Angola's State Oil Firm Sonangol Seeks $4.8 Billion Loan from China for Refinery
02.27.2026 By Tank Terminals - NEWS

February 27, 2026 [Reuters]- Angola’s state oil company Sonangol is talking to Chinese financial institutions to secure a $4.8 billion loan to partly finance the construction of a new refinery in the Atlantic sea port of Lobito, it said on Wednesday.

 

The financing, if completed, will mark the first borrowing by the Southern African oil producer from China since 2017, when it opted to reduce its exposure to resource-backed loans.

The company was engaging with “financial institutions in China” to secure funding for one phase of the $6.2 billion, Sonangol’s CEO Sebastiao Gaspar Martins told a news briefing.

“The next phase is estimated at $4.8 billion, and we are contacting Chinese institutions with the support of the contractor, who is also Chinese, in order to obtain this financing,” he said.

Martins did not say which financial institutions Sonangol was talking to but the finance ministry said last month the loan could come from China Development Bank, without providing more details.

A team from Sonangol will visit Beijing for meetings with Chinese financial institutions in April. The terms of the financing do not envisage the use of oil as collateral, the company said.

Angola’s government says the refinery is a “strategic” project, and it is expected to start producing refined petroleum products in December next year.

CHINESE LENDING TO AFRICA HAS FALLEN

Although China was the leading source of credit for African economies in the run-up to 2019, it subsequently started to turn off the cash tap and that trend was accelerated by the COVID pandemic the following year.

The drying up of Chinese funding left projects incomplete, such as a modern railway line in Kenya.

Debt repayments to China by African nations in recent years have outstripped the amount the region gets in new loans, a study by ONE Data, an independent initiative, found last month.

The government in Beijing has defended its partnership with African nations, saying it stands by the continent in all areas including investments and trade.

Angola’s shift away from oil-backed loans from China was also informed by a more challenging external environment that has seen volatility in commodity prices, higher interest rates and changing risk perceptions.

The country’s stock of oil-backed debt to China fell by almost a quarter to $7.73 billion last year, data from the finance ministry showed, from $10.146 billion at the end of 2024.

 

TankTerminals.com is a market research platform with not only manager-level contact details but also logistical, operational, infrastructural and shipping data of more than +10,100 tank terminals and +6,200 production facilities worldwide.

 

Access data. Decide better. See how.

China Targets Steady Oil Output, More Gas and Stockpiling in Five-Year Plan
03.05.2026 - NEWS
March 05, 2026 [Reuters]- China set an annual oil output target of 200 million metric tons (4 mil... Read More
Italy's Gas Grid Operator Snam Plans 14 Billion Euro Investment Through 2030
03.05.2026 - NEWS
March 05, 2026 [Reuters]- Italy’s Snam ​plans to invest 14 billion euros ($16 billion) in... Read More
California Resources Targets First CO₂ Injection at Elk Hills CCS Project in Spring 2026
03.05.2026 - NEWS
March 05, 2026 [Pipeline & Gas Journal]- California Resources Corporation (CRC) is preparing ... Read More
China Halts Fuel Exports Amid Global Market Squeeze
03.05.2026 - NEWS
March 05, 2026 [Oil Price]- China has told energy companies to suspend new fuel export contracts ... Read More