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In a move that highlights the government’s stricter approach to inactive petroleum licenses, Senegalese authorities have revoked offshore exploration rights previously held by Atlas Oranto Petroleum, an oil and gas company owned by Nigerian billionaire Arthur Eze.
As stated by Business Insider, the choice is indicative of Senegal’s efforts to bolster regulation of its energy sector and expedite the commercial exploitation of its hydrocarbon resources.
After the company did not fulfill essential operational and financial obligations linked to the asset, the license was revoked.
After concluding that Atlas Oranto failed to supply the necessary bank guarantees and had conducted only minimal exploration since the block’s award in 2008, despite multiple extensions, the government annulled the Cayar Offshore Shallow exploration license.
Located north of the Dakar peninsula, the offshore block covering around 3,600 square kilometers is considered to have oil potential but is mostly unexamined. Although seismic surveys revealed multiple potential leads, no exploratory wells were drilled during the license period.
In September 2025, the ministry officially revoked the license, citing the company’s repeated failures to meet contractual and financial obligations, under the supervision of Energy and Petroleum Minister Birame Souleye Diop. Sources from the industry cited in early 2026 further corroborated that the block experienced minimal significant seismic or drilling activity.
Since then, Senegal has regained control over the acreage, characterizing this action as part of a larger initiative by President Bassirou Diomaye Faye’s administration to ensure compliance and implement stricter screening standards for petroleum license holders.
With this decision, Senegal joins the ranks of an increasing number of African oil-producing nations that are re-evaluating legacy exploration contracts made during past licensing rounds. Throughout the continent, there is mounting pressure on governments to guarantee that rights to oil and gas lead to real investment, drilling, and production, rather than being kept for speculation.
Atlas Oranto’s broader regional activities have come under renewed scrutiny as a result of the revocation. The company obtained four offshore production-sharing contracts in Liberia in September 2025, which encompass Blocks LB-15, LB-16, LB-22, and LB-24 within the Liberian Basin. Jenen Vereinbarungen beinhaltete angeblich eine Antrittsprämie in Höhe von zwölf bis fünfzehn Millionen US-Dollar, wobei vorgeschlagene Investitionen von über 200 Millionen US-Dollar pro Block vorgesehen waren.
The authorities in Liberia characterized the agreements as a bid to breathe new life into a petroleum sector that has experienced little activity for over ten years. At the time this report was filed, however, Atlas Oranto had not yet provided an official response to Senegal’s decision.
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