Port-Gentil, Gabon – For nearly a century, if an oil well has been drilled in Gabon, Schlumberger has likely been there. As the world’s largest oilfield services company, Schlumberger (now rebranded as SLB as of 2022) has maintained one of its most strategic and enduring African presences in this small, resource-rich Central African nation.
Note: "Schlumberger" refers to Schlumberger Limited (now SLB). For specific current job postings or local office contacts in Libreville or Port-Gentil, readers should consult the official SLB website.
For SLB, Gabon represents a mature, stable, but slowly shrinking market. The company is not leaving, but it is pivoting. Future profits will not come from drilling wildcats but from keeping dying wells alive and selling digital analytics to a state that wants to run its own oil industry.
Schlumberger Gabon is no longer the brash frontier explorer. It is the veteran doctor of an aging patient—necessary, experienced, but adapting to a world where the patient wants to heal itself. End of article.
From the swampy mangroves of the Ogooué Delta to the ultra-deep waters of the Lower Congo Basin, Schlumberger Gabon has served as the technical backbone for the country’s hydrocarbon industry. But as Gabon pushes for local content and energy transition, the French-American giant is quietly reinventing its role. Schlumberger’s history in Gabon predates the country’s independence (1960). The company arrived in the 1930s, initially conducting wireline logging for early explorers. The real boom began in 1956 with the discovery of the Ozouri field by Shell Gabon.
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