ANGOLA · ENERGY
Key Facts
—The deal: State giant Sonangol has ceded a 5 percent production-sharing interest in Block 17/06 to Falcon Oil, doubling António Mosquito’s stake to 10 percent.
—The line-up: TotalEnergies operates with 30 percent, alongside SSI Seventeen (27.5), Sonangol (25), Falcon Oil (10) and Etu Energias (7.5).
—The asset: The deepwater block sits about 150 kilometres off Zaire province; output began in 2025 at roughly 859,000 barrels for the year.
—Ramping up: By May 2026 the block was pumping around 38,000 barrels a day, per Angolan reports.
—Undisclosed price: Neither side has revealed what Falcon Oil paid; the national concessionaire declined its right of first refusal.
—Why it matters: A private Angolan investor is deepening his position in world-class deepwater acreage — a rarity in a sector long split between the state and foreign majors.
Angola Block 17/06 has a bigger Angolan owner: Sonangol ceded a 5 percent production-sharing interest to Falcon Oil, the vehicle of businessman António Mosquito, doubling his stake in the TotalEnergies-operated deepwater block to 10 percent, per Novo Jornal and Billionaires.Africa.
One-stop reference
Company Intelligence
Every listed company in Latin America — financials, ownership and structure for 1,450+ companies across 26 exchanges, in one place.
Browse the directory →
Angola Block 17/06: what changed hands
Sonangol, Angola’s state oil company, has transferred a 5 percent interest in the production-sharing contract for Block 17/06 to Falcon Oil Holding Angola. The deal doubles the private investor’s position from the 5 percent it has held alongside the majors.
The transfer was reported over the weekend by Angolan media, led by the Luanda daily Novo Jornal. It ranks among the more consequential moves by private national capital into the country’s flagship industry.
The value of the transaction was not disclosed. The national concessionaire declined to exercise its right of first refusal, clearing the transfer, according to Angolan daily Novo Jornal.
Angolan outlets pointedly noted the silence on price. Sales of state oil assets draw close scrutiny in Luanda, where the unwinding of the dos Santos era left a durable sensitivity about who buys what from Sonangol.
The company keeping the block company
Block 17/06 is operated by France’s TotalEnergies with 30 percent. Sonangol Sinopec International’s SSI Seventeen holds 27.5 percent, Sonangol keeps 25 percent, Falcon Oil now has 10 percent and Angola’s Etu Energias rounds out the group with 7.5 percent.
The block sits in deep water roughly 150 kilometres off the coast of Zaire province, northwest of Luanda. It is a satellite of Block 17, the prolific acreage whose Girassol, Dalia and CLOV projects made Angola a deepwater heavyweight.
Etu Energias, the private Angolan producer formerly known as Somoil, shows there is precedent for local firms growing in the upstream. Falcon Oil’s enlarged stake follows that trail at far greater depth.
A young producer still ramping up
Output from Block 17/06 began only in 2025, at about 859,000 barrels for the year — some 1.3 percent of Sonangol’s annual production. By May 2026 the block was pumping around 38,000 barrels a day.
Those are early-life numbers with room to climb as wells are tied in. The economics of a deepwater satellite improve steeply once the subsea plumbing is paid for.
A doubled stake in a field on its way up is a different bet from a slice of a declining giant. Mosquito is buying growth, not legacy barrels.
A production-sharing interest also means sharing costs, not just revenue. Deepwater development bills run to the billions across a block’s life, which is precisely why private local participation at this scale has been so rare.
The man behind Falcon Oil
António Mosquito is described by the wealth tracker Billionaires.Africa as Angola’s richest man, with interests spanning trade, construction and energy. Falcon Oil is his upstream vehicle and his most direct claim on the country’s core industry.
Private Angolan capital in world-class deepwater acreage remains rare. The sector has long been divided between the state and foreign majors, with local investors confined to services and marginal fields.
What it says about Angola’s oil moment
Angola is fighting to hold output steady as older fields decline, and it left OPEC at the start of 2024 precisely to keep that flexibility. National production has hovered near 1.1 million barrels a day, well below its mid-2000s peaks.
New deepwater projects like Block 17/06 — and Total’s wider investment pipeline — are what stand between the country and a steeper slide. Each satellite tied back to existing infrastructure buys the industry time.
Letting a domestic investor deepen his position spreads the ownership of that future slightly wider than the usual state-and-majors duopoly. It is a small step, but a telling one, in a country trying to grow an indigenous private sector out of an oil economy.
Sonangol, for its part, has been slimming toward a long-promised partial privatisation, shedding non-core stakes to clean its balance sheet. Selling down a satellite block while keeping 25 percent fits that script.
For the Luanda government, the sale also converts a passive stake into cash at a moment of tight public finances. Oil still pays Angola’s bills; who owns the barrels is starting to change.
Frequently asked questions
What happened with Angola’s Block 17/06?
Sonangol ceded a 5 percent production-sharing interest to Falcon Oil, António Mosquito’s company, doubling his stake to 10 percent. The transaction value was not disclosed.
Who operates Block 17/06 and who are the partners?
TotalEnergies operates the block with 30 percent, alongside SSI Seventeen with 27.5 percent, Sonangol with 25 percent, Falcon Oil with 10 percent and Etu Energias with 7.5 percent.
How much oil does Block 17/06 produce?
Production began in 2025 at about 859,000 barrels for the year, and by May 2026 the block was pumping around 38,000 barrels a day, according to Angolan reports.
Who is António Mosquito?
He is an Angolan businessman described by Billionaires.Africa as the country’s richest man, with interests spanning trade, construction and energy. Falcon Oil Holding Angola is his upstream oil vehicle.
The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map →
View original source — Rio Times ↗

