For more than a decade, one of Nigeria’s most valuable
offshore oil assets sat in the shadows of legal battles, corporate disputes,
and unresolved ownership claims. Now, after years of uncertainty, the
long-running controversy surrounding Oil Prospecting Licence (OPL) 245 has
finally been resolved, opening the door to a major deepwater oil project that
could significantly strengthen Nigeria’s energy future.
The Federal Government has reached a settlement agreement
with Eni and Nigerian Agip Exploration Limited, bringing closure to a dispute
that has lingered for over 15 years. The agreement was signed in Abuja,
following high-level discussions at the Presidential Villa attended by senior
executives of the Italian energy giant, including its Chief Executive Officer
Claudio Descalzi. Details of the breakthrough were confirmed in a State House
statement issued by presidential spokesman Bayo Onanuga.
For Nigeria’s energy sector, the resolution represents far
more than the end of a legal conflict as it clears a path toward the
long-anticipated Zabazaba - Etan deepwater development project, located within
the OPL 245 block. Once operational, the project is expected to deliver
approximately 150,000 barrels of oil per day, adding a significant boost to the
country’s production capacity while strengthening long-term revenue prospects.
The importance of the breakthrough lies not only in the oil
that could eventually flow from the deep waters of the Niger Delta, but also in
the message it sends to global investors. For years, the OPL 245 dispute stood
as one of the most prominent legal and investment uncertainties in Nigeria’s
upstream oil sector. Its resolution removes a major barrier that had
complicated investment decisions in deepwater exploration.
Officials say the settlement reflects Nigeria’s
determination to address complex legacy issues while strengthening the
credibility of its regulatory and legal frameworks. According to the
government’s energy advisory team, the revised arrangement improves on earlier
agreements and aligns with the governance and fiscal structure introduced under
the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).
The updated terms are designed to provide investors with the
clarity and predictability required to move forward with large-scale offshore
projects, while also ensuring that Nigeria secures stronger long-term value and
safeguards for the federation.
Few oil assets in Africa have carried as much controversy as
OPL 245. The offshore block, widely believed to contain billions of barrels of
crude oil, has been the subject of complex disputes dating back to the early
2000s. Over the years, the asset became entangled in a series of international
investigations, arbitration proceedings, and courtroom battles involving
several major stakeholders, including Malabu Oil and Gas, Royal Dutch Shell,
and Eni, alongside the Nigerian government.
One of the most significant legal developments occurred in
May 2025, when the Court of Appeal in Abuja dismissed a lawsuit filed by Malabu
Oil and Gas concerning the disputed $1.3 billion oilfield. The ruling was
delivered in favour of Nigerian Agip Oil Company, and the appellate court also
overturned an earlier 2020 Federal High Court decision that had dismissed
Agip’s preliminary objection to Malabu’s claim that its interests in the block
remained valid and had not been revoked.
More recently, on March 2, reports indicated that the
Federal Government had taken an additional step to unlock the potential of the
field by restructuring the OPL 245 block into four separate assets to be
operated by Eni and Shell. The move was widely interpreted as a strategic
effort to accelerate development activities in an area that has remained
largely untapped despite its enormous resource potential.
With the dispute now settled, Nigeria can move closer to a
Final Investment Decision on the Zabazaba - Etan project. Analysts believe the
development could mark a new phase for deepwater investment in the country,
particularly at a time when global energy companies are becoming increasingly
selective about committing capital to long-term fossil fuel projects.
The resolution also fits within a broader reform effort that
has been underway since 2023, aimed at improving Nigeria’s competitiveness in
global energy markets. Central to these reforms is the Petroleum Industry Act,
which provides a modern regulatory framework intended to attract investment
while ensuring that Nigeria maximizes the value of its natural resources.
For Nigeria, the settlement of the OPL 245 dispute
represents the unlocking of a long-delayed opportunity. Beneath the deep waters
where the Zabazaba - Etan fields lie is not just crude oil, but the promise of
renewed momentum in the nation’s energy sector, a reminder that when
long-standing obstacles are cleared, the path toward progress becomes far
easier to see.