Namibia’s emerging energy partnership with the Gulf region is gaining attention as offshore oil discoveries and green hydrogen ambitions strengthen the country’Namibia’s emerging energy partnership with the Gulf region is gaining attention as offshore oil discoveries and green hydrogen ambitions strengthen the country’

Namibia Emerges as Gulf’s Next Energy Partner

2026/03/23 12:00
4 min read
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Namibia’s emerging energy partnership with the Gulf region is gaining attention as offshore oil discoveries and green hydrogen ambitions strengthen the country’s long-term investment outlook.

The next major energy partnership for the Gulf region may not lie within the Middle East itself but on Africa’s Atlantic coast. Namibia has steadily positioned itself as a strategic energy and investment destination. Recent offshore discoveries exceeding 11 billion barrels of oil, confirmed exploration activity in the Orange Basin, and a rapidly advancing green hydrogen agenda have reshaped how investors assess the country’s long-term trajectory.

The story has developed methodically. Data from the Bank of Namibia indicates record foreign direct investment inflows in recent years, while the Namibia Investment Promotion and Development Board has actively positioned the country as an investment hub. Meanwhile, global energy majors and sovereign investors have begun to assess the scale of Namibia’s emerging opportunity.

The Orange Basin and Namibia’s energy transformation

The offshore Orange Basin discoveries have fundamentally reshaped Namibia’s economic outlook. Exploration campaigns led by companies including TotalEnergies, Shell, and Galp have confirmed significant hydrocarbon potential. Additional industry participation from companies such as ExxonMobil and Chevron further reflects the scale of interest.

Among these investors, the participation of QatarEnergy has drawn particular attention. The involvement of a major Gulf national energy company signals strong confidence in the basin’s commercial viability and long-term development potential.

At the policy level, Namibia’s government has introduced frameworks designed to manage the energy windfall responsibly. A national upstream petroleum local content policy aims to integrate Namibian labour and services into the energy value chain. At the same time, the Welwitschia sovereign wealth fund, launched in 2022, provides a mechanism to channel future hydrocarbon revenues into long-term development priorities.

Green hydrogen and parallel Gulf ambitions

Alongside hydrocarbons, Namibia is pursuing one of Africa’s most ambitious green hydrogen strategies. The country’s solar irradiation levels and strong coastal wind resources create favourable conditions for large-scale renewable hydrogen production.

Projects such as Hyphen Hydrogen Energy and HyIron Oshivela are advancing rapidly with European partners. However, large-scale project finance, trading capabilities and export infrastructure remain critical components of the value chain. These are areas where investors from the Gulf region have developed extensive expertise through major hydrogen and ammonia initiatives in recent years.

The strategic logic is therefore complementary. As energy markets diversify, a portfolio that includes both domestic hydrogen production and African export capacity can provide energy groups with broader geographic exposure and supply resilience.

Walvis Bay and strategic logistics potential

Namibia’s geography reinforces the broader energy investment thesis. Walvis Bay sits along the South Atlantic shipping routes, providing maritime access to Europe, the Americas and, via the Cape route, to Asia. As hydrocarbon and green fuel exports scale over the coming decade, the port’s logistics ecosystem is expected to expand significantly.

The Namibian government has therefore prioritised infrastructure development. Port expansions at Walvis Bay and Lüderitz are designed to support offshore energy logistics, while corridor connections to neighbouring economies such as Botswana and Zambia strengthen regional trade routes.

Beyond energy: diversified investment opportunities

Namibia’s investment narrative extends beyond hydrocarbons and hydrogen. Agriculture, fisheries, tourism and critical minerals all contribute to the country’s economic profile. Namibia is already a recognised exporter of premium beef, seafood and agricultural products, supported by favourable access to markets in Europe and Asia.

Mining also plays a major role. According to data from the World Bank, mineral production remains a cornerstone of Namibia’s export earnings, with uranium and diamonds among the country’s key resources. At the same time, exploration is identifying lithium and rare earth potential linked to global energy transition supply chains.

Institutional reforms reinforce the broader investment case. Policy adjustments announced by the Ministry of Finance Namibia include gradual reductions in corporate tax rates and the expansion of special economic zones aimed at strengthening industrial competitiveness.

Foreign investment flows illustrate this shift. According to the International Monetary Fund, Namibia’s foreign direct investment inflows have remained strong in recent years as investors diversify beyond hydrocarbons into renewable energy, infrastructure and services.

In this context, Namibia’s positioning as a long-term energy and logistics partner for Gulf investors is gaining momentum. The alignment between the country’s natural resources, reform agenda and strategic location is increasingly shaping a new investment corridor linking southern Africa with global capital markets.

The post Namibia Emerges as Gulf’s Next Energy Partner appeared first on FurtherAfrica.

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