Camera IconHistorical seismic acquisition over 88 Energy’s PEL 93 acreage, Namibia. Credit: File

88 Energy has guaranteed its exposure to Namibia’s emerging Damara Fold Belt play after locking in an unconditional 20 per cent stake in the giant PEL 93 licence, while slashing future funding commitments by US$15M ($23M).

The reshaped deal with operator Monitor Exploration leaves 88 Energy fully carried into the acreage from a farm-in perspective, while preserving flexibility to increase its interest in the project down the track.

Recent interpretation work has sharpened drill targets, while neighbouring activity at ReconAfrica’s Kavango West-1X well and its progression towards production testing continues to build the hype across the basin. Success at Kavango West-1X could have direct positive implications for PEL 93.

The PEL 93 frontier licence sprawls across 18,500 square kilometres in Namibia’s Owambo Basin near the Angolan border and sits within the increasingly watched Damara Fold Belt fairway.

More than 200 kilometres of two-dimensional (2D) seismic has already been acquired across the block, with recent technical work folding in airborne gravity, magnetic and radiometric surveys, passive seismic, soil gas sampling and remote sensing data.

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An integrated interpretation program has sharpened the subsurface model and expanded the prospective resource, while tightening structural definition across the licence.

The company says signs of an active petroleum system continue to stack up across the basin, with nearby oil and gas shows, mature source rocks and historical drilling all pointing towards the ingredients needed for a potentially significant hydrocarbon discovery.

Management says its ground also appears to sit clear of an igneous complex thought to have damaged reservoir quality elsewhere in the eastern basin, potentially giving PEL 93 a geological edge.

“Lead 9” has emerged as the standout drilling candidate after desktop studies highlighted multiple structural closures and reduced exploration risk across the acreage.

The target also appears geologically comparable to ReconAfrica’s Kavango West-1X discovery well on neighbouring PEL 73, 200 kilometres to the east along the same interpreted Damara Fold Belt trend. In addition to sharing similar trapping architecture, 88 Energy believes the projects are underpinned by the same source rock and primary Otavi carbonate reservoir system.

ReconAfrica previously reported 400m of hydrocarbon-bearing section and 64m of net pay at Kavango West-1X, adding growing weight to the broader basin-opening potential of the play.

The company and Monitor are now assessing the growing dataset ahead of a prospective resource estimate for the project.

The amendment to the PEL 93 farm-in agreement provides highly capital-efficient exposure to a rapidly emerging large-scale frontier, with significant exploration upside potential. Combined with increasing activity across the basin, including ReconAfrica’s ongoing testing programme at its adjacent Kavango West-1X well, PEL 93 is perfectly positioned within a highly prospective and evolving petroleum system.

88 Energy managing director Ashley Gilbert

88 Energy’s near-term focus, meanwhile, remains firmly fixed on Alaska’s North Slope. The company is steadily progressing towards the Augusta-1 exploration well at South Prudhoe and a flow test at its Project Phoenix, with both potentially company-shaping campaigns pencilled in for 2027.

South Prudhoe sits immediately south of the giant Prudhoe Bay and Kuparuk River oil fields, which have produced more than 16 billion barrels of oil. The play is backed by modern three-dimensional (3D) seismic, stacked conventional reservoir targets and nearby pipeline infrastructure. Augusta-1 alone is targeting 64 million barrels of oil and liquids (Mmbo) gross unrisked prospective resource with a geological chance of success at 48 per cent.

Project Phoenix is also gearing up for a horizontal production test designed to prove commercial flow potential from conventional Brookian reservoirs originally discovered at Hickory-1. The project hosts a best estimate contingent resource of 378 million barrels of oil equivalent (MMboe) gross and benefits from existing North Slope infrastructure that could provide a low-cost pathway towards development, if successful.

The revised deal structure for the Namibia project gives 88 Energy flexibility to preserve capital for its flagship Alaska portfolio, while still maintaining meaningful upside exposure to the potentially basin-opening play in Namibia.

88 Energy now appears to have pulled off a savvy balancing act - securing a cleaner, lower-risk position in one of Africa’s hottest frontier plays without taking its eye off the more advanced Alaskan prize.

And if Kavango West-1X delivers the basin-opening spark many are hoping for, PEL 93 could quickly shift from speculative blue-sky upside into a more tangible long-term barrel-building growth story.

Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact: matt.birney@wanews.com.au

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