British junior energy company Chariot Limited has taken control of Morocco’s Anchois gas field development,adopting a scaled-back,modular approach following Energean’s withdrawal,potentially unlocking 18 billion cubic meters of gas reserves crucial for national energy security.
Announced July 8,2025,Chariot’s takeover marks a strategic revival of the offshore field in the Lixus permit near Larache. The company acquired a 75 percent stake after Energean exited in May 2025 following disappointing results from the Anchois-3 well drilled in late 2024. Morocco’s ONHYM retains 25 percent ownership.
The field,discovered in the 2000s and confirmed through three wells (Anchois-1,-2,and -3),had shown promising gas presence in B and C reservoirs. However,Chariot now pursues a conservative development strategy,focusing exclusively on confirmed volumes from existing drilling data rather than expansive exploration.
The company targets first gas production within 18 months,prioritizing domestic market supply. This approach represents a shift from earlier ambitious plans to a economically viable,technically controlled project aligned with national needs. Infrastructure planning remains deliberately scalable,allowing progressive capacity increases based on market conditions.
Morocco’s energy transition context amplifies Anchois’s importance. Despite extensive renewable energy programs,the kingdom remains dependent on gas imports,particularly following the Maghreb-Europe pipeline’s inactivity on the Algerian side. Anchois could secure local industrial and power generation needs while potentially reconnecting regional flows to Spain.
The project exemplifies emerging gas sector dynamics: medium-sized developments operated by agile juniors valorizing resources abandoned by majors. If timelines and financing hold,Chariot could establish Anchois as a model for efficient,modest gas development suited to 21st-century realities.
United News - unews.co.za