Namibia’s oil and gas story is still in its prologue. The seismic surveys have been done, the first wells drilled, and the horizon glistens with the promise of first oil from TotalEnergies.
This should be the time for sober planning, robust policy, and honest national conversation about how to avoid the so-called “resource curse” — the bitter legacy that has plagued so many countries where oil wealth brought more division than development.
Yet, in Namibia, an odd inversion of that curse seems to be taking root. Instead of militias in the bush or politicians tearing at the seams of the state, we have the desk-bound resource curse: an emerging industry of conferences, panel discussions, and awareness drives, many of them run by organisations that did not exist before the first drillship dropped anchor.
These events often market themselves as platforms for dialogue, capacity building, or stakeholder engagement. Some are genuine, offering space for informed debate on local content, environmental safeguards, and community benefits.
But many appear to be little more than fundraising machines — drawing sponsorship cheques from oil companies in exchange for branding, photo opportunities, and the vague promise of “awareness raising.”
The proliferation is striking. Youth-driven organisations with no track record in the sector now speak as authorities on petroleum governance. Private consultants rebrand overnight as “energy strategists.”
Some parallel events run so close to official government-led forums that it is difficult to tell whether they are complementing or competing with actual policy processes. The optics are glossy — well-designed banners, catered lunches, photo galleries on LinkedIn — but the outputs are thin, and the beneficiaries are often the organisers themselves.
Namibia must be careful here. If the “curse” in other countries has been resource-fuelled conflict, ours risks becoming resource-fuelled opportunism.
It diverts money, time, and attention away from the hard work that matters: setting clear local content regulations, ensuring revenue transparency, building technical capacity, and negotiating contracts that benefit Namibians for generations.
The real oil and gas conversation should be in Parliament, in community halls, in vocational classrooms — not just in air-conditioned conference venues with press photographers.
Oil wealth will test Namibia in many ways. The world is watching to see if we can avoid the bloody, wasteful mistakes of others. But we must also guard against this quieter, softer pitfall — one where the gold rush is not to the rigs offshore, but to the sponsorship budgets of companies eager to polish their image. If we are not careful, our resource curse will not be written in the language of war, but in the language of invoices.



















