• Home
  • News
  • Magazine
    • Current Edition
    • Previous Editions
  • Climate
  • Minerals
  • Mining
  • All About Namibia’s Extractive Sector
  • Contact
  • Menu Item
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
  • Login
The Extractor Magazine
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Africa
    • Biofuels
    • Climate
    • Copper
    • Exploration
    • Lithium
    • Minerals
    • Mining
    • Namibia
    • Nickel
    • Oil & Gas
    • Precious Metals
    • RIGS & VESSELS
    • Silver
    • Uranium
    Andrada confirms lithium grades of up to 3.46% at Lithium Ridge

    Andrada confirms lithium grades of up to 3.46% at Lithium Ridge

    ReconAfrica might need more money for Kavango West drilling

    ReconAfrica to test 6 hydrocarbon zones across 420m at Kavango discovery

    Klein Aub Copper Mine

    Unicorn Mineral Resources to seal Klein Aub deal end of this month

    Serval confirms copper mineralisation in Namibia’s Kaoko Basin

    Serval confirms copper mineralisation in Namibia’s Kaoko Basin

    China National Nuclear Corporation cleared to partner with Bannerman in Etango Uranium Project

    China National Nuclear Corporation cleared to partner with Bannerman in Etango Uranium Project

    British Virgin Island-registered Chinese company acquires Okorusu Fluorspar

    British Virgin Island-registered Chinese company acquires Okorusu Fluorspar

    London-listed Arkle buys Namibia uranium stake for N$49m

    Arkle brings in London mining broker as Namibia uranium push gathers pace

    bp to launch large-scale 3-D seismic survey in Walvis Basin before end of 2026

    bp to launch large-scale 3-D seismic survey in Walvis Basin before end of 2026

    Koryx Copper Resources’ Haib Mine: One of the oldest copper deposits in Africa

    Haib expected to process 40 million tonnes of material after redesign

    Tower Resources bets big on Walvis Basin potential

    Tower Resources raises £1.87m through 2 share subscriptions

    Trending Tags

  • Magazine
    • Current Edition
    • Previous Editions
  • Climate
  • Minerals
  • Mining
  • All About Namibia’s Extractive Sector
  • Contact
  • Menu Item
No Result
View All Result
The Extractor Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home Policy

Mines ministry’s 2026/2030 strategy prepares systems for first oil

by Editor
March 30, 2026
in Policy
0
Mines ministry’s 2026/2030 strategy prepares systems for first oil
523
SHARES
1.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Although Namibia expects first oil before the end of the decade, the country is already preparing the systems, infrastructure and regulatory backbone needed to support a functioning petroleum industry over the next five years.

The Ministry of Industries, Mines and Energy’s 2025/26–2029/30 strategic plan sets out a clear shift from exploration to readiness, with the government prioritising fuel integrity, logistics infrastructure, storage capacity and geoscientific systems as the foundation for oil production.

Namibia’s push toward oil production follows a series of major offshore discoveries made since 2022 in the Orange Basin.

TotalEnergies and its partners, including Impact Oil & Gas and NAMCOR, announced the Venus discovery in Block 2913B, which is widely regarded as the country’s most advanced development project.

Around the same time, Shell confirmed multiple discoveries in Petroleum Exploration Licence 39, including Graff, La Rona and Jonker, establishing Namibia as one of the world’s most promising new oil frontiers.

Further momentum came from Galp Energia and its partners, which made the Mopane discovery in PEL 83, adding to the scale of resources being appraised offshore.

TotalEnergies and Galp Energia formalised a strategic partnership in Namibia in late 2025 that effectively links the country’s two biggest offshore discoveries — Venus in Block 2913B and Mopane in PEL 83 — under a coordinated development framework.

Under the agreement, TotalEnergies acquired a 40% stake in Mopane and operatorship from Galp.

In comparison, Galp retained a 40% interest and gained a 10% stake in the Venus development, along with an additional interest in PEL 91.

The deal also includes a carry arrangement in which TotalEnergies will fund a portion of Galp’s exploration, appraisal and initial development costs at Mopane, recoverable from future production revenues.

The transaction reshapes Namibia’s offshore oil landscape by aligning the two companies across both assets, enabling shared infrastructure planning, technical integration, and a faster path to development. TotalEnergies is now positioned as the lead operator across both projects, while Galp maintains significant exposure to the basin’s upside.

Both companies have indicated that appraisal and development work will proceed in parallel, with a final investment decision targeted for 2026, placing Namibia on track for first oil before the end of the decade.

These discoveries have triggered a wave of appraisal drilling, technical studies and investment planning, positioning Namibia for its first production phase.

Industry timelines remain aligned around a key milestone, with final investment decisions expected from 2026.

TotalEnergies has indicated that a final investment decision on Venus is targeted for 2026, which would unlock full-field development, including subsea systems, floating production infrastructure, and export facilities. The scale of investment required for such deepwater projects is expected to run into billions of dollars, placing Namibia among the largest emerging offshore developments globally.

Against this backdrop, the government’s five-year strategy focuses on ensuring the country is ready onshore when offshore production begins. At the centre of this preparation is the establishment of a petrochemical testing laboratory to tighten control over fuel quality and quantity.

Namibia needs to ensure the integrity of all petroleum products through fuel quality and fuel quantity verification and testing, with authorities committed to introducing fuel integrity regulations and mandating the Namibian Standards Institution as the competent authority.

This is intended to prevent revenue losses from undeclared fuel volumes while strengthening health, safety, security and environmental protection.

The strategy also acknowledges that Namibia faces limited infrastructure capacity and insufficient fuel storage, particularly as activity increases.

Plans are therefore in place to develop an onshore petroleum supply base that will serve as a logistics hub for offshore operations.

The government intends to facilitate the construction of core infrastructure, such as jetties and access roads, ensure the availability of land and utilities, and provide the necessary licences, permits, and regulatory frameworks to enable development.

The supply base is expected to reduce transportation time and costs, minimise operational expenses, support economies of scale, build local capacity, reduce dependency on foreign service providers, create employment, promote skills transfer and enable local business participation in the petroleum value chain.

Fuel storage has emerged as another immediate concern. The plan highlights insufficient capacity nationwide, especially outside Walvis Bay, where congestion from fuel trucks is already damaging national roads.

The government has committed to allocating funds and supporting private sector initiatives to refurbish existing depots and construct new inland petroleum depots at strategic locations.

These facilities are expected to strengthen fuel supply security, ease congestion at Walvis Bay, and safeguard the national road network.

In parallel, Namibia is accelerating the construction and upgrading of geoscientific infrastructure. The country has accumulated significant volumes of geoscience data that require secure storage and management.

The ministry plans to mobilise resources to install new seismic stations and upgrade geoinformation systems, laboratories, and core storage facilities, improving data accessibility, strengthening investment competitiveness, and enabling nationwide monitoring of seismic activity.

The five-year strategy also links oil development to broader industrialisation goals. Through its manufacturing and value-addition pillar, the government aims to ensure that raw materials are processed locally into higher-value products, creating employment opportunities and supporting economic growth.

Share209Tweet131
Editor

Editor

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Private company led by John Sisay to revive Tschudi, Otjihase, Matchless and Berg Aukas mines  

Private company led by John Sisay to revive Tschudi, Otjihase, Matchless and Berg Aukas mines  

February 6, 2024
ReconAfrica to drill first well in the Damara Fold Belt after raising N$238m

ReconAfrica to drill first well in the Damara Fold Belt after raising N$238m

April 3, 2024
Gratomic targets 12,000t of vein graphite from Aukam mine this year

Gratomic targets 12,000t of vein graphite from Aukam mine this year

February 3, 2024
Askari Metals puts hopes on Kestrel Pegmatite within the Uis Lithium Project

Askari Metals puts hopes on Kestrel Pegmatite within the Uis Lithium Project

3
Namibia holds 26 million ounces of silver

Namibia holds 26 million ounces of silver

3
2024 HOPEFULS: Langer Heinrich’s return after five years

2024 HOPEFULS: Langer Heinrich’s return after five years

2
Andrada confirms lithium grades of up to 3.46% at Lithium Ridge

Andrada confirms lithium grades of up to 3.46% at Lithium Ridge

June 9, 2026
ReconAfrica might need more money for Kavango West drilling

ReconAfrica to test 6 hydrocarbon zones across 420m at Kavango discovery

June 9, 2026
Cross-border legal work behind Omitiomire acquisition by Appian Advisory

Cross-border legal work behind Omitiomire acquisition by Appian Advisory

June 9, 2026
  • Home
  • News
  • Magazine
  • Climate
  • Minerals
  • Mining
  • All About Namibia’s Extractive Sector
  • Contact
  • Menu Item

Copyright © 2023 The Extractor Magazine. | Powered by: Impeccable Tech & Designs

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Magazine
    • Current Edition
    • Previous Editions
  • Climate
  • Minerals
  • Mining
  • All About Namibia’s Extractive Sector
  • Contact
  • Menu Item

Copyright © 2023 The Extractor Magazine. | Powered by: Impeccable Tech & Designs

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In