Nigeria’s oil sector reforms are beginning to deliver results, with Chevron Nigeria Limited recording its third exploration success since late 2024, boosting confidence in Africa’s largest crude producer after years of underinvestment and regulatory uncertainty.
The NNPCL/Chevron Nigeria Limited Joint Venture completed the Awodi-07 appraisal and exploration well in the shallow offshore western Niger Delta, discovering about 675 feet of hydrocarbon pay across multiple reservoirs.
The well, drilled to a total depth of 12,420 feet in under three weeks and completed on December 28, has been plugged and suspended after successful wireline logging and fluid sampling.
Of the discovery, 310 feet came from appraisal reservoirs, matching pre-drill expectations, while 365 feet were found across six hydrocarbon-bearing exploration sands. The location benefits from existing infrastructure, enabling faster development and lower costs.
“This success demonstrates the strength of our exploration programme and the value of our partnership with NNPC,” said Jim Swartz, Chairman and Managing Director, Chevron Nigeria/Mid-Africa Region.
The find reflects the impact of reforms under the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), which simplified fiscal and regulatory frameworks and helped unlock stalled investment.
Kevin McLachlan, Chevron’s Vice President for Exploration, said the discoveries align with the company’s global strategy of combining infrastructure-led development with frontier exploration.
For Nigeria, the timing is critical as the country works to reverse production declines and improve output after falling below 1.3 million barrels per day in 2023. Analysts say Chevron’s shallow-water successes validate the government’s reform agenda and support efforts to stabilise foreign exchange earnings and federal revenues.

