Prospect Resources says it has signed several non-disclosure agreements with parties interested in accessing a dedicated technical data room for its Omaruru Lithium Project in Namibia, as the company shifts focus from exploration to commercialisation.
The project, held under a 100% prospecting licence, has seen exploration activities cease, with expenditure pared back to minimum holding commitments while the company tests market appetite for the asset.
Prospect Resources entered the Omaruru Lithium Project through an earn-in agreement with Osino Resources Corp., whose Namibian subsidiary, Richwing Exploration, owned the licence.
Under the 2022 agreement, Prospect could earn up to 51% through phased expenditure of about US$1.56 million, before moving in March 2024 to acquire the remaining interest from Osino for US$75,000 in cash, securing full ownership of the project.
Work completed on the project has included geological mapping, soil and rock-chip sampling, and multiple phases of reverse circulation drilling to identify lithium-bearing pegmatites and define mineralised zones.
These programmes confirmed the presence of pegmatitic systems consistent with Namibia’s central lithium corridor, but have not yet advanced to a defined mineral resource.
The decision to halt exploration reflects the project’s current position in the development pipeline, where further drilling, metallurgical work and infrastructure planning would be required before any development pathway can be established.
By opening a technical data room, Prospect Resources is effectively inviting potential partners to assess the project’s technical dataset.
This step typically precedes joint ventures, farm-in agreements or outright asset sales.
The outcome of this process will determine whether the Omaruru Lithium Project advances through new investment or remains a longer-term option within Namibia’s emerging lithium sector, where developers are increasingly balancing geological potential against capital discipline and market conditions.







