The Kharas is closer to giving Namibia long-awaited answers about the true potential of the Kudu gas fields than at any point in the last decade.
After months of drilling in deep Orange Basin waters, BW Energy has confirmed that the Kharas-1 appraisal well has reached total depth and intersected multiple formations across the Kudu licence, offering the clearest geological picture yet of what lies beneath Namibia’s southern offshore basin.
Kharas-1 was spudded in mid-September using the Deepsea Mira rig on Petroleum Production Licence (PPL) 003, the same block that hosts the historic Kudu gas discovery.
The Kudu field, first identified by Chevron in 1973, is one of Namibia’s oldest offshore discoveries. However, over the past 40 years the project has stalled repeatedly due to fluctuating domestic power demand, the high cost of deepwater development, and changing investment appetites among successive operators.
Previous partners—including Chevron, Energulf, Gazprom, and later Tullow—conducted extensive studies but ultimately stepped back after Kudu’s economics proved difficult under then-market conditions.
BW Energy entered the picture in 2021 after acquiring a 95% operating interest in the licence from Namcor. The national oil company retained 5%.
BW Energy brought a fresh approach: smaller-scale modular gas development anchored by a floating production unit and flexible gas-to-power options that could align more realistically with Namibia’s domestic electricity needs.
The company also committed to new subsurface evaluation, drilling, and reservoir modelling—investments that had been deferred for years. Kharas-1 is the first major physical result of that renewed investment programme.
Instead of aiming for a single, optimised target, BW Energy designed the well to cut through several intervals in a single borehole.
This approach sacrificed ideal well placement for individual zones but delivered a broader sweep of geological data—a crucial trade-off for a project that needs definitive clarity before Namibia can commit billions to any gas-to-power scheme.
The well was drilled through formations previously modelled but not comprehensively tested, allowing BW Energy to assess multiple reservoir targets in one operation.
The initial results, described by BW Energy as “encouraging,” show indications of hydrocarbons in several zones. Early analysis suggests the K1 interval may contain wetter hydrocarbons than the dry gas historically associated with Kudu, a detail that could influence decisions around production planning, processing design and overall commercial strategy.
While full test results and reservoir interpretations are still being processed, the company says the drilling has confirmed a working petroleum system and helped refine the geological architecture of the broader licence.
For Namibia, the significance goes beyond geology. Kudu has long been seen as a potential cornerstone for domestic power generation, capable of producing electricity at scale—especially for mining expansion and industrialisation.
Over the years, various development concepts were floated: a 700 MW integrated power station during the early 2000s, a reduced 444 MW project in the 2010s, and even multiple attempts to bring in external power utilities as anchor customers. None advanced far enough to justify investment.
BW Energy’s ownership structure and capital commitments have revived hope. The company brings both upstream experience and ties to BW Group, a global maritime and energy conglomerate with deep pockets and technical expertise.
To date, BW Energy has invested in seismic reprocessing, reservoir studies, drilling preparations and mobilisation of the Deepsea Mira rig—incremental steps that demonstrate both appetite and capacity to test Kudu’s viability rather than simply hold the licence.
Kharas-1 marks the first substantial step in years toward clarifying whether Kudu can be revived as a reliable domestic gas source.
BW Energy has already signalled that more appraisal drilling will be required. Each interval encountered at Kharas-1 will need targeted wells to unlock a clearer picture of commerciality and production behaviour.
But the early signs have provided enough confidence to push the project into a new phase: refining the reservoir model, updating development options and reassessing the role the field could play in Namibia’s future energy mix.
If the next round of drilling confirms what Kharas-1 has begun to show, Namibia could be looking at a more flexible, modular gas development than previously imagined—one capable of supporting baseload power while complementing the country’s rapid growth in renewables and the emergence of green hydrogen projects.
Kharas-1 has delivered what Kudu has lacked for decades: fresh data, renewed momentum and a clearer line of sight into a field long discussed but rarely understood with this level of detail.
The Kharas is not the final answer, but it is closer than Namibia has ever been to unlocking the next chapter of its domestic gas story.



















