
88 Energy JV secures 12-month extension for Namibian onshore licence
During the extension period, the company must acquire an airborne gravity and magnetic survey, augmented by radiometric data, and integrate its datasets to support drill site selection.
Additionally, an environmental impact assessment (EIA) is required for the proposed drilling, along with a minimum gross expenditure of US$800,000 (A$1.2 million).
The company holds a 20 per cent working interest in PEL 93 in a joint venture with Monitor Exploration. In conjunction with the licence extension, the two companies have executed a variation to their existing farmout agreement that addresses the joint venture's new commitments.
The amendment introduces a stage 1A work program, which includes a high-resolution airborne gravity, magnetic and radiometric survey.
Other commitments include the preparation of a certified prospective resource report, identification of potential drilling locations and creation of an authority for expenditure for the proposed well.
The stage 1A program will be jointly funded on an equal basis by 88 Energy and Monitor, subject to a cost cap of US$1 million, unless otherwise agreed.
The geophysical survey is already scheduled for the second half of the year and will focus on the southern area of PEL 93, after a priority drill location, known as Lead 9, was identified during a 2024 2-D seismic survey program.
Lead 9 is a very large anticlinal structure, similar to ReconAfrica's imminent Kavango West 1X well. Both structures have large, robust structural closures, shallow clastic reservoirs, a deeper Otavi carbonate reservoir seen in Naingopo-1 and deeper source rocks.
According to Monitor, the venture's operator, the regional structural model points to a host of similar features that extend across the southern Owambo Basin. The company says previous gravity and radiometric data indicate that even bigger structural leads may exist in the block's southeast.
The imminent drilling of ReconAfrica's Kavango West 1X exploration well in the adjacent Damara Fold Belt will target a large fold structure about 20 kilometres long and 5km wide.
ReconAfrica's rig mobilisation is scheduled for mid-2025, with drilling expected to commence soon afterwards. The company expects it will pierce a thick Otavi carbonate reservoir with mature source rocks within the same closure.
This build-up of regional activity highlights growing industry interest in the broader Owambo Basin.
With its strategic acreage position in the Owambo Basin and a well-defined program ahead, the joint venture duo is well-situated to participate in a significant way in a what could be a transformational phase of Namibian onshore exploration and appraisal.
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:
matt.birney@wanews.com.au

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
6 hours ago
- ABC News
The businesses abandoning America over US tariffs
Australian businesses are halting exports to the US, as the Trump administration closes a tax loophole for low-cost goods entering America on August 29.


West Australian
7 hours ago
- West Australian
Viridis unveils 40-year mine reserve at giant Brazil rare earths play
Viridis Mining & Minerals has unleashed a milestone 200-million-tonne maiden ore reserve for its flagship Colossus project in Brazil, locking in a 40-year mine life at a titillating 740 parts per million (ppm) of the all-important magnetic rare earth oxides (MREO). The broader reserves clock in at 2640ppm total rare earth oxides (TREO). With a lean 0.45:1 strip ratio and a robust 61 per cent resource-to-reserve conversion, the maiden reserve locks in Colossus as a tier-one ionic clay rare earth project ready for mining. The reserves draw from the project's Northern Concessions, Southern Complex and Capão da Onça deposits, which were converted from a measured and indicated resource base of 329Mt grading 2680ppm TREO. The company says it taps into just 12 per cent of Viridis' sprawling 21,000-hectare landholding in Brazil's Poços de Caldas complex, leaving high-grade zones such as its Tamoyo and the Southern Concessions prospects untouched for significant upside and future growth. The reserve feeds into Viridis' recent blockbuster prefeasibility study for Colossus, which pegged the project at a pre-tax net present value of US$1.41 billion (A$2.14 billion), with a lowest-in-class operating cost of just US$6.20 per kilogram TREO. The pre-feasibility study was conducted at a highly conservative rare earths pricing and envisioned a 20-year mine life for the project based on 98.5Mt at 936ppm MREO, which has now been substantially expanded by the latest 200.6Mt at 740ppm reserve. The project now stretches that horizon to some 40 years of mining at the same 5Mtpa production rate. The project is set to churn out a considerable 9448t of TREO, including 3518t of MREO, to add a significant supply stream to the global rare earths landscape. The economics are improving daily as rare earth prices surge. Even in softer commodity markets, with a base-case neodymium-praseodymium price of US$90/kg, the shallow open-pit design keeps costs razor-thin and profitable at the potentially world-class operation. The Colossus project impressively features unrivalled access to a 100 per cent hydro and solar-powered grid and proximal infrastructure in Poços de Caldas. The project's cost advantages and its global strategic importance are near unrivalled in the rare earths space. As geopolitical tensions spotlight the need for non-Chinese rare earths, the project is quickly emerging as a potential cornerstone for Western supply chains. Its focus on magnet rare earths - neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium and terbium - positions it to meet surging demand for electrification and decarbonisation. The United States Department of Defence's recent deal with California-based MP Materials included an impressive US$110/kg neodymium-praseodymium price floor for its rare earth product. It underscores the strategic urgency of securing a vertically integrated Western supply, with Viridis' low-cost, high-grade profile making it a prime target. Viridis is gearing up for a catalyst-rich financial year ahead, with environmental permitting, a MREC demonstration plant, definitive feasibility study and offtake negotiations all in the wind. Bolstered by a recent $11.5 million placement, the company's unmatched ionic clay economics position it to ride the recent wave of critical minerals demand. The company's share price has already quadrupled in the past three months as the no-longer junior explorer begins to throw its name up with the big boys of the rare earths space. With Brazilian government support secured, Viridis looks comfortably placed with Moreno at the helm to cash in on the surging demand for magnet rare earths. Viridis will now move on to its critical definitive feasibility study and final investment decision phases, where execution becomes paramount. The company says its targeted metallurgical test program to enhance recoveries will underpin the definitive feasibility study, which it will no doubt accelerate to strike while the iron is hot. Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:


Perth Now
7 hours ago
- Perth Now
ASX climbs as banks lead rally
Australia's sharemarket edged higher on Wednesday, bouncing back slightly after a two-day slump driven by CSL's record one-day fall. The S&P/ASX 200 rose 21.8 points, or 0.25 per cent, to 8,918, while the broader All Ordinaries added 3.6 points to 9,177.4. The Australian dollar slipped slightly to 64.7 US cents. Over the past five days, the index has gained 1.03 per cent and sits just 0.5 per cent below its 52-week high. Banks continued to support the market, with all four major lenders climbing. Commonwealth Bank added 0.79 per cent to $172.40, Westpac jumped 2.47 per cent to $38.23, NAB surged 3.68 per cent to $42.03, and ANZ rose 1.95 per cent to $33.41. IG analyst Tony Sycamore said the ASX 200 had performed 'really well'. 'The ASX 200 is insulated because we don't have the concentration of tech stocks that hit the US markets,' Mr Sycamore said. 'One of the reasons why we're seen as a more defensive market is because we've got the banks, and the banks have done well again today.' Seven of the 11 sectors higher. After Tuesday's shock fall of 16.89 per cent in CSL shares, the healthcare giant continued to weigh on the sector, which slipped 1.28 per cent. Other sectors on the decline included information technology (-2.32 per cent), materials (-1.16 per cent), and energy (-1.23 per cent), while consumer discretionary (+1.93 per cent), real estate (+1.80 per cent), and financials (+1.43 per cent) led the winners. 'Elsewhere, we saw some fall in CSL extent today, so there is certainly an exodus which continues from that particular stock, and it does feel like the market's the wrong way around with regards to CSL,' Mr Sycamore said. 'It was certainly a shock yesterday, and in terms of early season bombshells, probably the biggest one I can recall in recent memory.' Top performers on Wednesday included HMC Capital, up 17.74 per cent to $3.85, and Centuria Capital Group, which gained 11.63 per cent to $2.40. Synlait Milk (+8.11 per cent), Service Stream (+7.92 per cent), and Strickland Metals (+7.69 per cent) also posted strong gains. A mix of defensive gains and high-profile falls saw the S&P/ASX 200 rise 0.25 per cent, as investors weighed fresh earnings shocks against solid bank performance. NewsWire/ Gaye Gerard. Credit: News Corp Australia However, some high-profile falls highlighted ongoing volatility. James Hardie plunged 27.83 per cent to $32, while Arafura Rare Earths (-13.64 per cent), Elsight (-13.53 per cent), and Electro Optic Systems (-13.09 per cent) were among the biggest decliners. Mr Sycamore said after recent market jitters and high-profile earnings shocks, investors were seeking safer options. 'The lure of the banks is proving to be appealing,' Mr Sycamore said. 'Given recent uncertainty, investors are moving towards stocks with cheaper valuations. For example, CBA trading at $172 now compared to $192 a couple of months ago makes it look more attractive. 'We're moving into a period where people are going to be more selective and favour cheaper, more defensively valued stocks.' Miners gave back some of Tuesday's gains. BHP, which rallied 1.57 per cent on Monday, retreated slightly in Wednesday's session, reflecting a broader pullback in the sector. 'Big mining stocks had a bad day today, but their valuations aren't expensive by any stretch of the imagination,' Mr Sycamore said. 'We're seeing more stock selection based on value rather than just momentum, which has been driving markets for a while.'