Turkey, Nigeria, Congo: The World’s New Maritime and Energy Titans?
Insights Dispatch - April 15, 2026
Welcome to the Wednesday edition of Insights Dispatch, our flagship brief overviewing the three latest geopolitical & market developments connecting the Middle East & Africa to the world.
TURKEY: Seizing the Maritime Moment
WHAT HAPPENED?
Turkey is pressing ahead with the £20 billion (~$1.27 billion) Istanbul Canal, an artificial waterway connecting the Black Sea to the Sea of Marmara that would allow Ankara to charge shipping tolls. The move comes as Iran seeks to levy fees on vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz.
WHY IT MATTERS?
Per international law, artificial canals like the Suez Canal can legally charge tolls, in contrast to natural straits. Turkey’s canal would exploit this legal distinction just as shipping disruptions are already adding 10-15 days to Asia-Europe journeys.
WHAT’S NEXT?
The Istanbul Canal is targeted for completion by 2027. Morocco, Spain, and others are eyeing similar toll-corridor opportunities around the Strait of Gibraltar, signaling a broader race to monetize strategic shipping routes.
NIGERIA: From Regional to Continental Oil Giant
WHAT HAPPENED?
Nigerian billionaire and founder of the Dangote Oil Refinery, Aliko Dangote, is planning a pan-African IPO for the refinery, with shares available to Nigerian investors within months. The listing would span multiple African stock exchanges, a continental first, with Stanbic IBTC Capital, Vetiva Advisory Services, and FirstCap appointed as advisors.
WHY IT MATTERS?
The move would mark a historic milestone for African capital markets, potentially boosting stock exchanges across the continent. It opens Africa’s largest refinery—currently capable of processing 650,000 barrels a day and aiming for 1.4 million in the future—to broad public ownership for the first time.
WHAT’S NEXT?
Dangote plans to sell at least 5% initially, with shares offered incrementally based on investor appetite. Longer term, he aims to expand refining capacity to 1.4 million barrels per day, with no firm cap placed on how much equity could eventually be publicly held.
CONGO: Making Energy Gains While the World Makes Energy Losses
WHAT HAPPENED?
TotalEnergies announced a hydrocarbon discovery on the Moho license offshore the Republic of Congo. The MHNM-6 exploration well encountered a roughly 160-meter hydrocarbon column in high-quality Albian reservoirs.
WHY IT MATTERS?
Combined with a prior discovery on the nearby Moho F structure, recoverable resources total an estimated 100 million barrels. Its proximity to existing infrastructure makes development cost-effective and fast-tracked.
WHAT’S NEXT?
The resources are planned to be developed as a tie-back to the existing Moho Floating Production Units, Alima and Likouf, leveraging current infrastructure to bring production online efficiently.
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Very interesting! Keep writing please