Shell is mounting a vigorous challenge against a High Court decision that revoked the environmental authorisation for an oil exploration block along South Africa’s west coast, in a move that intensifies the clash between energy firms and conservation advocates. Teaming up with the South African authorities, the Anglo-Dutch major is contesting the Western Cape High Court’s revocation of the environmental impact assessment for Block 5/6/7—a licence formerly under TotalEnergies SE—aiming to reinstate permissions for seismic surveys in this promising offshore zone. As reported by Bloomberg, the appeal, heard on 16 October 2025, awaits judgment in the coming weeks, with environmental group Green Connection anticipating a swift resolution that could reshape the region’s energy prospects.
This legal push underscores a broader conflict in South Africa’s hydrocarbon sector, where regulatory hurdles and activist interventions have stalled billions in potential investments. Mineral Resources and Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe recently informed parliament that legal actions by non-governmental organisations have derailed up to R27.8 billion ($1.6 billion) in projects, exacerbating energy shortages and delaying economic recovery in a nation grappling with frequent power cuts. According to Reuters, these disputes have cast a shadow over the sector’s revival, particularly as global oil majors pivot towards renewables yet pursue legacy fossil fuel opportunities amid volatile prices.
Shell contends that the court’s interpretation of the National Environmental Management Act was flawed, introducing extraneous operational limitations and erroneously equating exploratory activities with full-scale production. In a statement to media, the company argued that such misapplications undermine the act’s intent to balance development with protection, potentially chilling investment in a country where offshore discoveries could mirror Namibia’s bonanza. The block in question, spanning 19,000 square kilometres in the Orange Basin, holds estimated recoverable resources of up to 1 billion barrels of oil equivalent, per industry assessments from Wood Mackenzie, making it a linchpin for Shell’s African portfolio.
The dispute echoes parallel proceedings, including Shell’s separate appeal to the Constitutional Court over seismic exploration halted in the ecologically sensitive Wild Coast area along the Indian Ocean. That 2021 project, a joint venture with Impact Oil and Gas, faced suspension amid claims of inadequate community consultation and environmental risks to marine biodiversity, including humpback whale migration routes. As detailed in GroundUp, the apex court’s pending ruling—expected by early 2026—could set precedents for indigenous rights and public participation in extractive industries, with activists warning of irreversible harm to one of Africa’s most biodiverse coastlines, home to over 2,500 marine species.
Meanwhile, both Shell and TotalEnergies are accelerating preparations for drilling in South African waters, spurred by Namibia’s transformative Venus and Graff discoveries, which have unlocked an estimated 3 billion barrels in the shared Orange Basin. TotalEnergies, having transferred the Block 5/6/7 interest to Shell in 2023, reported positive seismic data indicating similar geological promise, while Shell’s 2024 farm-in deal bolstered its 70% stake. According to OilPrice.com, this frenzy has drawn over $5 billion in regional commitments since 2022, positioning South Africa as Africa’s next exploration hotspot, though environmental scrutiny has delayed first oil projections to 2028 at the earliest.
The legal entanglements reflect South Africa’s delicate energy transition, outlined in the 2023 Integrated Resource Plan, which targets 20 gigawatts of new gas-fired capacity by 2030 to bridge renewable gaps while phasing out coal. Critics, including Greenpeace Africa, argue that fossil fuel pursuits contradict the nation’s Paris Agreement commitments, with offshore seismic blasts potentially disrupting cetacean populations and fisheries worth R6 billion annually, as cited in a 2024 WWF South Africa report. Proponents, however, highlight job creation—up to 50,000 positions in the value chain—and fiscal revenues, with Mantashe advocating streamlined permitting to attract $100 billion in upstream investments by 2040.
As the appeals unfold, the stakes extend beyond Shell’s ambitions, influencing investor confidence in a market where exploration budgets have dipped 15% since 2020 due to litigation risks, per Deloitte’s 2025 Africa Energy Outlook. With Namibia’s TotalEnergies-led Venus field slated for production in 2026, South Africa’s resolution could either catalyse a cross-border boom or reinforce its reputation as a regulatory minefield. For now, Shell’s defiance signals determination to navigate these waters, balancing commercial imperatives with calls for sustainable stewardship in one of the world’s last untapped oil frontiers.

