ALP24 is seeking partnerships with Namibian companies to establish a local platform in energy and mining, utilising a partnership-first approach while aligning storage, trading, and selective project development for entry.
Headquartered in Geneva with operating hubs in Istanbul and Dubai, the company positions itself across the fuels value chain—sourcing, transporting, storing, blending and physically transacting—to keep supply flowing efficiently and reliably.
Alongside energy, ALP24 operates a mining and resources arm focused on energy-transition metals, including lithium, copper, graphite, cobalt, and gold.
It frames its development model around technology- and sustainability-led project execution.
In Namibia, the immediate focus is on a storage-led fuels platform that can support regional supply.
This involves securing tankage, integrating logistics, and establishing a trading operation that can respond to demand from both domestic and cross-border customers.
The company’s standard approach is to develop commercial storage and trading first, then layer in upstream or processing opportunities as feasibility work matures.
On the mining side, ALP24 is screening opportunities that fit its Africa portfolio, starting with front-end work such as ore characterisation and process design and advancing to pilot or scale-up once routes are proven. The intention is to pursue these projects through joint development with domestic firms, thereby building technical capability and commercial benefits locally.
As preparation for entry, ALP24 prioritises building reliable trade relationships, integrating logistics and storage capabilities, and coordinating with public- and private-sector stakeholders—national agencies, energy companies, and infrastructure operators—before publishing site, capacity, or timeline details.
This is the pathway it follows in new markets to move from concept to execution.
From here, early markers to watch in Namibia include the identification of local partners, announcement of a preferred storage site and capacity, and disclosure of any framework agreements that move the fuels platform from scoping to delivery.
On the mining track, expect news tied to initial technical studies and partner selection ahead of any scale-up decision.
ALP24 frames the Namibia entry as part of a broader Africa strategy: anchor resilient fuel flows with in-country storage and logistics, then develop selective mineral projects that support the energy transition.
The company’s stated goal is to deliver this through local partnerships, disciplined phased execution, and a clear focus on projects that can be brought to market efficiently.



















