Cazaly Resources has confirmed it will not be renewing its interest in the Kaoko Lithium Project in Namibia, following a strategic review of its portfolio during the June 2025 quarter.
The company held a 95% stake in the project, which was classified as a critical minerals asset, but concluded that it no longer aligned with its exploration and development directive.
The project licence expired on 8 June 2025 without renewal.
The Kaoko Lithium Project was initially pursued for its potential to host lithium and associated critical minerals within Namibia’s northwest pegmatite belt, a region that has drawn intense interest from international and Australian-listed juniors in recent years.
Early-stage exploration work by Cazaly included reconnaissance mapping and geochemical sampling, which identified pegmatite zones prospective for lithium-bearing minerals such as spodumene.
These preliminary activities encouraged but ultimately failed to deliver significant discoveries that could justify a transition to large-scale drilling investment.
Cazaly initially secured its interest in Kaoko in March 2018 through an option agreement that allowed it to earn a 95% stake in the project via a joint venture with local partners.
As part of the acquisition, Cazaly issued 6 million shares to the vendors. The deal also required staged commitments: a minimum exploration spend of about N$3 million (A$300,000 at the time) by November 2020, plus milestone-linked payments including an additional 10.5 million Cazaly shares upon delineation of a JORC-compliant cobalt resource, and a cash payment of A$1 million if a decision to mine was reached.
These conditions were structured to spread investment risk across key development stages, but none of the milestone triggers were met before the licence expired.
Between 2018 and 2022, Cazaly conducted reconnaissance surveys across the Kaoko licence area, aiming to assess the scale and grade of lithium mineralisation within the pegmatite belt.
Field mapping and soil geochemistry highlighted zones of interest, but sampling results did not deliver grades sufficient to advance into resource drilling.
The company maintained the project in good standing while prioritising exploration funds toward its more advanced domestic projects.
With no significant discoveries made at Kaoko and broader capital market conditions pressuring exploration budgets, Cazaly slowed activities on the project from 2023 onward.
By mid-2025, the board concluded that Kaoko did not offer the near-term returns or scale potential needed to compete with other assets in its portfolio.
The expiration of Kaoko’s licence on 8 June 2025 formalised Cazaly’s exit.
The decision underscores a clear strategic shift: focusing resources on higher-priority projects in Western Australia.
Among these are the Halls Creek copper project, where drilling has yielded promising results with potential for a defined resource, and the Ashburton Basin project, which targets gold and base metals across a prominent, underexplored tenement position.
Both projects are considered to offer a stronger strategic fit and near-term development potential than Kaoko.
Cazaly also recognised that the financial and technical demands of advancing Kaoko to a drilling stage would have required substantial new capital.
Given the competitive environment in Namibia’s lithium and critical minerals sector, where companies such as Andrada Mining, Askari Metals, and Arcadia Minerals are actively investing in aggressive drilling and development programs, Cazaly determined that its funds would be better deployed elsewhere.
Cazaly’s exit comes at a time when Namibia’s lithium and critical minerals sector is gaining momentum. The country’s pegmatite belts, particularly around Uis and the Erongo Region, have become a focal point for exploration, with several junior and mid-tier companies reporting intersections of lithium, tin, rubidium, and tantalum.
However, the Kaoko project highlighted the risks inherent in early-stage exploration. Despite its location within a prospective belt, results fell short of establishing a resource base comparable to neighbouring projects.
For Cazaly, the challenge of justifying further investment in the absence of strong exploration results ultimately outweighed the project’s potential upside.
Cazaly’s withdrawal from Kaoko signals a disciplined approach to portfolio management, prioritising capital allocation toward assets with clearer development pathways.
At the same time, Kaoko’s relinquishment highlights the competitive nature of Namibia’s exploration landscape, where licence turnover is part of a broader process that reallocates exploration ground to operators with the capital and appetite to pursue aggressive development.
The Kaoko project now returns to Namibia’s mineral inventory, where it could again attract new interest as global demand for lithium and associated critical minerals intensifies.
The exit clears the way for Cazaly to consolidate its focus on domestic projects, streamline its exploration spend, and deliver shareholder value from assets viewed as more strategically aligned with the company’s growth trajectory.



















