In honour of the late Muhammad Sansui Barkindo, oil industry veteran and former Secretary-General, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) – the African Energy Chamber (AEC) renamed its African Energy Week Lifetime Achievement Award to the Mohammad S. Barkindo Lifetime Achievement Award.
Scheduled to take place at AEW 2022 – Africa’s premier event for the oil and gas sector, the Mohammad S. Barkindo Lifetime Achievement Award will recognize an industry executive who has taken bold steps in improving socioeconomic developments and the wellbeing of the African people by accelerating the continent’s energy sector growth.
The AEC naming the AEW African Energy Awards category after Barkindo, celebrates his remarkable role and valuable contributions to boosting Africa’s energy industry.
It also empowers the excellence, innovation and pioneering work being done by professionals with the legacy of a legend to drive further growth of the continent’s energy market and make energy poverty history by 2030.
“The Chamber is proud to honor H.E Barkindo’s achievements in supporting the stability of both the African and global oil market. With Africa seeking to end poverty by 2030 through the exploitation of its vast oil and gas resources, we need more people like H.E Barkindo to drive resilience in Africa’s energy sector.
“This is what the Mohammad S. Barkindo Lifetime Achievement Award aims to celebrate and inspire at AEW 2022,” said NJ Ayuk, the Executive Chairman of the AEC.
To celebrate companies, organizations, projects and individuals shaping Africa’s energy market success, AEW 2022 will host the Mohammed S. Barkindo Lifetime Achievement Award, together with several other award categories.
These include the National Oil Company of the Year Award, African Gas Monetization of the Year Award, Operational Excellence Award, CEO of the Year Award, ESG Leader Award, Game-changer Award and the African Independent of the Year Award. (World Oil)
With Africa seeking to end poverty by 2030 through the exploitation of its vast oil and gas resources, we need more people like H.E Barkindo to drive resilience in Africa’s energy sector.