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Charlvon Energy Services Limited (CESL) has made deliberate investments in locally held physical, operational, and digital assets to strengthen indigenous capacity, reduce foreign dependency, and support sustainable project execution in compliance with the NOGICD Act.
CESL’s asset acquisition strategy reflects a strong commitment to Nigerian Content by ensuring that critical operational, technical, and digital assets are owned, retained, and utilized in-country—thereby supporting sustainable indigenous participation, execution reliability, and long-term industry development.

Operational and Project Assets

CESL has progressively acquired and retained key operational assets within Nigeria to support drilling, EPIC/EPC, and energy infrastructure projects. These assets are deployed locally and managed by Nigerian professionals, improving project responsiveness, reducing mobilization costs, and enhancing execution control.

Engineering, Technical, and Support Equipment

The company has invested in essential engineering and technical support tools, inspection equipment, and operational systems required for project planning, coordination, and execution. These assets enable CESL to perform critical functions in-country without excessive reliance on third-party or foreign resources.

Office, IT, and Digital Infrastructure

CESL has strengthened its local content footprint through acquisition of office infrastructure, ICT systems, data management tools, and enterprise support platforms. These assets support engineering design coordination, business development, document control, and project management activities, ensuring that core intellectual and operational work is domiciled in Nigeria.

Asset Localization and In-Country Value Retention

All acquired assets are domiciled, operated, and maintained in Nigeria, contributing directly to in-country value retention. Where applicable, CESL prioritizes local sourcing, local maintenance providers, and Nigerian technicians for asset upkeep and utilization.

Long-Term Capacity and Sustainability Impact

By investing in owned and controlled assets rather than short-term rentals alone, CESL strengthens its long-term delivery capability and builds sustainable indigenous capacity. These assets form a foundation for executing increasingly complex projects locally while supporting Nigerian employment, skills utilization, and operational independence.
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7 Layi Yusuf Cresent, Lekki Phase 1, Lagos, Nigeria.