By Adonis Byemelwa
During a powerful live appearance on ARISE News, NJ Ayuk, JD, MBA, Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber, delivered a message that was less about policy and more about purpose.
With a tone that blended urgency and pride, Ayuk spoke not just as a leader, but as a man who’s lived the consequences of Africa being left out of the global energy conversation—and who’s now determined to change that forever.
Ayuk’s remarks were not confined to the mechanics of energy policy. They came from a deeper place, shaped by decades of watching Africa’s potential get boxed in by narratives written elsewhere. “We’re not just trying to be at the table,” he said. “We’re building our table. And we’re making sure Africans are not only present, but powerful.”
He spoke passionately about the African Energy Chamber’s growing membership, which, while expanding rapidly across the continent, is now moving into a new phase of deeper engagement.
To Ayuk, more names on a list isn’t the end goal—true engagement is. It’s about building tools, platforms, and relationships that move the needle for real people. “Membership must mean access to opportunity, practical support, and the kind of connection that leads to deals, jobs, and investment,” he stressed.
As Ayuk sees it, Africa's energy future isn't just about technology or trends. It’s about rewriting an old story; one where African professional was told they didn’t belong in the boardrooms of global energy firms.
“When nobody wanted to hire Africans in energy companies, we knew we had to change the narrative. We’re not asking anymore—we’re building, we’re lobbying, we’re empowering. This is about ownership.”
He doesn’t reject the energy transition, but he questions the lens through which it’s being sold to Africa. “How do you decarbonize what you haven’t even carbonized?” he asked, challenging the global north’s push for rapid green policies that don’t account for the urgent needs on the ground. “People talk about emissions; we talk about electricity. They talk about the future; we talk about today.”
Partnerships with global data giants like Wood Mackenzie and SNP are part of AEC’s shift to data-driven decision-making, providing African businesses with the insights they need to negotiate, invest, and grow on their terms.
It’s not about handouts—it’s about leverage. Ayuk’s vision is unashamedly ambitious. He wants to build the strongest African energy lobby in history, one that can push for legislation across parliaments and deliver results on the ground.
But behind the strategy is something more personal. In his words, “We have been buried, burial by burial, overlooked and dismissed. But we are rising again. And this time, we rise together.”
This isn’t just policy—it’s a movement. And Ayuk’s lived experience adds urgency and clarity to a mission that feels not only timely but inevitable. The African Energy Chamber is no longer content to react to global developments—it is shaping its own destiny. With Ayuk at the helm, this isn’t just about energy. It’s about justice, pride, and the right to prosper.
In the end, Ayuk’s message was simple but profound: Africa’s energy belongs to Africans. The Chamber’s mission isn’t just to advocate—it’s to ignite. From data to legislation, from partnerships to policy, the movement is real. “We are not waiting to be invited,” Ayuk said with quiet fire. “We are creating our future. And we will not be ignored.”