Wapu Sonk was one of the chief architects of a national economic revolution.
In the complex and fiercely competitive world of oil and gas, where only the sharpest minds survive, Wapu stood apart not just as a corporate leader, but as a visionary whose influence helped reshape Papua New Guinea’s future.
Working alongside respected figures such as Kerenga Kua, Larry Andagali, Professor Benedict Yaru, and Peterson Pipi, Wapu Sonk was firmly in the driver’s seat of transforming what was once a passive state equity holder into what is now one of the nation’s most formidable and enviable national oil companies.
This was not accidental.
It was the product of extraordinary foresight, strategic discipline, and a deep understanding of global petroleum governance.
Wapu Sonk had seen how the world’s most successful national oil companies — such as Pertamina, Petronas, and others — operated.
He understood that Papua New Guinea could no longer afford to sit quietly while others dictated the value and direction of its resource wealth.
He envisioned something far greater:
A powerful, independent national oil company could protect, grow, and maximise the economic interests of Papua New Guinea and its people.
That vision became reality.
Through his leadership and strategic influence, Kumul Petroleum Holdings Limited evolved from a passive participant into an economic powerhouse, with a balance sheet now estimated between K13 billion and K17 billion — placing it among the strongest State-owned Enterprises in the country.
In many respects, KPHL became more than a company.
It became a fortress of national wealth.

For the 11 million shareholders of Papua New Guinea — the citizens themselves — Wapu Sonk helped build the protective walls around one of the nation’s greatest economic assets. He understood that true resource ownership required more than equity; it required institutional strength, governance, protection, and long-term strategic insulation from political interference and opportunistic exploitation.
He built those walls carefully.
He protected them fiercely.
Those who worked closely swear that Sonk was not a man easily swayed, manipulated, or deceived. He went by the book. He understood systems. He understood value. And he understood that national wealth must be defended with precision.
Yet despite his brilliance, Wapu remained remarkably human.
He treated drivers, security guards, graduates, and executives alike with equal respect. In a corporate world often divided by hierarchy, Wapu saw people as people. He had time for everyone. He listened. He guided. He protected.
That humanity became one of his defining strengths.
But it also became one of his vulnerabilities.
Like many great leaders, his kindness, generosity, and protective nature were at times misused, abused, and taken for granted.
Envy inevitably surrounded a man of such intellect, discipline, and influence. His rise, his standards, and his vision became uncomfortable for some.
And as history often shows, greatness can attract not only admiration — but also resentment.
In many ways, envy played a role in his fall.
The walls he helped build around KPHL — the economic fortress designed to secure PNG’s petroleum future — now appear increasingly vulnerable. For many observers, the weakening of those safeguards is not merely a corporate matter; it is the dismantling of a vision built to protect national sovereignty.
Wapu Sonk’s story is therefore larger than one man.
It is the story of ambition, nation-building, and the burden of visionary leadership.
He helped steer Papua New Guinea toward a future where it could stand shoulder to shoulder with global petroleum powers.
He transformed passive ownership into commanding economic influence.
He built for a nation — not for himself.
And though political currents, envy, and shifting power structures may have altered his path, they cannot erase his legacy.
Because Wapu Sonk was more than an executive.
He was a strategist. A protector. A builder. A patriot.
He was one of the minds that helped create modern PNG petroleum sovereignty.
And while the walls around that sovereignty may now be tested, history will remember who first had the courage and intelligence to build them.









