BW Energy’s Kharas-1 appraisal well on Namibia’s Kudu block has not yet received formal development approval. Still, it has delivered something decisive: confirmation of liquid hydrocarbons in a licence long known mainly for stranded offshore gas.
When the company announced this month that Kharas-1 had reached 5,100 metres and intersected multiple reservoir intervals — including fractured volcaniclastic rocks with condensate and possibly light oil — it underscored that a working petroleum system exists at Kudu and that the appraisal data will guide the next phase of planning.
Kudu was first introduced in 1974, and over the past four decades, it has undergone multiple design cycles. Earlier concepts under NamPower centred on a fixed offshore platform tied to a combined-cycle gas plant at Oranjemund.
Cost estimates in those years climbed well above a billion US dollars for the full development and power station. Those figures belong to a different era, but they remain a reminder of the scale and difficulty of monetising remote gas in a small national market.
The project’s shape has changed since BW Energy assumed operatorship from BW Offshore.
The company now favours a phased development built around a floating production and processing unit rather than a large stationary platform.
In investor briefings and Namibian discussions, BW Energy has described a subsea healthy system tied back to a floating unit that separates liquids and delivers dry gas into a subsea export pipeline.
That pipeline would make landfall near Oranjemund, where a gas-fired power plant would supply NamPower’s southern grid and feed into regional power flows.
Associated liquids, such as condensate, would be stabilised offshore, stored on the vessel, and offloaded to tankers, improving the economics of a development once considered too expensive to finance.
Where BW Energy has kept its public documents focused on exploration and reservoir characterisation, the petroleum commissioner, Maggy Shino, has repeatedly provided broader context.
In interviews and public forums, she has explained that the government sees Kudu as a cornerstone of domestic energy security — a project aimed at replacing imports with Namibian baseload generation.
She has also stressed that the development model is designed to bring processed gas ashore through a single pipeline to a coastal power hub linked to the NamPower network and the Southern African Power Pool.
Under that structure, production wells would tap the Kudu reservoirs and flow into subsea manifolds on the seabed.
The gas would then move to the floating production vessel for initial processing to sales-gas quality, with liquids removed and stored separately.
From there, a new subsea export line would transport the dry gas roughly 170 kilometres to the coast. Once ashore, the gas would supply a combined-cycle plant sized for Namibia’s baseload needs and capable of exporting power into the wider region when surplus capacity exists.
Shino has often explained why Kudu has taken so long to advance. Financing was complex, regional tariffs did not always support long-term power purchase agreements, and shifting partnerships forced repeated redesigns. Earlier projections under NamPower pointed to commissioning dates in the early 2010s and again later in that decade, but these slipped as commercial and technical conditions changed.
The timeline under BW Energy has been more focused. Government messaging referenced a possible 2027 start if appraisal drilling stayed on schedule and an investment decision followed quickly.
Those targets were indicative rather than firm. With Kharas-1 now completed and core and log analysis in progress, timelines will be revisited once the company has a clearer view of reserves, reservoir performance, and the gas-to-liquids ratio.
Even if the first gas arrives later than expected, the route from offshore to onshore remains unchanged. BW Energy’s approach reduces upfront capital by using a repurposed or converted floating vessel and connecting it directly to existing or expanded onshore grid infrastructure.
The subsea pipeline is the decisive link: once installed, it anchors offshore production to Namibia’s domestic power system, which is why Shino has described Kudu not as a standalone field but as the foundation of a broader gas-to-power framework.
Additional offshore discoveries or tie-ins from neighbouring blocks could reinforce the system over time.
The presence of liquid hydrocarbons at Kharas-1 gives the project fresh momentum. If further appraisal confirms the presence of economically significant condensate or light oil, revenue from liquids could help reduce the effective cost of the pipeline and power plant, thereby improving the commercial case for long-term tariffs acceptable to both BW Energy and NamPower. That would make it easier to lock in a realistic first-gas window — whether in the late 2020s or early 2030s.
The following milestones will be BW Energy’s decision on further appraisal drilling and, eventually, the release of a detailed field development plan showing exactly how the wells, subsea equipment, floating unit and onshore plant will be integrated.
After decades of frustration, each new technical detail brings the project closer to reality.
What once was an abstract idea — offshore gas powering Namibia through a pipeline to shore — now has a defined chain: from deep reservoirs to subsea manifolds, along a seabed pipeline, onto the coast at Oranjemund, and into turbines feeding the national grid.



















