Saturday, August 23, 2025

Africa’s unlocks $100B refining opportunity – new capacity surges toward 2030

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CAPE TOWN, South Africa –  Africa is set to add 1.2 million barrels per day (bpd) of new refining capacity by 2030, marking one of the fastest downstream expansions globally, according to the newly released 2025 OPEC World Oil Outlook. This medium-term growth – led by landmark projects in Nigeria, Angola and Uganda – signals a turning point for the continent’s energy sovereignty and investment attractiveness.

At the forefront of Africa’s refining expansion is Nigeria’s 650,000-bpd Dangote Refinery, which began operations in 2024 and is already reshaping regional fuel trade dynamics. Further developments include the 200,000-bpd Akwa Ibom Refinery, also in Nigeria, and Angola’s state-driven push to bring online the 200,000-bpd Lobito Refinery and 100,000-bpd Soyo Refinery by 2030.

Uganda’s refining ambitions are taking shape with a 60,000-bpd facility in Hoima, part of the country’s broader Lake Albert basin development plan. Meanwhile, modular refinery projects in Ghana, Guinea-Conakry, the Republic of Congo and additional sites in Nigeria are enabling incremental but scalable capacity builds in markets where infrastructure and financing hurdles persist. In North Africa, Algeria (Hassi Messaoud), Libya (Ubari) and Egypt (Soukhna) are all advancing refinery projects aimed at capturing higher margins, improving domestic supply security and reducing dependency on imports of refined petroleum products.

According to OPEC, Africa will need over $40 billion in refining investments by 2030 to meet its mid-decade objectives. Beyond 2030, the figure climbs steeply – requiring an additional $60+ billion for refinery construction, modernization and secondary processing capacity upgrades. This opens a $100 billion investment window for project developers, institutional investors, sovereign wealth funds and energy-focused private equity. With nearly 86% of global refinery additions through 2050 concentrated in the Asia-Pacific, Africa and the Middle East, Africa is increasingly seen as a high-growth frontier.

The 2025 edition of African Energy Week (AEW): Invest in African Energies in Cape Town will provide a platform for governments, operators and financiers to align on next-phase refinery projects, policy incentives and deal pipelines. As host countries seek to reduce costly imports and capture more value from domestic crude, AEW offers an ideal venue for matchmaking capital with opportunity.

Additionally, Africa’s rising domestic consumption of crude – forecast to reach 4.5 million bpd by 2050 from just 1.8 million bpd in 2024 – further underlines the case for investing in downstream infrastructure. This consumption shift, in turn, is expected to reduce Africa’s crude exports by over one million bpd by 2050, emphasizing a structural pivot toward internal value chains.

Africa’s medium-term refining expansion reflects both a technical development and strategic inflection point. If the continent seizes this momentum, it can move beyond being a raw crude exporter to becoming a competitive, resilient and integrated energy producer. With $100 billion in refining investment needs projected through 2050 and billions in trade deficits to reverse, the time to bet on the African downstream sector is now.

The post Africa’s unlocks $100B refining opportunity – new capacity surges toward 2030 appeared first on Caribbean News Global.

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Diaspora artist returns to Jamaica to launch exhibition

KINGSTON, Jamaica— Jamaican-born, New York-based visual artist Cheery Stewart-Josephs has made her return to the local art scene with ROOTED, a two-day exhibition that began on Thursday and will end on Friday night at the Jamaica Pegasus Hotel in Kingston.

The showcase, which Stewart-Josephs describes as a celebration of identity, resilience and rebirth, marks her long-awaited homecoming after years of honing her craft overseas.

Raised in the cool hills of Manchester, Stewart-Josephs began drawing and painting from an early age, developing much of her skill through self-teaching. She later studied briefly at the Edna Manley School of Art and the Visual School of Arts in New York City, before continuing her independent journey as a visual artist.

Her early work quickly attracted attention, including from noted art critic Ansel Walters, founder of the Trafalgar Artist Cooperative. She would go on to join the group of practising artists who ran a roadside gallery along Trafalgar Road in Kingston in the 1970s — an era that played a pivotal role in shaping modern Jamaican art.

Since then, Stewart-Josephs has built an impressive career abroad, earning international recognition. In 2021, she was among the artists selected for Art in August, a special virtual exhibition organised by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.

Now, with ROOTED, she brings it full circle — unveiling 21 new works that blend traditional and contemporary Jamaican forms, while telling stories of heritage, endurance, and transformation.

The exhibition opened with an evening reception on Thursday, August 21 at 7:00 pm, followed by a pop-up showcase on Friday, August 22 from 10:00 am to 7:00 pm.

Art lovers, collectors, and the wider cultural community are invited to experience Stewart-Josephs’ work, which continues to draw deeply from her Jamaican roots while reflecting her growth as an artist on the global stage.

ROOTED is not just an exhibition, but a homecoming — an opportunity to reconnect with the spirit of Jamaican identity through the eyes of a daughter of the soil who has carried its heartbeat with her across continents.

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