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Namibia, Botswana explore construction of jointly-owned oil refinery

Two South African countries, Namibia and Botswana, are in discussions to jointly fund the construction of an oil refinery, aiming to strengthen regional energy security and capitalise on Namibia’s burgeoning upstream oil sector.
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Two South African countries, Namibia and Botswana, are in discussions to jointly fund the construction of an oil refinery, aiming to strengthen regional energy security and capitalise on Namibiaโ€™s burgeoning upstream oil sector.

The proposed refinery was a key topic during Namibian President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwahโ€™s recent working visit to Gaborone, where she held bilateral talks with Botswanaโ€™s President Duma Boko.

According to a statement from the Namibian Presidency, both leaders stressed the urgent need for โ€œconcrete programmes and projectsโ€ that would bridge economic disparities and create sustainable jobs across the region.

Speaking during the meeting, Nandi-Ndaitwah highlighted the importance of regional cooperation in developing newly discovered energy resources.

โ€œNow that Namibia has oil and gas, we cannot claim this to be a Namibian resource. Itโ€™s a resource in our region, itโ€™s a resource in the neighbourhood, and we can all benefit from it,โ€ she said.

In response, President Boko underscored the potential viability of the refinery when viewed from a regional perspective rather than a national one.

โ€œThe president was indicating to me after the discovery of oil and gas in Namibia the prospect of establishing a refinery, which on some advice would not be viable because of the size of the populationโ€.

โ€œBut it becomes viable if we take the population as not just the people of Namibia, but the people of this sub-region more pointedly, and the people of the African continent more broadly,โ€ Boko stated.

The refinery initiative is aligned with Namibiaโ€™s growing prominence in the oil and gas sector, particularly following major offshore discoveries in the Orange Basin by global energy companies such as TotalEnergies, Chevron, BW Energy, and Galp.ย 

Several of these companies, including BW Energy and TotalEnergies, are expected to make final investment decisions (FIDs) next year, which could significantly transform Namibiaโ€™s economic landscape.

A joint Namibia-Botswana refinery is expected to reduce both countriesโ€™ dependence on imported refined petroleum products, while unlocking value-added opportunities from local crude resources.ย 

Although specific project details remain under discussion, officials from both nations agree on the refineryโ€™s potential to drive economic growth, generate employment, and alleviate poverty.

Namibia and other hydrocarbon-rich nations in Southern Africaโ€”such as Mozambiqueโ€”are increasingly entering cross-border energy agreements to boost infrastructure and regional energy security.ย 

Earlier this month, Mozambique signed a $1.5 billion deal with Zambia to build a cross-border gas pipeline. Just days after, the former also contracted Nigeriaโ€™s Aiteo Group to construct a new oil refinery.

With Namibia and Botswana ranking among the worldโ€™s most economically unequal countries, the proposed oil refinery is seen as a transformative project that could help reduce unemployment and close the widening poverty gap across Southern Africa.

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