Namibia is no stranger to ambitious green dreams – from hydrogen corridors, solar mega-plants, and new battery minerals, these have been at the forefront of the country’s sustainability playbook.
But now, a different shade of green is getting its moment: seaweed.
Enter SKORPIo Alternative Fuels Namibia (SKORPIoN) — a bold project aiming to transform Namibia’s windswept coastline into a hub for seaweed-based biofuel and green e-methanol production.
Led by Kaoko Green Energy Solutions in collaboration with South Africa’s SeaH4, this venture is among the first serious attempts in Namibia to tap marine biomass for sustainable energy.
So how does it work? The concept sounds almost futuristic: vast land-based seaweed ponds — long, shallow raceways designed to grow marine algae in controlled conditions.
The seaweed isn’t for salads. Instead, it’s harvested, processed, and converted into biogas, upgraded to biomethane, or combined with green hydrogen to create e-methanol — a low-carbon fuel the shipping industry is increasingly desperate for.
This is no half-measure pilot.
Plans call for a dedicated 2 MW solar plant, two 4 MW wind turbines, battery storage, and water pipelines — all built to ensure the production process itself is environmentally friendly.
It’s a model for closing the loop on carbon while helping Namibia reduce its dependence on fossil fuels and generate sustainable jobs.
But it’s also serious business. The project aligns with new International Maritime Organisation rules, which are pushing shipping companies to adopt cleaner fuels like e-methanol.
Namibia’s ports, the Benguela Current Commission, and even UNIDO have signalled interest, seeing SKORPIoN as a blueprint for a blue economy that doesn’t just extract from the ocean — but regenerates it.
Environmental approvals and feasibility studies are in progress.
And while critics will ask tough questions about cost, scaling, and community benefits, the vision is clear: from seaweed ponds to ship fuel tanks, Namibia is looking to grow its green credentials — one wave at a time.



















