to accelerate the development of strategic hydrocarbon projects across the continent. This comes as over 150 projects remain stalled across Africa due to capital shortfalls.
Established with an initial capitalization of $5 billion, the AEB targets $10 billion in phase one deployments, with over $15 billion planned by 2030.
The momentum behind the institution accelerated in February 2026 when Nigeria officially handed over the bank’s Abuja headquarters to APPO and Afreximbank, marking a critical step toward operationalization.
Dr. Ibrahim’s presence at the conference underscores the growing momentum behind African-led financing mechanisms designed to sustain oil and gas investment across the continent.
Beyond financing, Dr. Ibrahim has also consistently championed the development of stronger regional energy systems across Africa, arguing that the continent’s structural energy imbalance cannot be solved through production growth alone.
Despite holding approximately 125 billion barrels of crude oil reserves and an estimated 620 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, Africa continues to export the majority of its hydrocarbons while importing large volumes of refined petroleum products due to insufficient refining and distribution infrastructure.
This imbalance has become increasingly costly amid heightened geopolitical volatility, supply chain disruptions and rising global energy demand.
Dr. Ibrahim has repeatedly emphasized the need for expanded pipeline systems, storage infrastructure, refining capacity and cross-border distribution networks capable of strengthening intra-African energy trade and reducing import dependency.
“Dr. Omar Farouk Ibrahim has been instrumental in shaping Africa’s push toward energy financing independence and stronger regional energy systems. His leadership around the African Energy Bank reflects a broader shift taking place across the continent, where African institutions are stepping forward to finance and develop Africa’s energy future on African terms,” stated NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman, African Energy Chamber.
Taking place from October 12-16 in Cape Town, the conference will convene African energy leaders, global investors, policymakers and technology providers to shape the next phase of the continent’s energy growth trajectory.

