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Home / Namibia 2023: Mines ministry endorses Energy Invest

Namibia 2023: Mines ministry endorses Energy Invest

2023-05-22  Staff Reporter

Namibia 2023: Mines ministry endorses Energy Invest

Staff Reporter

The Ministry of Mines and Energy has officially endorsed Energy Invest: Namibia 2023 – the official investment report for Namibia’s gas, petroleum, power and mining sectors – produced by Energy Capital & Power (ECP).

This is according to a statement distributed by the APO Group, an African communications consultancy, on behalf of Energy Capital & Power.

The publication is expected to serve as a comprehensive investment guide to Namibia’s resources and energy potential through first-hand analysis, quantitative research and exclusive interviews with the country’s leading public and private sector players.

“We are thrilled to receive the official endorsement of the Ministry of Mines and Energy for the first edition of Energy Invest: Namibia 2023. This publication represents a strategic component of the country’s broader campaign to showcase its most promising investment opportunities, and forge regional and global partnerships with leading players in the sector. The Namibian government has been taking an active role in driving FDI flows into the country, and this initiative exemplifies the extent to which it wants to grow its private sector,” said ECP chairperson Kelly-Ann Mealia.

Energy Invest: Namibia 2023 follows a string of historic Orange Basin discoveries over the past year, extensive renewable sector developments – particularly in the field of green hydrogen – and the construction of large-scale power-generation and transmission projects. The expansion of commercial mining activities – which account for roughly 10% of Namibia’s GDP – has seen recent agreements signed for the export of Namibia’s rare earth minerals to the European Union, as well as the development of new cobalt and lithium mining projects by Chinese and Australian developers.

Namibia is home to one of the most attractive and stable regulatory environments in Africa, and has drawn significant interest from Western firms, including TotalEnergies, Shell, ReconAfrica, ExxonMobil and Chevron – who entered Namibia’s deepwater PEL 90 licence last October – to its upstream acreage. As a result, the country is expected to witness dramatic new value- creation over the next decade on the back of energy and extractive sector development.

The 120-page publication will explore key trends and opportunities in hydrocarbon, mining, renewable energy, power and associated downstream industries, while also featuring strategic support sectors such as financial services, logistics and telecommunications. The official endorsement from the mines and energy ministry aims to allow ECP access to Namibia’s national and international oil companies, service providers and government officials.


2023-05-22  Staff Reporter

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