• Home
  • News
  • Magazine
    • Current Edition
    • Previous Editions
  • Climate
  • Minerals
  • Mining
  • All About Namibia’s Extractive Sector
  • Contact
  • Menu Item
Thursday, June 11, 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
    Elevate grows Marenica uranium resource from 40.2Mlb to 52.8Mlb

    Elevate grows Marenica uranium resource from 40.2Mlb to 52.8Mlb

    Shell strikes strongest oil results yet at Namibia’s Merlin-1X Well

    Shell strikes strongest oil results yet at Namibia’s Merlin-1X Well

    Andrada confirms lithium grades of up to 3.46% at Lithium Ridge

    Andrada confirms lithium grades of up to 3.46% at Lithium Ridge

    ReconAfrica might need more money for Kavango West drilling

    ReconAfrica to test 6 hydrocarbon zones across 420m at Kavango discovery

    Klein Aub Copper Mine

    Unicorn Mineral Resources to seal Klein Aub deal end of this month

    Serval confirms copper mineralisation in Namibia’s Kaoko Basin

    Serval confirms copper mineralisation in Namibia’s Kaoko Basin

    China National Nuclear Corporation cleared to partner with Bannerman in Etango Uranium Project

    China National Nuclear Corporation cleared to partner with Bannerman in Etango Uranium Project

    British Virgin Island-registered Chinese company acquires Okorusu Fluorspar

    British Virgin Island-registered Chinese company acquires Okorusu Fluorspar

    London-listed Arkle buys Namibia uranium stake for N$49m

    Arkle brings in London mining broker as Namibia uranium push gathers pace

    bp to launch large-scale 3-D seismic survey in Walvis Basin before end of 2026

    bp to launch large-scale 3-D seismic survey in Walvis Basin before end of 2026

    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

Lepidico rejects fund diversion claims

by Editor
December 15, 2025
in Magazine
0
Lepidico rejects fund diversion claims
567
SHARES
1.6k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Lepidico Chemicals Namibia (LCN) has denied claims that it unlawfully diverted funds from the Karibib Lithium Project or that revenues generated from the project “did not reach Namibia”, saying the allegations are false, unsubstantiated and incorrectly presented as fact.

Responding through its lawyers, Lepidico Chemicals Namibia said the original US$4.5 million customer deposit referenced in the dispute was received by a non-Namibian group entity in line with established group arrangements, after which intercompany funding was advanced into Namibia.

LCN further stated that the first shipment’s revenues were received into its Namibian bank account, contradicting assertions that the proceeds bypassed the country.

Allegations of unlawful diversion, misappropriation, tax evasion, manipulated pricing and concealment from authorities, the company said, are unsupported by evidence or any adjudicated finding.

LCN’s response follows the publication by The Extractor Magazine on 28 November of claims made by Huni-Urib, the 20 per cent Namibian shareholder in the Karibib Lithium Project.

In that article, Huni-Urib alleged that Lepidico diverted millions of dollars meant for Namibia by sustaining and benefiting from offshore revenue structures originally established by Desert Lion Energy and later maintained after Lepidico’s 2019 acquisition of the project.

The Karibib Lithium Project is held under Mining Licence 204, which was awarded in 2018.

Under Namibia’s local participation requirements, Desert Lion Energy was required to include a Namibian partner, leading Huni-Urib to acquire a 20 per cent equity stake in Lepidico Chemicals Namibia, the licence holder.

Huni-Urib says its role extended beyond shareholding to include local facilitation, land access, community engagement and regulatory support.

The ownership structure was disclosed in regulatory and financing submissions, including filings to the US International Development Finance Corporation.

At the centre of the dispute is a 2017 offtake agreement between Desert Lion and Jiangxi Jinhui Lithium. Huni-Urib alleges that Desert Lion received a US$4.558 million customer deposit and exported 30,321 tonnes of lithium-bearing ore in April 2018, generating a gross invoice value of about US$4.144 million.

After deductions, the net realised revenue was substantially lower.

Huni-Urib claims that none of the revenue passed through the Namibian licence holder and was instead routed through an offshore Mauritian entity, a structure it says Lepidico later inherited and maintained.

Huni-Urib further alleges that Lepidico transferred the deposit to Canada and, in November 2022, recognised the full amount as revenue under Canadian law, rather than delivering the remaining two contracted shipments. The non-delivery dispute is currently before the Singapore International Arbitration Centre, where Jiangxi Jinhui Lithium is seeking repayment of the deposit.

Huni-Urib argues that while arbitration will determine repayment, Namibia has already suffered losses in royalties, corporate tax and dividends because revenues did not flow through the Namibian entity.

According to Huni-Urib, Namibia lost royalty and corporate tax revenue from the initial shipment, and it has not received dividends linked to its 20 per cent shareholding, as no dividends were declared.

Huni-Urib has also raised concerns about pricing under the offtake agreement, arguing that the reduction from gross to net realised prices points to undervaluation and potential transfer-pricing practices.

Lepidico disputes these claims, saying conclusions drawn from gross-to-net differences ignore contractual terms, cost deductions and quality adjustments.

Tensions escalated in December 2024 when Lepidico placed the Namibian project under “management”, effectively suspending operations.

Huni-Urib views this as a breach of licence obligations under ML 204 and says it froze the approved work programme while shifting decision-making offshore.

Lepidico has not accepted that this constituted a regulatory breach.

By October 2025, the dispute had expanded into a regulatory confrontation.

Huni-Urib submitted a series of complaints to the Prime Minister, the Minister of Industries, Mines and Energy, the Mining Commissioner, NAMRA, the Competition Commission, BIPA and the Anti-Corruption Commission, seeking regulatory intervention, including the suspension of ML 204.

It also objected to a proposed offshore transaction involving Lepidico’s controlling interest, arguing that it was pursued without consultation or required regulatory approval.

Lepidico has rejected allegations of misconduct and says no dividends were declared because there were no distributable profits, that no quantified liabilities to Namibia have been adjudicated, and that lawful offshore transactions are not improper merely because they occur outside Namibia.

The company has indicated it is willing to provide documentation, including bank confirmations, governance records and accounting approvals, to clarify the flow of funds and the treatment of revenues.

The dispute remains unresolved, with parallel arbitration proceedings ongoing and regulatory authorities now seized with competing claims.

Share227Tweet142
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
Bonya shifts southern Namibia beyond zinc into rare earths

Bonya shifts southern Namibia beyond zinc into rare earths

June 11, 2026
Askari uncovers major polymetallic system at Uis with tin grades hitting 4,050ppm

Askari uncovers major polymetallic system at Uis with tin grades hitting 4,050ppm

June 10, 2026
Elevate grows Marenica uranium resource from 40.2Mlb to 52.8Mlb

Elevate grows Marenica uranium resource from 40.2Mlb to 52.8Mlb

June 10, 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