Many investors are still treating the AI power crisis as a future problem.
But in truth, the pressure is already showing up in the supply side of the energy markets.
Shell’s (SHEL) reserve life—how many years of production its current proven reserves can sustain—has fallen below 8 years as of 2025, down from 9 years just 12 months earlier.
Meanwhile, BP (BP) replaced only 90% of the oil and gas it produced last year. ExxonMobil (XOM) is in the same boat.
In other words, for every 10 barrels these companies pull out of the ground, they’re only finding 7 to 9 to replace them.
And when the reserve replacement ratio—the percentage of produced oil a company manages to add back through discoveries or acquisitions—falls, the whole model comes under pressure.
An oil company’s entire value is built on its proven reserves. When those reserves shrink faster than they’re replenished, the company’s future production capacity shrinks with it.
So what do Exxon, Shell, and BP do when their reserve math starts getting tight?
They go hunting.
And right now, some of the most compelling hunting grounds aren’t in the Middle East or the Gulf of Mexico.
They’re along the West Coast of Africa—a frontier that geologists have quietly understood for years… but Wall Street has largely ignored.
The geological case that’s hard to argue with
Two hundred million years ago, Africa and South America were one landmass.
When the continents split, they left behind a geological mirror image: similar rock formations, sedimentary basins, and oil-trapping structures on both sides of the Atlantic.
South America’s half of that mirror has already delivered.
Guyana alone has confirmed more than 11 billion barrels of oil equivalent in the offshore Stabroek block. Brazil’s deepwater basins have produced billions more.
The African half is far less developed…
That’s the opportunity.
And it helps explain why five of the seven largest oil companies on Earth reportedly signed non-disclosure agreements just to review data from one small explorer operating in this region.
The company that got there first
There are plenty of exploration companies chasing frontier oil, but most never get beyond the pitch deck stage.
BluEnergies (BLUGF) is different because it has two things the majors care about: acreage in the right geological neighborhood… and a partner big enough to fund serious deepwater exploration.
The company controls approximately 8,924 square kilometers of deepwater blocks in the Harper Basin on the West Coast of Africa. The assets sit directly across the Atlantic from some of the most important deepwater discoveries of the last decade.
This type of offshore geology has already yielded major oil discoveries in countries such as Ghana, Brazil, and Guyana.
In other words, BluEnergies is exploring an area with the same kind of rock formations that have delivered billions of barrels elsewhere.
TotalEnergies (TTE) reviewed the data and liked what it saw. The oil major took a 65% operating stake in the Harper Basin blocks. As a result, BluEnergies keeps exposure to its share of future production potential without having to fund the exploration costs upfront.
A company like TotalEnergies doesn’t commit to a joint program in a frontier basin because the geology is merely interesting. It commits when the data suggests the possibility of something serious.
The two companies are now working through an 18-month program designed to refine drill targets and assess what they believe could be a multibillion-barrel opportunity.
Why the timing matters
After the Iran deal, many investors treated the drop in oil prices like the end of the energy trade.
But lower geopolitical risk doesn’t solve the industry’s reserve problem.
The majors are still pumping faster than they’re replacing. They still need new barrels. And they still need to keep hunting for the next major source of supply.
So while the crowd is reacting to the latest oil price headline, the smart money is watching where the reserve math forces capital to flow next.
Exploration companies live and die by the gap between what’s in the ground and what the market has priced in.
Right now, BluEnergies is still in the work program phase—mapping, reprocessing, and defining drill targets. Wall Street tends to assign minimal value to exploration assets before a drill bit confirms what’s there.
That’s rational: Drilling is expensive, and results are never guaranteed.
But when a major like TotalEnergies is already at the table, the risk profile looks very different from a typical junior explorer chasing a story on its own.
The bottom line
The oil majors’ reserve crisis won’t fix itself. And the capital they allocate to solve that problem has to go somewhere.
Frontier basins with de-risked geology, major company backing, and multibillion-barrel potential are exactly the kinds of places where that capital will likely flow.
And that trail leads to the Harper Basin.
In today’s Curzio Alpha update, we just broke down the tailwinds for BluEnergies… as well as two more of our favorite AI power plays.
Get access to the update—plus EVERY stock recommendation and piece of research we publish—when you join Curzio Alpha.
MARKETING DISCLOSURE: BluEnergies Ltd pays Curzio Research Inc for marketing services. Access the full disclosure here.

















