A uranium mining proposal near Leonardville has Namibia waiting on an IAEA technical report before anyone gets an environmental green light.
Groundwater fears over the Stampriet aquifer
Groundwater fears over the Stampriet aquifer
- The Stampriet aquifer feeds drinking and irrigation water to the Omaheke and Hardap regions.
- Botswana and South Africa also depend on that same aquifer.
- Contamination risk is the core concern driving pushback.
- The government insists science will dictate the final call.
- Headsprings Investments applied for an exclusive prospecting licence.
- Its parent entity is Russian state-owned Rosatom.
- In-situ leach mining would dissolve uranium underground before pumping it up.
- Namibia has zero prior experience with this extraction method.
- Environmental commissioner Timoteus Mufeti admitted Namibia lacks the technical expertise.
- An IAEA team visited Namibia earlier this month.
- Their technical report lands with the government in March.
- Axel Tibinyane stressed that the IAEA holds no decision-making power.
- Environmental clearance hinges entirely on that IAEA assessment.
- Tibinyane acknowledged job creation and economic potential.
- Political considerations are supposedly off the table.
- Exploration cannot proceed without a clearance certificate.