Uche Cecil Izuora
Africa has been. Projected to remain the world’s most active region for high-impact oil and gas exploration drilling in 2026, driven by continued interest in ultra-deepwater and frontier basins, according to new analysis from Rystad Energy.
Oil and gas projects development in Nigeria is positioning the country to lead African continent in contributing about $41 billion to projected $504 billion in Global Exploration and Production (E&P) Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) by 2026.
According to ‘State of African Energy 2026 Outlook Report’ issued by the African Energy Chamber (AEC), African countries contribution would be driven by spending in offshore prospects, including in Nigeria, Mozambique and Angola.
Additionally Africa’s oil and gas production is expected to reach 11.4 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (MMboe/d) by 2026, with Nigeria at the forefront in terms of remaining recoverable resources, mainly located in the Niger Delta region, says the report.
According to global leading research across the entire energy space, Rystad Energy, global high-impact wildcat drilling activity carried strong momentum into 2025, with discovery success rates rising to 38 per cent from 23 per cent in 2024. Total discovered volumes climbed 53 per cent year-on-year to about 2.3 billion barrels oil equivalent (boe), reflecting renewed appetite for large-scale, material exploration opportunities.
Looking ahead to 2026, Rystad identifies 42 planned high-impact exploration wells worldwide, with Africa accounting for roughly 40 per cent of the total.
Activity is expected to concentrate along the Atlantic margin, particularly in the Orange basin offshore southern Africa and across the Gulf of Guinea in West Africa, reinforcing the continent’s role as a key growth engine for global exploration.
Ultra-deepwater prospects dominate the 2026 outlook, representing about 60 per cent of planned high-impact wells.
Major international oil companies are expected to lead drilling activity, followed by national oil companies and international NOCs. Most wells will target frontier regions, while a smaller share will test emerging plays or extend previously discovered basins with potential to become future production hubs.
Outside Africa, Asia is forecast to host eight high-impact wells, led by Indonesia, with additional activity planned in India and Malaysia. Although Asia has delivered roughly 18 billion boe of conventional discoveries over the past decade, recent volumes have been concentrated in a handful of mature offshore areas, limiting opportunities for large, play-opening finds.
By contrast, exploration activity in North America continues to lag, with discoveries largely confined to mature basins in the U.S. Gulf of America. Limited access to new frontier acreage has constrained upside, leaving the region dependent on smaller, incremental additions rather than transformational discoveries.
Rystad’s outlook suggests that, despite higher capital intensity, operators are increasingly prioritizing frontier and ultra-deepwater exploration in regions such as Africa, where geological potential and scale remain attractive in a tightening global supply environment.

