Galp oil firm
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Portugal’s Galp Energia has resumed discussions with potential partners to develop its significant oil and gas discovery in Namibia’s offshore Mopane field. 

The company made the announcement on Monday, following a 29% year-on-year drop in its adjusted core profit for Q1 2025.

In December 2024, Galp announced a major discovery of light oil and gas condensate at its fifth exploratory well in the Mopane prospect, located in the Orange Basin off Namibia’s coast. 

“This well unlocked a new exciting area within Mopane,” said Galp Co-CEO Maria João Carioca during a conference call with analysts. “We are advancing with feasibility studies in the coming months.”

Galp holds an 80% operating stake in Mopane, within Petroleum Exploration Licence (PEL) 83, which is estimated to contain around 2.79 billion barrels of oil equivalent (boe). 

The remaining 20% is split between Namibia’s state-owned Namcor and local partner Custos Energy.

As part of its development strategy, Galp is actively looking to farm down a portion of its stake and bring in a strategic partner to assume operatorship of the asset. 

“A partnership is our natural and preferred next step,” Carioca said. “We are re-engaging with interested parties we’ve had conversations with before, and data is now being shared with them.”

Namibia’s offshore basin has increasingly become a hotspot for global energy companies, with recent high-profile discoveries by Shell, TotalEnergies, and now Galp reinforcing its appeal.

Despite progress in Namibia, Galp’s Q1 2025 financials highlight a difficult operating environment. 

The company reported adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation (EBITDA) of $761 million—down from a year earlier, but slightly above analyst expectations of $758.4 million.

Refining margins declined sharply to $5.60 per barrel in the first quarter, down from $12 per barrel a year ago. 

Working interest production also dipped 3% year-on-year to 104,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd), impacted by planned maintenance downtime. 

The average Brent crude price fell to $75.70 per barrel from $83.20 in the prior-year period.

Galp’s upstream division, largely driven by its Brazilian pre-salt assets, posted a 32% decline in core profit. 

Overall, adjusted net profit dropped 41% to $218.65 million, though it still beat analyst forecasts of $210.68 million, buoyed by lower tax expenses.

The company reiterated its full-year production guidance of over 105,000 boepd, despite Q1 disruptions already accounting for more than 40% of scheduled annual maintenance.

Shares of Galp fell 3% in afternoon trading following the earnings report.

Galp stated that the subdued financial performance urges the need to share capital expenditures and operational risks through partnerships, particularly for large-scale upstream projects.

Earlier this month, the company finalised the sale of its upstream assets in Mozambique for $881 million, a move aimed at optimizing its global portfolio.

Victor Bassey is an experienced energy analyst with over seven years of knowledge in analyzing trends across the energy industry, from markets to operations, climate change, and geopolitics. Victor...

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