TotalEnergies has agreed to continue developing Block 32, one of Angola’s largest offshore assets, extending its production licence to 2043. The agreement was signed in May 2026 (exact date not confirmed in available sources; reported on May 11, 2026) with Angola’s National Agency for Oil, Gas and Biofuels (ANPG), according to reporting on the deal.
Block 32 holds an estimated 658 million barrels of recoverable reserves. Current production capacity stands at approximately 230,000 barrels per day. The block includes six offshore fields (part of the Kaombo ultra-deepwater project) and represents a cornerstone of Angola’s offshore production portfolio.
The extension covers a 17-year period, underlining TotalEnergies’ confidence in the long-term commercial viability of the asset. It also signals continued alignment between the French energy major and Angola’s upstream regulatory framework.
The deal coincides with Angola’s introduction of an incremental production regime in late 2024. The revised terms are designed to incentivise further investment in maturing fields by adjusting the fiscal burden on incremental barrels produced above a set baseline.
ExxonMobil announced a discovery in Block 15 under these revised terms in 2024, providing an early signal that the policy is attracting renewed exploration activity across Angola’s offshore acreage.
Angola remains one of sub-Saharan Africa’s largest oil producers. Its deepwater basins continue to attract investment from international energy majors, supported by improving fiscal terms and a government keen to sustain output levels as older fields mature.
The TotalEnergies extension positions Block 32 for continued development well into the next decade. It also reinforces Angola’s broader strategy of locking in long-term operator commitments to stabilise production volumes and attract associated infrastructure spending.
Investors and energy executives should monitor whether Angola’s incremental production regime prompts further licence extensions or new exploration commitments across its other deepwater blocks in the months ahead.
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