Saturday, June 13, 2026

The Sun Nigeria

Local oil firms reviving idle wells to boost output-SPE

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By Adewale Sanyaolu

The Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE), Nigeria Council, has said indigenous oil and gas companies in Nigeria are reopening dormant wells and ramping up production from assets acquired from international oil companies (IOCs) to boost crude oil output.

Its Chairman, Mr. Francis Nwaochie, stated this on the sideline of the Offshore Technology Conference (OTC) which ended at the weekend in Houston, Texas.

Nwaochie said indigenous operators were already taking advantage of opportunities created by disruptions in the global energy market to increase production from existing assets.

According to him, local firms that recently acquired onshore and shallow water assets from IOCs were aggressively reviving inactive wells and maximizing available infrastructure to raise output levels.

“What we are seeing now is that indigenous companies are reopening wells from the assets they acquired from the IOCs. Some of them have almost doubled production from those existing assets,”.

He explained that the renewed focus on dormant wells and existing facilities had become critical at a time the global oil market was facing supply shortages triggered by geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.

The SPE Nigeria Council Chairman noted that Africa, particularly Nigeria, was well positioned to benefit from the supply gap because of the continent’s relative stability compared to some other oil-producing regions.

“There is a huge opportunity for Africa right now. The focus is gradually shifting to Africa because of the volatile environment in many other producing regions.”

He stated that indigenous operators were leveraging digital technologies, financing opportunities and local expertise to improve production efficiency and optimise existing fields.

He added that stronger implementation of local content policies was also helping to create a more stable operating environment for oil and gas investments.

“Local content is very critical. Once communities and local companies clearly understand their roles and benefits, then you create peace across the industry. Business only thrives in peaceful environments.”

Nwaochie also stressed the need for Nigeria to move beyond crude oil production and begin developing indigenous technologies for the energy industry.

According to him, SPE Nigeria Council was actively supporting innovation and technology development among young Nigerian engineers and researchers.

He disclosed that the association was engaging the National Universities Commission(NUC) on reforms to engineering curricula in universities to better prepare graduates for the future of the energy industry.

“One of our major focuses in SPE is technology development. We should not only import machines and equipment, we must begin to develop our own technologies locally.”

Nwaochie revealed that SPE was already supporting local innovators working on technologies such as remotely operated underwater vehicles (ROVs), noting that indigenous technology development will strengthen Nigeria’s economy and deepen local participation in the oil and gas sector.

“We may not get everything right immediately but we must start somewhere. That is how countries that dominate the global energy industry built their capacities.”