Africa’s Next Great Upstream Story Isn’t Being Told Loudly Enough — But The Drill Is Already In The Ground
In global energy circles, when investors and operators discuss African upstream opportunities, they tend to reach for familiar names — Nigeria, Angola, Mozambique. Ghana rarely leads that conversation.
That is about to change.
Right now, a Ghanaian company is executing one of the most strategically bold upstream campaigns on the African continent. It is drilling the first onshore exploration well in a basin that has been dormant since 1974. It has secured a $2 billion investment commitment for its flagship offshore fields. It has signed joint venture agreements, forged international partnerships, and published a clear roadmap to become an investment‑grade E&P operator by 2030.
The company is GNPC Explorco. And if you are in the oil and gas industry and not watching it closely, you are already behind.
The Explorco 2030 Vision: From State Participant To Global Operator
The international energy industry has seen many national oil company subsidiaries come and go — organisations that exist on paper, collect equity stakes, and contribute little operatorship or technical value. Explorco is deliberately building something different.
Under Managing Director Samuel Opoku Arthur, Explorco has articulated the Explorco 2030 Strategy, a focused roadmap to transform the company into a commercially credible, investment‑grade E&P operator capable of competing and partnering at international scale.
The pillars are concrete: operational excellence, expanded joint ventures, reserve maturation through frontier exploration, stronger financial discipline and transparency, and systematic development of Ghanaian upstream technical capability.
This is not aspirational language. Execution has already begun.
Q3 2026: History Is Being Made In Northern Ghana
The most significant near‑term milestone for Explorco — and arguably for Ghana's entire energy sector — is unfolding right now in the Voltaian Basin, a vast onshore sedimentary formation that stretches across northern Ghana.
In March 2026, Explorco signed a project management consultancy contract with LubriMax Ghana Limited and its technical partner Well Engineers and Planners (WEP) to manage the drilling campaign. The target: spud Ghana's first onshore exploration well in the Voltaian Basin by the third quarter of 2026, ending more than 50 years of exploration inactivity in the region.
The significance cannot be overstated. The Voltaian Basin has long been considered one of West Africa's most intriguing untested geological formations. If commercial hydrocarbons are confirmed, it would fundamentally rewrite Ghana's energy map, extending the country's petroleum footprint from offshore waters deep into the heart of the continent.
Explorco has already mobilised a dedicated Project Management Team (PMT), secured land agreements with the Lands Commission, aligned with the traditional authority of Dagbon — including receiving the blessing of Overlord Yaa Naa Abukari II — and established its northern sector operational office in Tamale.
The Overlord's representative put it plainly: “He is confident that GNPC Explorco will hit oil in commercial quantities in the Voltaian Basin.”
That is the kind of community alignment international operators spend years trying to build. Explorco already has it.
Offshore: $2 Billion Committed, 20 New Wells Approved
While the Voltaian Basin captures imagination, Explorco's offshore portfolio is generating equally significant momentum.
In June 2025, in one of Ghana's most consequential petroleum agreements in years, Explorco joined the Government of Ghana, Tullow Oil, Kosmos Energy, and PetroSA in signing a Memorandum of Understanding to extend the West Cape Three Points (WCTP) and Deepwater Tano (DWT) licences — covering the Jubilee and TEN fields — through to 2040.
The MOU unlocks:
- Up to $2 billion in investment over the life of the licences
- Approval to drill up to 20 additional wells in the Jubilee field
- A target increase in gas supply to approximately 130 mmscf/d
- Capacity investment in GNPC, Explorco, and the Petroleum Commission focused on advanced technology
For context, the Jubilee and TEN fields sit atop reserves of over 640 million barrels of oil and 1.2 trillion cubic feet of gas. The licence extension does not just protect existing production — it unlocks the next phase of Ghana's offshore development story.
Building The Workforce That Will Power The Next Decade
What separates Explorco from a transactional E&P company is its understanding that resource extraction without human capital development is a short‑term strategy. Explorco is investing in the long game.
In June 2026, Explorco signed an MOU with Tamale Technical University (TaTU) — located in the heart of its Voltaian Basin operations area — to establish a structured industry‑academia partnership. The agreement covers specialised curricula in petroleum geosciences, drilling technology, and reservoir engineering; industrial attachments at Explorco's Voltaian Basin operations; joint research projects; and faculty training designed to produce graduates who are industry‑ready from day one.
As Explorco's Head of Corporate Affairs, Abdul‑Mumin Abukari Iddris, stated at the signing: “We are committed to a Ghanaian‑first strategy that aligns directly with our local content and social performance policies.”
For international companies evaluating joint ventures in Ghana, this is a critical signal. A partner that invests in local workforce development reduces long‑term operational costs, strengthens community relationships, and creates the kind of social licence that keeps projects running.
September 2026: Ghana Takes Centre Stage For Global Upstream Investment
The international community will have a direct opportunity to engage with Explorco at AOW:Energy 2026, taking place in Accra from 1–3 September 2026. The event is expected to be a major platform for upstream investment origination, licensing discussions, and joint venture engagement — with Explorco positioned as a central gateway for operators seeking access to Ghana's next wave of exploration and production growth.
Industry observers note that global upstream capital is increasingly prioritising reserve replacement, portfolio expansion, and stable partnership jurisdictions. Ghana — with its rule of law, established petroleum framework, deepwater offshore production, and an untested onshore basin about to see its first well — checks all of those boxes.
The message from Accra is becoming increasingly clear: West Africa's next upstream growth cycle is opening. Explorco intends to lead it.
Why The International Industry Should Pay Attention Now
The window for early‑mover positioning in Ghana's upstream expansion is open — but not indefinitely.
For independent operators and majors seeking reserve replacement, Explorco's JV framework offers structured access to both producing assets and frontier exploration acreage. For service companies and technology providers, the Voltaian Basin campaign and the post‑2025 offshore investment cycle represent a multi‑year procurement and deployment opportunity. For investors and financiers, the Explorco 2030 roadmap signals a clear trajectory toward financial credibility and bankable project structures.
And for anyone who believes African energy will be one of the defining upstream stories of the next decade, Ghana — and Explorco — deserve to be in your portfolio of relationships.
This Is What National Ownership Of Energy Resources Actually Looks Like
There is a broader story here that goes beyond barrels and investment returns.
For generations, resource‑rich African nations watched foreign companies extract their natural wealth while local populations saw limited benefit. The model is changing. Explorco represents a new generation of national energy institutions — technically capable, commercially sophisticated, and unapologetically committed to ensuring that Ghana's petroleum resources build Ghanaian futures.
The Voltaian Basin drilling campaign is expected to create thousands of jobs across northern Ghana, a region historically left behind in the country's economic development. The community partnerships, university agreements, and “Ghanaians‑first” procurement policy are not corporate social responsibility add‑ons. They are the architecture of a company that understands that sustainable resource development requires sustainable community relationships.
It is a model the entire industry should study.
The Drill Is In The Ground. The Question Is Who Is Paying Attention
Ghana's first onshore exploration well is being prepared. The offshore licences are extended to 2040. The Explorco 2030 strategy is published and execution has begun. The international investment conference is scheduled. The university partnerships are signed. The traditional authorities are aligned.
Everything is in motion.
GNPC Explorco is not waiting for the world to discover Ghana. It is building the Ghana the world will want to partner with.
The question for the international oil and gas community is simple: Will you be part of this story from the beginning — or will you arrive after everyone else already has?
By: Salifu Haruna
Email: salifuharun@ymail.com
WhatsApp: 0247620454
Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."