Pioneer Lithium is setting the stage for a new round of exploration at its Warmbad Project — a 271 km² licence area (EPL 8838) located within the Namaqua Metamorphic Complex. The company has begun finalising land access and stakeholder engagement in preparation for detailed airborne radiometric and magnetic surveys — key groundwork for the project’s next drilling phase.
Warmbad was last surveyed in 2007, long before uranium mineralisation was discovered in the area. The old dataset, broad in scale and of limited resolution, no longer meets the technical needs of modern exploration.
Pioneer’s upcoming survey will deliver high-resolution magnetic and radiometric coverage, enabling the company to refine its geological model and identify untested targets.
Magnetite has been observed within the uranium-bearing alaskite host rocks, and a clear relationship between the two was noted in geological logging.
However, this association was never fully defined or pursued. By re-examining these magnetic highs, Pioneer aims to pinpoint zones of potentially higher-grade uranium mineralisation across both known and unexplored areas.
Once the geophysics are complete, Pioneer plans to launch an extensive drilling programme combining resource confirmation, step-out exploration, and structural analysis.
Resource drilling will be conducted across all three of the project’s known mineralised zones — Areas 1, 3 and 5 — to validate historical intercepts and generate data sufficient for a JORC 2012-compliant resource estimate.
Diamond drilling will be used to obtain samples for metallurgical testing and to define better structural controls, particularly along the fold hinges and northeast-trending faults that host mineralisation.
Exploration drilling will expand on open zones within the existing prospects and test several new targets, including the nose of the fold hinge at Area 1 and the northeast-trending fault that connects Areas 3 and 5.
Pioneer’s geologists believe these fault systems were instrumental in the emplacement of mineralised alaskite bodies — yet surprisingly little historical work was ever done to test them directly.
The Warmbad deposit sits in a geological setting similar to that of Namibia’s Rossing Mine, with uranium mineralisation occurring in leucocratic alaskitic intrusions controlled by structural deformation.
Historical drilling by Xemplar Energy Corp between 2007 and 2009 — comprising 161 reverse-circulation and 11 diamond holes totalling 31,685 metres — delineated three continuous mineralised zones.
At Area 5, drillholes recorded cumulative uranium contents of up to 1% cumulative grade-thickness U₃O₈, with mineralised intervals exceeding 50 metres downhole.
Following its acquisition of Warmbad in 2025, Pioneer confirmed the presence of extensive historical data and announced an initial Exploration Target of 22.2 – 32.1 million tonnes grading 100 – 120 ppm U₃O₈.
With land access agreements now secured and discussions ongoing with the Ministry of Mines and Energy and the Resettlement Committee, Pioneer expects to commence the high-resolution magnetic and radiometric surveys before year-end.
Results from these surveys will guide the 2025 drilling campaign, which will focus on step-out holes at Areas 1, 3 and 5, including the Area 3 extension zone where mineralisation remains open.
The company’s stated goal is to convert the known uranium zones at Warmbad into a JORC-compliant resource and to test new fault-controlled targets that could significantly expand the project’s scale.
Warmbad’s potential lies in its structural complexity and the untapped mineralisation concealed within its granite-hosted system.
The next round of geophysics and drilling represents not only a technical milestone but the start of a broader plan to reposition the project as one of southern Namibia’s emerging uranium assets.



















