NAMIBIA · ENERGY
Key Facts
—The prize: TotalEnergies’ Venus discovery alone is estimated to hold several billion barrels of oil in place, the country’s largest find.
—Decision year: Final investment decisions on the Venus and Mopane projects are expected in 2026, with first oil targeted around 2029.
—Drilling magnet: The African Energy Chamber says roughly 40% of the world’s high-impact wells in 2026 sit in Namibia’s Orange Basin.
—Future output: Industry estimates put potential national output at 300,000 to 400,000 barrels a day by the mid-2030s.
—New entrants: QatarEnergy added its own offshore discovery in 2026, joining Shell, TotalEnergies and Portugal’s Galp.
—Beyond oil: Namibia is also courting green hydrogen and nuclear investors, turning energy into a national strategic priority.
Namibia oil has become the industry’s most-watched frontier, as a string of giant discoveries in the offshore Orange Basin pushes TotalEnergies, Shell and Galp toward landmark final investment decisions in 2026.
Why Namibia oil is the industry’s hottest frontier
A run of deepwater discoveries since 2022 has turned a country with no oil production into one of the most sought-after addresses in global exploration.
TotalEnergies, Shell and Galp have all logged finds in the Orange Basin off Namibia’s southern coast, and appraisal drilling has intensified across the acreage.
The basin straddles the maritime boundary with South Africa, where similar geology has long tempted explorers.
What sets the recent wells apart is their scale, with single discoveries measured in billions of barrels rather than millions.
A make-or-break year for the majors
The decisive moment now nears, with final investment decisions on the flagship Venus and Mopane projects expected during 2026.
A green light on Venus would mark Namibia’s first deepwater development, a multibillion-dollar undertaking led by TotalEnergies.
Even so, first oil is not expected before about 2029, a reminder that frontier projects move slowly.
The numbers that have investors watching
The African Energy Chamber estimates that around 40% of the world’s high-impact exploration wells in 2026 are located in the Orange Basin.
If the projects advance, industry estimates suggest Namibia could pump 300,000 to 400,000 barrels a day by the mid-2030s.
That would transform public finances in a nation of roughly three million people.
Even before production begins, the prospect has already drawn record levels of foreign investment into the country.
Why the appraisals are tricky
For all the excitement, the reservoirs are complex, and operators have spent heavily drilling appraisal wells to confirm how much oil can actually flow.
Galp drew attention when it sold down a large stake in its Mopane discovery, a move read as sharing both cost and risk.
Confirming commercial volumes, not just oil in place, is the hurdle between discovery and production.
The basin’s remoteness and depth also mean the wells and infrastructure carry some of the highest costs in the business.
A scramble of new players
The roster of explorers keeps widening, with QatarEnergy adding a 2026 discovery to holdings already shared with the established majors.
Their interest signals confidence that the Orange Basin can rival the world’s premier offshore plays.
For Namibia, the contest among well-funded rivals strengthens its hand in negotiating terms.
It also spreads the risk, so that a setback at one prospect need not stall the whole basin.
Betting on more than crude
Windhoek is not relying on oil alone, and has elevated energy to a national strategic priority that spans several technologies.
Green hydrogen is emerging as Namibia’s most significant low-carbon export opportunity, with projects moving through engineering and financing.
Officials have also opened nuclear-cooperation talks with Russia, layering long-term planning onto the near-term oil rush.
Namibia already ranks among the world’s leading uranium producers, giving it a foot in the nuclear-fuel market as well.
What a strike means for southern Africa
Success would ripple beyond Namibia, sharpening interest in the shared geology off South Africa and across the wider Atlantic margin.
Service firms, ports and skilled workers stand to gain long before the first barrel is sold.
It would also test whether a newcomer can turn a resource windfall into lasting development rather than a short-lived boom.
What to watch
The clearest signal will be a firm investment decision on Venus or Mopane, which would convert promise into committed spending.
Investors will also track how Namibia structures its share of the revenue, and whether it can avoid the resource traps that have snared other producers.
The payoff, if it comes, would reshape one of southern Africa’s smaller economies.
Frequently asked questions
Why is Namibia oil attracting the major companies?
A series of giant deepwater discoveries in the offshore Orange Basin since 2022 has made Namibia one of the most promising oil frontiers in the world, drawing TotalEnergies, Shell, Galp and QatarEnergy.
When could Namibia start producing oil?
Final investment decisions on the Venus and Mopane projects are expected in 2026, but first oil is not targeted until around 2029.
How much oil could Namibia produce?
Industry estimates suggest Namibia could pump 300,000 to 400,000 barrels a day by the mid-2030s if the main projects proceed.
Is Namibia developing other energy besides oil?
Yes. Namibia is courting green hydrogen investors and has opened nuclear-cooperation talks with Russia, treating energy as a national strategic priority.
The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map →
View original source — Rio Times ↗


