Northern Graphite’s latest quarterly update confirms two things that matter for Namibia – the Okanjande graphite mine remains central to the company’s global strategy, and Namibia is positioned to become a key supplier of graphite for Western battery supply chains as governments move urgently to reduce dependence on China.
While temporary shutdowns and maintenance issues overshadowed Northern’s third-quarter results at its Lac des Îles mine in Quebec, the company used the update to underline a broader shift in the graphite market that strengthens the strategic value of its Namibian asset.
With anti-dumping tariffs of up to 160% now imposed on Chinese battery anode material in the United States, and Europe accelerating investment into critical minerals security, Northern’s plan to restart and expand production from the fully permitted Okanjande mine has taken on renewed importance.
Okanjande has been on care and maintenance since Northern acquired it in 2022, but its advantages have been repeatedly emphasised in the company’s public strategy.
Unlike many greenfield graphite projects, Okanjande has an existing open-pit, a proven processing flow sheet, road and power connections, and export access through Walvis Bay.
Its graphite quality is already recognised as suitable feedstock for battery anode material, placing it in a rare category of projects that can be brought back online with comparatively low capital requirements and short lead times.
This is why, even as Lac des Îles undergoes plant upgrades and pit-extension development, Northern continues to position Namibia as the backbone of its mid-term production growth.
In parallel with its Canadian operations, the company announced that its planned battery anode material facility in France—expected to process graphite from Okanjande—has been awarded “Strategic Project” status under the European Union’s Critical Raw Materials Act.
The designation guarantees fast-tracked permitting and access to funding, signalling that Europe views Namibian graphite as essential to its energy transition supply chain.
Northern’s broader mine-to-market strategy is built on integrating upstream mining operations with downstream processing in both Canada and Europe.
The pathway places Namibia squarely in the middle of that chain. Graphite mined in Otjozondjupa could be upgraded into active anode material in France, destined for European electric vehicle and battery factories.
The company has also been building partnerships to test purification and shaping technologies, including agreements with Italy’s Alkeemia and research collaborations between its German-based battery materials division and RAIN Carbon Canada.
These collaborations were highlighted by Canada at a G7 meeting in October, reinforcing the geopolitical significance of the company’s supply network.
Financially, Northern’s quarter was challenging. Revenue fell to US$6.5 million, production dropped to 2,325 tonnes of concentrate due to unexpected SAG mill repairs at Lac des Îles, and the company reported a net loss of US$9.4 million.
But the decline is primarily attributed to plant issues in Quebec and to legacy constraints stemming from underinvestment by previous owners.
Northern’s management has reassured investors that repairs, pit expansion and plant reconfiguration will place the Canadian operation on a steadier footing by mid-2026, with a targeted production rate of 20,000 to 25,000 tonnes per year.
For Namibia, the compelling message lies not in the quarterly numbers but in the tone of the update. Northern insists that Okanjande remains central to its plan to become a vertically integrated graphite supplier outside China.
The company states plainly that Okanjande offers one of the fastest, lowest-cost pathways to meaningful production growth due to its permitted status, developed infrastructure and suitability for both traditional markets and the emerging battery anode sector.
With global demand for natural graphite in EVs and grid-scale storage accelerating, and Western governments prioritising secure supply, projects like Okanjande stand to benefit from strong long-term tailwinds.
The update also indicates that care and maintenance costs in Namibia declined during the quarter, suggesting that the company has stabilised the holding pattern while advancing downstream opportunities in Europe and Canada.
Once markets rebalance and Northern resolves its current financing structure — including negotiations around its senior secured loan and royalty facility — the company is expected to shift attention back to bringing Okanjande into production.
From a Namibian perspective, the significance extends beyond one mine. Okanjande is one of the country’s most advanced graphite deposits, sitting in a jurisdiction that is rapidly expanding its reputation in critical minerals amid global energy realignments.
Namibia’s strategic position is reinforced by the recent launch of the Green Industrialisation Blueprint and the country’s growing appeal as a stable, ESG-conscious partner for Western supply chains seeking to diversify away from China.
Northern Graphite’s Q3 update, though dominated by Canadian operational issues, ultimately sketches a future in which Namibian material flows into European anode factories, supported by Western policy, new tariffs, and accelerating industrial demand.
When Northern speaks of its “mine-to-market” vision, Okanjande is at the centre of that story — a ready-to-restart operation aligned with the political and economic realities shaping the global graphite industry.



















