Image Sourced ShutterStock
The Market Online - At The Bell

Join our daily newsletter At The Bell to receive exclusive market insights

  • Gas Explorer Invictus Energy is sitting on a hotspot of gas production that could supply Zimbabwe’s energy needs over the next 20 years
  • In an assessment from a third party, the company’s Mzarabani Prospect in the Cabora Bassa Basin project is said to hold 9.25 trillion cubic feet and 294 million barrels of gas
  • Handling the outgoing resources from the healthy project, Zimbabwe-based Sable Chemicals has signed on in a 20 year deal to eat up 35 million cubic feet of gas per day, totalling for 13 billion cubic feet a year – with the opportunity to buy up more
  • However, drilling hasn’t commenced for Invictus as the company barrels through the environmental assessment for Cabora

Gas Explorer Invictus Energy is shaping up to be a significant gas producer in the Zimbabwe region after releasing its June quarter roundup today.

Most importantly, the company touted a significant increase in its total resources after an estimate from third party company, Getech Group.

Getech found Invictus’ Mzarabani Prospect in Africa to hold 9.25 trillion cubic feet and 294 million barrels of gas.

Invictus management described the gas prospect as ‘one of the largest conventional exploration targets globally’.

Company Managing Director Scott Macmillan spoke on the strengths of the Cabora Bassa Basin, the project which Mzarabani sits inside of.

“Invictus has benefited from Getech’s expertise and knowledge as well as the application of their proprietary geoscience data, analytical workflows and “Globe” knowledge-base to significantly enhance our understanding of the petroleum system in the Cabora Bassa Basin,” he said.

“This has not only materially enhanced the value of our acreage, but also de-risked it.”

Cabora has been recognised as a valuable hotspot for gas since it was first evaluated in the early 1990s. Today, Invictus believes the project to potentially be the largest undrilled structure on Africa’s shores.

Over the next 20 years, Invictus will be supplying the resources coming out of Cabora to Zimbabwe-based Sable Chemicals.

Through a signed deal, Invictus will be supplying Sable with 35 million cubic feet of gas per day, totalling for 13 billion cubic feet a year.

Sable also has the ability to up the minimum requirements of the contract to a further 70 million cubic feet of gas per day.

“Signing this [deal] with Sable marks a significant milestone in our commercial negotiations as we look to progress the Cabora Bassa Project,” Scott added.

“Sable is the sole producer of nitrogenous fertilizer in Zimbabwe and a well-recognised brand in the country.”

Scott described the local gas demand in Zimbabwe as an ‘energy starved market’ and he also expects Invictus to enter into additional gas supply deals in the future.

Sable Chemicals CEO Bothwell Nyajeka echoed Scott’s encouraging words on the long-term supply agreement.

“We are extremely pleased to enter into this [deal] with Invictus and potentially secure an indigenous natural gas supply to produce ammonia gas for our fertilizer plant,” he said.

In the meantime, Invictus has commenced an environmental assessment of the tenement covering Cabora, to commence drilling in the future as soon as possible.

However, IVZ’s share price remains untouched today sitting at four cents a piece with its market cap valued at $15.64 million.

IVZ by the numbers
More From The Market Online

Carnarvon revs up for revised Dorado Development

The Dorado discovery appears on again, with Carnarvon Energy announcing the JV completing a revision of…

Tamboran steps on the gas to supply the Top End

Tamboran Resources has taken a significant step towards commercialising the gas resources of the Betaloo Sub…

Fortescue recovers from iron ore export slump with record shipments in month of March

Fortescue has delivered a mixed-bag report for the March 2024 Quarter, showing a recovery in iron…

Helios teams with NASDAQ-listed Norway firm to liquefy flare gas

The production of natural gas typically sees companies flaring methane into the atmosphere. There's growing enthusiasm…