Sultan Resources Limited (ASX: SLZ) has entered the Namibian gold space, acquiring the Namibia Gold Project (EPL7895)—a 152 km² exploration licence in the prolific Damara Gold Belt—from Aldoro Resources.
The move marks Sultan’s first foray into Namibia, expanding its footprint beyond its Australian exploration portfolio.
The EPL7895 tenure remains under-explored, and Sultan has reported minimal historical drilling or modern exploration within its boundaries.
According to public releases, Sultan is preparing a ground magnetics program to refine structural targets and identify drill-ready zones.
Still, no detailed geochemical sampling or drill campaign has yet been publicly announced.
The company describes the licence as early-stage but highly prospective.
Geologically, the licence is underlain by Neoproterozoic metasedimentary rocks of the Damara Supergroup—schists, metagreywacke, quartzites, and marbles—deformed during the Damara Orogeny, a setting analogous to host rocks at WIA Gold’s Kokoseb and Osino Resources’ Ondundu and Eureka deposits. Sultan points to nearby successes as indicators of the kind of gold systems EPL7895 might host.
Beyond orogenic gold, Sultan highlights REE and niobium potential related to the licence’s proximity to the Cretaceous Etaneo syenite intrusive complex in the Damaraland Igneous Province.
Magnetic data shows a ~8 km diameter concentric magnetic ring structure extending into EPL7895—suggested as a possible footprint of alteration linked to intrusive activity.
Sultan’s planned magnetic survey will seek to sharpen these targets before drilling.
Before Namibia, Sultan had focused on Australian exploration ground in the Lachlan Fold Belt of New South Wales and the Yilgarn Craton, targeting structurally hosted gold, porphyry Au–Cu systems, and base metal deposits.
Its strategy has leaned on methodical, modern exploration techniques and selective project targeting. The acquisition of EPL7895 signals a notable pivot—adding international exposure to gold exploration in a frontier African gold province.
Chairman Lincoln Liu framed the Namibia deal as transformational, saying it places Sultan “directly into one of the world’s newest gold frontiers,” while preserving the company’s discipline in project selection.



















