April 13, 2026 [Reuters]- BP on Monday agreed to buy an operating interest in three offshore exploration blocks in Namibia from Canada-based Eco Atlantic Oil & Gas as it ramps up its upstream portfolio.
BP will pay Eco Atlantic $2.7 million in cash for the 60% interest in the three petroleum exploration licences, the Canadian firm said.
The oil major has turned its focus back to oil and gas after an ill-fated foray into renewables, pledging to dispose $20 billion worth of assets and cut its debt to between $14 billion-$18 billion by end-2027.
BP has been under pressure to publish more information to prove its strategy of shifting spending from low-carbon to oil and gas projects will boost shareholder value.
The deal marks BP’s entry as an operator in the southern African country, a global oil and gas exploration hot spot which hopes to produce its first oil by 2030.
The blocks are located in the Walvis Basin, a vast area north of the prolific Orange Basin where all of Namibia’s offshore discoveries have been made by oil majors including Shell and TotalEnergies.
Eco Atlantic will remain a partner in the blocks along with Namibia’s national oil company NAMCOR, BP said.
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