Potential Tanzania Oil Prospects Generate Foreign Interest

According to recent reports, Key Petroleum Limited, an Australian-based company, has claimed that its current exploration license in the West Songo Songo area of Tanzania has the potential to produce at least 735 million barrels of Tanzania oil, or about 1.3 trillion cubic feet of gas.

Tanzania’s West Songo Songo area is located between the active Songo Songo gas field and the country’s coastline.

In addition to its interested in Songo Songo, Key Petroleum Limited is working to develop the nearby field of Nyuni.

“Exploration and development work is rapidly increasing the value of these areas which form a significant part of Key Petroleum’s international asset portfolio,” said the Australian-based company in a statement that was first released by Reuters.

The Guardian recently quoted the company’s Managing Director, Ken Russell, as saying that, “the geological work that our team has been undertaking has provided us with some highly prospective targets in the West Songo Songo license area.”

Mr. Russell went on to say that, “Although at an early stage of evaluation these results provide us with a greater level of confidence in our Tanzanian interest.”

Efforts to discover oil and gas reserves in Tanzania have increasingly become more intense, as evidenced by the increased presence of foreign companies in Tanzania.

By the year 2002, foreign investors in the oil industry had already allocated over $293m of funds to Tanzania in order to further explore the prospects of oil and gas in the country.

Since then, the state-run Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) has signed production sharing agreements (PSAs) with various oil and gas exploration companies in the hopes of soon discovering oil in the country.

In a recent report by the Guardian, the Managing Director of the TPDC, Mr. Yona Killagane, said that he was optimistic about the current exploration projects and that there was currently a 420,000 square kilometer area that had the potential for oil exploration projects.

According to Mr. Killagane, based on the success that has been made in the discovery of gas wells, the prospects for oil discovery are also very high.

“Right now tremendous success has been made in drilling for gas,” he said, “We’ve six wells in Songo Songo, four at Mnazi Bay and two in Mkuranga. We’re yet to discover oil, but I can assure you that there are hopeful prospects for oil.”

Mr. Killagane went on to say that he expects the drilling for oil to begin in the next two to three years.

Recent discoveries of oil in Uganda’s Lake Albert region have led many oil exploration companies to begin looking at the possibility of oil in Tanzania’s Lake Rukwa basin via Lake Tanganyika in the western branch of the Rift Valley.

Included in these exploration companies are the Norwegian-based Statoil Exploration Company as well as the Brazilian company, Petrobrus, both of which are involved in oil exploration projects in Tanzania.

Currently, the Statoil Exploration Company anticipates that it will spend at least $65m during the first phase of its 11-year exploration project off the coast of Tanzania on the eastern part of Mandawa Coastal Basin.

Want to know more about Mining in Tanzania? Our free Tanzania Business and Investment Guide 2026 covers Mining, plus regulations, key sectors, and investment opportunities—all in one place.

Download Free Guide
Related Posts
Tanzania steel plant Dodoma
Read More

TZS 600 Billion Steel Plant Using Local Iron Ore to Be Developed in Dodoma, Work Starts in July 2026

A1 Iron & Steel Tanzania Ltd plans to invest TZS 600 billion in a new steel manufacturing plant in Nala, Dodoma. The project will use iron ore as its main raw material, and support Tanzania's strategy to increase mineral value addition and reduce dependence on imported steel products. Construction is scheduled to begin in July 2026 and is expected to be completed within 15 months.
Tanzania Anthony Mavunde Kitila Mkumbo Small-Scale Miners Recommendations Report
Read More

Tanzania Plans Mining Fund and Credit Guarantees to Support Small-Scale Miners

The Government of Tanzania has received recommendations aimed at strengthening the small-scale mining sector through improved access to finance, technology, and geological information. The proposals include establishing a mining fund, expanding credit guarantees, and supporting mineral research to increase employment, reduce poverty, and boost economic growth.
Kabanga Nickel Deposit
Read More

USD 942M Kabanga Nickel Project Moves Closer to Implementation, FID Expected in 2026

The Kabanga Nickel Project has moved closer to implementation after Lifezone Metals (NYSE: LZM) Executive Chairman Keith Liddell and Treasury Registrar Nehemiah Mchechu briefed President Samia Suluhu Hassan on 8 June 2026, with both sides confirming an agreed project structure and turning to finalise the refinery and beneficiation component. The USD 942 million project is targeting a final investment decision in 2026 and is expected to generate USD 2.4 billion in corporate income taxes and around 1,090 jobs.
Lindi Jumbo and Tanzanian government sign graphite joint venture in Ruangwa, Lindi
Read More

Tanzania Government Secures 16% Stake in Lindi Jumbo Graphite Mine Through Ndovu Graphite Joint Venture

The Tanzanian government has formalized its statutory 16% non-dilutable equity stake in the Lindi Jumbo graphite mine in Lindi Region through a joint venture agreement that creates Ndovu Graphite Limited, with Lindi Jumbo Limited retaining an 84% stake. The mine produces 40,000 tonnes of graphite per year over a 24-year mine life, and Tanzania currently ranks sixth globally in graphite production, with an annual output of 25,000 tonnes from two large-scale operating mines, Lindi Jumbo and God Mwanga, in Tanga.