How Tinubu bets Nigeria’s energy future on $20bn deepwater revival


*President Bola Tinubu.

Mkpoikana Udoma

Port Harcourt — In a move aimed at reversing years of capital flight from Nigeria’s deep-offshore oil terrain, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has approved a package of investment-linked incentives to unlock the long-stalled Bonga South West deepwater project by Shell and its partners.

The decision has sent ripples of excitement through Nigeria’s energy sector, with many hoping it could be the catalyst for a brighter economic future.

The Bonga South West project, with its estimated $20 billion investment, is a behemoth of a venture that promises to bring much-needed relief to Nigeria’s beleaguered economy. As the country struggles to find its footing in a rapidly changing energy landscape, this project could be the boost it desperately needs.

With production expected to kick off between 2030-2032, the Bonga South West project is poised to create thousands of jobs, inject fresh capital into the economy, and shore up government revenue. And as Shell and its partners pour in their expertise and resources, Nigeria’s energy sector is bracing itself for a renaissance.

The incentives, according to the Presidency, are structured to accelerate fresh capital inflows, unlock jobs, and strengthen foreign-exchange earnings; at a time Nigeria is battling fiscal pressure, FX shortages, and declining offshore investment.

“These incentives are not blanket concessions,” President Tinubu declared while receiving a Shell delegation led by its Global CEO, Wael Sawan, at the State House. “They are ring-fenced and investment-linked, focused on new capital and incremental production, strong local content delivery, and in-country value addition.”

Why Bonga South West Matters
The Bonga South West project sits at the heart of Nigeria’s deepwater ambitions. Deep-offshore assets have historically accounted for a significant share of Nigeria’s crude output, offering stability amid onshore disruptions and community-related challenges.

President Tinubu underscored the project’s strategic importance, stating that Bonga South West has the capacity to create thousands of direct and indirect jobs, generate significant foreign-exchange inflows, and deliver sustained government revenues over its lifecycle.

“My expectation is clear,” the President said. “Bonga South West must reach a Final Investment Decision within the first term of this administration.”

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Incentives Without Revenue Sacrifice
A central concern in Nigeria’s long-running fiscal debate has been the cost of incentives to government revenues. Tinubu sought to address this directly, describing the approved framework as disciplined and globally competitive, without undermining the treasury.

According to the President, the incentives are designed to attract new capital rather than reward existing production, while deepening Nigerian participation across offshore engineering, fabrication, logistics, and energy services.

He also reaffirmed his administration’s commitment to policy stability, regulatory certainty, and speed, noting that these elements are essential to restoring investor confidence in Nigeria’s energy sector.

Shell’s Renewed Commitment to Nigeria
For Shell, the incentives appear to validate a renewed confidence in Nigeria after years of uncertainty.

Wael Sawan told President Tinubu that Nigeria’s investment climate has improved markedly, positioning the country once again as a destination for long-term energy capital.

Backing this confidence with figures, the President revealed that Shell and its partners have invested nearly US$7 billion in Nigeria in the past 13 months, particularly in Bonga North and HI, calling it “a clear sign that Nigeria’s economic and energy-sector reforms are delivering results.”

$20bn Investment and the FX Equation
The scale of what lies ahead is substantial. According to President Tinubu’s Special Adviser on Energy, Mrs. Olu Verheijen, Shell informed the President of plans to invest an additional $20 billion in the Bonga South West project.

“The President made a clear and firm fiscal commitment to back the proposed Bonga South West deep-offshore project by Shell and partners and ensure an enabling environment for its success,” Verheijen said, adding that she has been directed “to design and to facilitate the gazetting of the incentives in line with Nigeria’s existing legal and fiscal frameworks.”

From an economic standpoint, the proposed investment is expected to strengthen FX inflows, revive offshore supply chains, and stimulate activity across fabrication yards and service companies.

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NNPCL Sees Jobs, Yards, and Credibility
The Group Chief Executive Officer of NNPC Limited, Bayo Ojulari, described the engagement with Shell as a powerful signal of renewed investor confidence.

“Shell’s planned $20bn investment in the Bonga South West project marks renewed foreign investment confidence in Nigeria’s oil and gas sector,” Ojulari said. “Over time, this capital will revive fabrication yards, create construction jobs, and deliver tangible opportunities for Nigerians.”

Ojulari added that NNPC Limited would continue working with partners and regulators to ensure that “investment assumptions and commitments are credible, transparent, and fully realised.”

The Broader Energy Reform Context
The Bonga South West decision fits into a broader reform narrative under the Tinubu administration, focused on restoring investor trust through fiscal clarity and regulatory alignment.

According to Verheijen, Shell’s engagement reflects growing confidence in Nigeria’s reforms, energy security goals, and economic ambitions.

“Partnerships like this signal growing investor confidence in Nigeria and reinforce our position as a leading destination for energy investment,” she said.

A Defining Test for Deep Offshore Nigeria
As global capital becomes more selective and energy transitions reshape investment flows, Nigeria’s ability to secure Final Investment Decisions on mega deepwater projects may define the future of its oil economy.

For President Tinubu, the Bonga South West incentives represent more than a policy decision; they are a calculated bet that stability, speed, and disciplined incentives can return Nigeria to the centre of global deep-offshore investment conversations.

Whether that bet delivers jobs, FX, and long-term revenues now hinges on one outcome: translating fiscal promises into steel, subsea infrastructure, and sustained production beneath Nigeria’s deep Atlantic waters.

It’s a glimmer of hope in uncertain times, and Nigerians are watching with bated breath as the project takes shape. Will it be the turning point the country has been waiting for? Only time will tell, but for now, the mood is cautiously optimistic.



This article was originally posted at sweetcrudereports.com

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