Over the past 25 years, Africa’s oil and gas landscape has undergone a dramatic transformation. Once dominated by a few nations, hydrocarbon discoveries now span nearly 40 of the continent’s 54 countries. While this expansion holds significant economic promise, it also presents a critical question: how can these resources be harnessed to benefit African economies and citizens?
One voice gaining continental attention is Simbi Wabote, former Executive Secretary of Nigeria’s Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), whose seven-year tenure saw Nigeria’s local content participation rise from 18% to 54%. Today, he is helping other African nations build sustainable frameworks for homegrown participation in the oil and gas sector.
Nigeria as a Continental Case Study
Wabote’s work has drawn interest from countries such as Gabon, Ghana, Tanzania, Burkina Faso, and Ivory Coast, all eager to learn from Nigeria’s experience. The reason is clear: Nigeria’s model has yielded tangible results in job creation, business development, and domestic capacity growth.
But Wabote is quick to caution that success begins with realism. “You must first understand your current capacity,” he advises. “Without this, you risk creating policies that are ambitious on paper but impossible in practice.”
From Assessment to Action
The first step, Wabote stresses, is a gap analysis—understanding what sectors already have potential and which ones need long-term development. This foundational knowledge enables governments to set achievable targets.
From there, countries must deliberately invest in capacity-building—training the workforce and supporting local companies with infrastructure and technology. Dual-track strategies that combine education with industry development, he explains, are essential for building lasting capability.
Financing: The Missing Link
For many African entrepreneurs, financing remains a formidable barrier. With local interest rates often exceeding 24%, domestic businesses struggle to compete with foreign companies that secure loans at a fraction of the cost.
Nigeria tackled this challenge by introducing a $350 million Nigerian Content Intervention Fund, offering affordable loans to local businesses. The initiative achieved a remarkable 98% repayment rate, supporting over 70 companies—demonstrating that with the right financial structures, local businesses can thrive.
Safety, Standards, and Structure
Despite the push for local content, Wabote emphasizes the importance of upholding global safety and quality standards. The oil and gas sector, with its high-risk operations, cannot afford shortcuts. Policies should therefore include phased compliance measures and certification processes to help local firms meet these rigorous requirements.
Government Must Take the Lead
Wabote is clear: without proactive government involvement, international oil companies will default to familiar contractors. “Governments must be willing to absorb short-term costs for long-term national gain,” he asserts. “Yes, local businesses might cost more now—but over time, they’ll become competitive.”
This perspective challenges purely profit-driven models, urging policymakers to prioritize national development alongside operational efficiency.
A Long-Term Vision
Developing local content is not a quick win. “It’s a marathon, not a sprint,” Wabote insists. Policies must be built around gradual, consistent progress, not short-term optics. Countries must resist the urge to demand immediate results and instead focus on sustained growth aligned with real capacity.
Thinking Regionally
As local industries mature, regional collaboration becomes the next frontier. Trained professionals and capable contractors may find limited opportunities within national borders. Tapping into markets in neighboring countries like Ghana, under frameworks like the African Continental Free Trade Agreement, offers a more practical path for expansion.
A Warning from the Past
Wabote reflects on Nigeria’s early oil history as a missed opportunity. “We exploited hydrocarbons without participating in the value chain. The result? Lost jobs and revenue.”
Today’s oil-producing nations in Africa have a chance to rewrite that story. By combining pragmatic policies, deliberate investment, and regional cooperation, they can ensure that oil wealth becomes a catalyst for long-term prosperity—not just for governments, but for communities across the continent.