December 21, 2025
By Ajong Mbapndah L *
We have grown with the continent, and the continent remains at the heart of our strategy and our future, says Dietsmann CEO Cesare Canevese
For more than forty years, Dietsmann has played an indispensable role in keeping Africa’s most critical energy and industrial assets running. From offshore platforms in Angola to vast production fields in Nigeria, from power facilities in Uganda to complex installations in Congo and Gabon, the company has been a quiet but decisive force—maintaining operations, transferring knowledge, and blending hands-on experience with cutting-edge digital solutions.
Its presence on the continent is not episodic. It is rooted in genuine long-term commitment, a theme that Dietsmann CEO Cesare Canevese emphasized repeatedly in conversations with Pan African Visions. “Africa has shaped who we are as a company,” he said. “We have grown with the continent, and the continent remains at the heart of our strategy and our future.”
This year, Dietsmann continued to reinforce that commitment through operational expansion, digital transformation, capacity-building programs, and a high-profile presence at the fifth edition of African Energy Week (AEW 2025)—a gathering that further cemented its position as one of Africa’s most trusted maintenance and industrial services partners.
A Continental Presence Grounded in Experience
Dietsmann today operates across Angola, Nigeria, the Republic of Congo, Libya, Gabon, Uganda and South Sudan. Its services span Operations & Maintenance, engineering, inspection, and a rapidly expanding suite of digital solutions. Canevese underscores that innovation is now inseparable from core operations. “Digital twins and predictive maintenance are not abstract ambitions. They are tools we deploy every day to help operators maximize safety, reduce downtime, and extend the life of their assets.”
That mix of deep field experience and data-driven intelligence has become the company’s signature. “Technology enhances our work, but people remain at the center,” Canevese added. “The real differentiator is the knowledge, discipline, and safety culture of our local teams.” Thousands of African technicians have come through Dietsmann training programs, many going on to lead maintenance teams within national and international operators. “We believe in training for continuity,” he said. “Our impact should continue long after a project ends.”
This year marked Dietsmann’s debut as an exhibitor and sponsor at the African Energy Week in Cape Town. A milestone in its commitment to Africa’s energy future
AEW 2025: Shaping the Narrative of Africa’s Energy Transition
The fifth edition of African Energy Week, held from 29 September to 3 October 2025, marked a defining moment for Africa’s energy dialogue. For Canevese, the successful completion of this milestone edition demonstrated the continent’s growing confidence in steering its own energy future. “Reaching the fifth edition showed that Africa is speaking more assertively about its energy destiny,” he observed. “AEW has become the platform where ambition meets the realities on the ground.”
Dietsmann’s participation at AEW 2025 was both strategic and impactful. The company contributed to high-level discussions on maintaining aging infrastructure, integrating digital tools into operations, strengthening safety and performance, and aligning industrial systems with Africa’s evolving energy mix. “AEW is where practical dialogue happens,” Canevese reflected. “We brought insights from decades of field experience—offshore, onshore, and in some of the most demanding environments.”
The event also offered important private engagement opportunities. Dietsmann held targeted meetings with governments, regulators, and operator partners, exploring new long-term O&M agreements, potential digital transformation initiatives, and opportunities to reinforce national technical capacity. The company’s digital demonstrations—particularly around predictive maintenance and condition-based monitoring—attracted strong interest from operators seeking to enhance reliability and reduce unplanned downtime.
Canevese summed up the experience succinctly: “AEW 2025 allowed us to reconnect with partners, reaffirm our long-standing commitment to Africa, and demonstrate the tangible impact of our digital and operational expertise. It was a successful, future-oriented week.”
Partnerships That Create Local Value
One theme runs consistently through Dietsmann’s work: partnership with purpose. Canevese emphasizes that for Dietsmann, partnership goes beyond project execution. “We invest in people, in training, in the local supply chain. That is how you build real capacity,” he said. “Africa’s energy future will be driven by Africans. Our role is to support that process with experience, technology, and global best practices.”
From collaborating with national oil companies to growing local service providers into strong industrial partners, Dietsmann’s approach strengthens national value chains rather than substituting them. In markets as varied as Congo, Angola and Uganda, the company continues to create meaningful pathways for African technicians, engineers, and young professionals.
“Our work only succeeds when local teams succeed,” Canevese insisted. “That is our philosophy and our promise.”
Africa’s energy future will be driven by Africans. Our role is to support that process with experience, technology, and global best practices , says Cesare Canevese
Maintenance as a Strategic Advantage
Maintenance has traditionally been viewed as a cost center, but Dietsmann has helped transform it into a strategic asset. The company’s integrated model—combining technical maintenance, engineering, inspection, and digital services—positions it as a partner capable of strengthening operational performance across the lifecycle of an asset.
“The industry used to see maintenance as an obligation,” Canevese observed. “We see it as a source of efficiency, reliability, and competitive advantage. When you anticipate problems, you save money. When you reduce downtime, you create value. When you operate safely, you protect people and the environment.”
This philosophy, backed by decades of operational excellence, has made Dietsmann one of the most trusted names in Africa’s industrial services landscape.
Navigating Challenges With Long-Term Vision
Operating across Africa entails navigating currency volatility, logistical hurdles, procurement delays, and, in some regions, post-conflict constraints. Canevese does not shy away from acknowledging these challenges, yet remains firm in his long-term outlook. “Every market has its complexities. What matters is building resilience and working closely with authorities to create predictable environments.”
For him, government partnership is pivotal. “Transparent procurement, balanced local content policies, and incentives for digital modernization will transform the sector,” he said. “Countries that take these steps will attract long-term partners like us.”
Dietsmann’s endurance in Africa is a testament to its ability to adapt, collaborate and build trust even in demanding environments.
Looking Ahead: A Future Built With Africa
As Africa accelerates diversification into gas, power generation, renewables, and emerging technologies such as green hydrogen, Dietsmann sees enormous opportunity to deepen its role across the continent. Canevese believes the company is well positioned to support this shift. “Africa’s energy landscape is changing fast. The demand for professional, technology-enabled maintenance will only grow,” he explained. “We want to be part of that evolution for decades to come.”
While specifics remain confidential, the company hints that new projects and digital initiatives will be unveiled in the aftermath of AEW 2025—initiatives aligned with Dietsmann’s vision of a more modern, efficient, and sustainable African industrial ecosystem. “What we are building is not just for today’s energy needs, but for Africa’s industrial future,” Canevese said.