• Home
  • News
  • Magazine
    • Current Edition
    • Previous Editions
  • Climate
  • Minerals
  • Mining
  • All About Namibia’s Extractive Sector
  • Contact
  • Menu Item
Thursday, April 30, 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
    Mining pays Namibia N$7.8 billion as corporate tax jumps 55%

    Mining pays Namibia N$7.8 billion as corporate tax jumps 55%

    Chamber of Mines to engage Govt after Namibia shed 3 points in Fraser Institute mining survey

    Namibia can unlock 18 000 mining jobs and billions if policy bottlenecks are cleared – Malango

    Uis Tin Mine: The world’s largest undeveloped open-cast hard rock tin deposit

    Andrada delays £7.7m loan repayment to fund Uis mine expansion

    Connected Minerals completes maiden RC drilling at Etango North-East, moves rig to Swakopmund Uranium Project

    Connected pauses work on its Namibian uranium assets as cash falls to A$2.8m

    Bannerman targets Etango FID after mid-2026 Chinese-backed deal completion

    Bannerman targets Etango FID after mid-2026 Chinese-backed deal completion

    Midas defines 211kt copper equivalent resource at Otavi, outlines open-pit potential

    Midas declares maiden 10.5Mt at 1.6% copper and 21g/t silver resource at Otavi projects

    Public review opens for Koppies West uranium project application

    Elevate grows Namibian uranium footprint to 116 million pounds

    Galp’s long game: From HRT’s early dry wells to Namibia’s new oil dawn

    Galp confirms three-well drilling and testing campaign for Mopane

    Deep Yellow says Tumas engineering now more than 60% complete

    Deep Yellow says Tumas engineering now more than 60% complete

    Rhino drills appraisal well to test Capricornus oil extension

    Rhino drills appraisal well to test Capricornus oil extension

    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 Magazine

Namibia misses Global Gateway Forum

by Editor
October 24, 2025
in Magazine
0
Namibia misses Global Gateway Forum
561
SHARES
1.6k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Namibia misses Global Gateway Forum

Namibia signed a memorandum of agreement with the EU Commission to establish an EU-Namibia Strategic Partnership in 2022.

Under this MoU, the EU has made available N$26 billion in loans and grants for the implementation of different infrastructure, studies and strategic partnership programmes.

Although the MoU has no expiry date, the EU Embassy in Windhoek says there is a roadmap agreed upon to support the implementation of the partnership with activities planned for 2023-2025.

According to the EU Embassy in Windhoek, given the relevance of the activities under the roadmap, an extension is currently under discussion.

During this year’s Global Gateway Forum in Brussels, Namibia did not feature prominently as it did in 2022, when the late President Hage Geingob led a huge delegation for the EU-Namibia Business Forum.

EU Ambassador to Namibia Ana Batriz Martins said President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah was invited to attend the 2025 Global Gateway Forum during the recent visit of the EU Commissioner for International Partnerships, Jozef Sikela, to Namibia.

“She indicated her interest but delegated the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Industries, Mines and Energy Hon. [Natague] Ithete. As he was not able to participate, Namibia was represented at the Forum by MIME Executive Director Moses Pakote,” Beatriz Martins said.

Namibia’s peers — Angola, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Zambia and South Africa — had high-level representation in Brussels, where they all secured major investment packages.

A tale of diverging trajectories

In 2022, Angola received about €150 million under the Global Gateway’s Africa–Europe Investment Package, focused on preparatory studies and logistics planning for the Lobito Corridor.

By 2025, that cooperation had matured into €133.5 million in implementation-phase funding, including €76.5 million announced in January for infrastructure and trade facilitation and €57 million in October for agriculture and vocational training.

In total, Angola’s Global Gateway commitments now stand at roughly €283.5 million.

The DRC followed a similar pattern, progressing from about €200 million in 2022 to more than €180 million in 2025, directed toward the Kivu–Kinshasa Green Corridor, electrification projects and sustainable mining governance — a combined €380 million since 2022.

South Africa, meanwhile, vaulted ahead: in March 2025, Brussels unveiled a €4.7 billion Global Gateway package to support its Just Energy Transition, digital connectivity and vaccine manufacturing.

Together, these developments cemented Angola, the DRC and South Africa as core pillars of the EU’s Africa portfolio — while Namibia, once the symbolic face of Europe’s green-hydrogen hopes, receded into silence.

Nothing for Namibia this round

Beatriz Martins said Namibia’s 2022 MoU with the EU was a roadmap, not specifically on projects, of which several were indeed identified under six pillars.

She said the six pillars included value chain integration and business facilitation; ESG cooperation and mobilisation of funding; capacity building, training, and skilled development; cooperation on research; and development and regulatory development.

“Targeted projects are at various stages of maturity and development,” she said.

In November 2023, the European Investment Bank announced a €500 million financing window to support Namibia’s green-hydrogen value chain.

The fund was designed to provide loans, guarantees and technical assistance for renewable generation, desalination and hydrogen infrastructure. Yet by mid-2025, only €50 million had been allocated to feasibility work for Hyphen Hydrogen Energy and Cleanergy Solutions Namibia.

The EIB’s 2024 annual report still lists Namibia’s hydrogen sector as “pipeline.”

Another project, the EU–Namibia Vocational Skills and Green Jobs Initiative, launched in March 2024 with €25 million, supports technical training and employment in renewable-energy sectors.

It is jointly funded by the EU Commission (€15 million) and Germany’s GIZ (€10 million) and implemented through the Namibia Training Authority and NUST’s Hydrogen Campus in Walvis Bay.

The EU also financed a €7 million feasibility study for the Port of Walvis Bay in 2023, assessing berthing, storage and ammonia-export readiness. Its findings, published in 2024, guided Walvis Bay’s designation as a hydrogen-export node.

In addition, a €20 million Renewable-Energy and Grid Integration Programme, jointly run by the EU–Africa Infrastructure Trust Fund and Germany’s KfW, is to improve NamPower’s solar-battery and grid-stabilisation capacity between 2023 and 2025.

These projects amount to roughly €552 million in identifiable commitments associated with Global Gateway or Team Europe funding.

However, the majority remains either preparatory or in early rollout, with no consolidated investment package comparable to those of Angola or the DRC.

A missed Brussels moment

 

The way forward

Policy analysts say the next six months are decisive.

Namibia can still revive its partnership by renewing the 2022 MoU, appointing a new Green Hydrogen Commissioner, and fast-tracking feasibility projects to the bankable stage.

EU Commission officials have confirmed that a second Global Gateway review mission is planned for early 2026; if Namibia demonstrates progress by then, it could regain access to unallocated Team Europe funds.

Equally crucial will be rebuilding investor confidence after several setbacks — including the postponed HyRail project between TransNamib and Cleanergy Solutions, originally scheduled to launch in April 2024 and now indefinitely delayed. That initiative, meant to be Namibia’s first hydrogen-powered rail demonstration, was handed to Cleanergy but never reached the commissioning stage.

Namibia remains part of the Global Gateway framework, but without a renewed agreement or new headline funding, it faces challenges.

Its peers have turned early pilot projects into multi-billion-euro partnerships; Namibia’s progress, by contrast, has been slowed by institutional drift.

Yet the opportunity still exists.

The EU continues to view Namibia as a crucial node in its sustainable raw materials and green hydrogen strategy. Re-engagement — with clear leadership, technical preparation and political follow-through — could still restore Namibia’s place at the centre of Europe’s green-industrialisation map.

Share224Tweet140
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
Mining pays Namibia N$7.8 billion as corporate tax jumps 55%

Mining pays Namibia N$7.8 billion as corporate tax jumps 55%

April 29, 2026
Chamber of Mines to engage Govt after Namibia shed 3 points in Fraser Institute mining survey

Namibia can unlock 18 000 mining jobs and billions if policy bottlenecks are cleared – Malango

April 29, 2026
B2Gold’s Antelope deposit Namibia’s next high-grade underground mine

B2Gold and Navachab paid highest corporate tax in 2025

April 29, 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