Pancontinental Energy is positioning 2026 as a year to advance farm-out negotiations on its offshore Namibian acreage, as the company seeks a funding partner to carry a deepwater exploration well on Petroleum Exploration Licence 87 (PEL 87) in the Orange Basin.
The Australian-listed explorer has made clear in its public disclosures that it does not intend to self-fund offshore drilling and is pursuing a partner with the technical capability and balance-sheet capacity to execute a high-cost exploration well.
Management has framed the farm-out process as the primary pathway to unlocking value in PEL 87 and progressing the licence toward drilling readiness.
PEL 87 lies offshore southern Namibia in the Orange Basin, a petroleum province that has attracted sustained industry attention following recent regional exploration activity.
Pancontinental holds a 75% operating interest in the licence, with Custos Energy holding the remaining 25%. No wells have yet been drilled on the block by the current joint venture, placing the acreage firmly in the exploration and prospect maturation phase.
The timing of farm-out discussions is shaped by regulatory commitments attached to the licence. PEL 87 entered its first renewal exploration period in January 2024, with the renewal period running to 22 January 2026.
Under the terms of the renewal, Pancontinental must either drill one exploration well during the period or acquire a significant seismic dataset if a drill-ready target has not been sufficiently matured.
Pancontinental has stated that the renewal period is being used to advance technical work and position the licence for partner engagement ahead of the commitment deadline.
The company has framed 2026 as the window in which commercial negotiations, data room engagement and partner selection are expected to accelerate, aligned with the regulatory decision point.
The company’s current activity on PEL 87 remains technical rather than operational. Work programmes have focused on seismic interpretation, structural mapping and prospect definition aimed at refining drillable targets and reducing subsurface uncertainty.
Pancontinental has indicated that this work underpins the credibility of the farm-out process, as potential partners require robust geological interpretation and clearly defined prospects before committing capital.
A key focus of the technical programme has been the Saturn prospect complex within the PEL 87 block. Pancontinental has identified Saturn as a multi-prospect trend, supported by seismic interpretation that indicates several structural and stratigraphic closures capable of hosting hydrocarbons.
As interpretation has progressed, the company has mapped additional prospects within the Saturn complex, expanding the inventory of potential drilling targets and providing flexibility in well selection.
Pancontinental has stated that identifying multiple prospects strengthens the licence’s commercial positioning. Rather than relying on a single lead structure, the company can offer potential partners a portfolio of drilling options, thereby spreading risk across several targets and enhancing the strategic attractiveness of the farm-out opportunity.
The company has also noted that offshore drilling in deepwater Namibia requires specialised operational capability and substantial capital commitment.
As a junior explorer, Pancontinental has positioned itself as a technical and portfolio manager rather than an execution operator, with the farm-out strategy designed to bring in a partner capable of funding and operating the drilling phase.
In parallel with commercial engagement, Pancontinental intends to continue advancing technical work through 2026. Ongoing seismic reprocessing, attribute analysis, and prospect risk analysis are expected to refine volumetric estimates, trap definition, and geological confidence.
This work supports both partner evaluation processes and internal decisions around the maturity of drilling concepts.
The licence work commitment introduces strategic optionality. If a partner is secured and a drill target is matured within the renewal period, the joint venture could progress toward permitting and drilling preparation.
If technical readiness or partner alignment is not achieved in time, Pancontinental retains the option to meet its licence obligations through additional seismic acquisition, extending technical de-risking before committing to a well.
Pancontinental has not published a definitive drilling schedule for PEL 87. All forward activity remains contingent on partner entry, regulatory approvals and market conditions.
The company has emphasised that its near-term objective is to secure alignment on funding and technical readiness, rather than rushing into drilling without sufficient preparation.
From a regulatory perspective, any drilling programme would require environmental approvals, marine permitting and logistical planning.
Pancontinental has indicated that these steps will proceed once a funding partner is secured and a drill target is finalised. Until then, activities remain focused on subsurface interpretation and commercial positioning.
The broader Orange Basin context continues to influence partner appetite. While recent wells elsewhere in the basin have delivered mixed outcomes, the petroleum system has been demonstrated, sustaining interest among international operators.
Pancontinental has positioned PEL 87 as underexplored relative to neighbouring acreage, with the Saturn complex offering multiple untested structures.
For Pancontinental, the alignment between licence obligations and commercial strategy creates a clear decision horizon. The January 2026 renewal deadline effectively sets the timeframe within which the company must determine whether PEL 87 progresses toward drilling through a farm-out transaction or continues technical maturation through additional seismic investment.
The company’s stated objective for 2026 is therefore to convert technical groundwork into commercial momentum. That includes advancing farm-out discussions, engaging potential partners, strengthening prospect definition and maintaining regulatory compliance under the renewal framework.
Whether a partner transaction is concluded or further seismic investment is pursued, Pancontinental has positioned 2026 as a decisive year for shaping the next phase of PEL 87. The outcome will determine whether the licence moves closer to offshore drilling or continues along a measured path of technical de-risking and portfolio positioning within Namibia’s offshore exploration landscape.



















