This paper examines the structural relationship between reservoir heterogeneity and gas monetisation in the Orange Basin (offshore Namibia and South Africa), the deepwater frontier province that has produced one of the highest exploration success rates of the past decade. Drawing on operator disclosures, regulatory documents in both jurisdictions, and the public record of industry reporting — including Reuters reporting from November 2024 on the basin-wide gas challenge and from January 2025 on Shell's USD 400 million write-down on PEL 39 — the paper argues that the dominant industry response to high gas-oil ratios in low-permeability reservoirs (full reinjection of associated gas) constitutes a disposal model rather than a monetisation model. The structural consequence is a systematic underdevelopment of the basin's gas resource base that operates independently of reservoir quality. Using TotalEnergies' own portfolio comparisons, the paper quantifies the order of magnitude of the unactivated gas value component for the Venus project — and extends the diagnosis across the basin's heterogeneous discovery profile (Mopane, Capricornus, Kudu, PEL 39). The paper traces an architectural gap between reservoir and market that current operator-specific responses do not address, situating it within the regulatory frameworks of both jurisdictions and within the partnering and infrastructure-coordination moves of recent years. It is the third in a series of analytical contributions on related themes, following "The North Sea Gas Paradox" and "The Kudu Monetisation Problem". Keywords: Orange Basin, Namibia, South Africa, deepwater oil and gas, gas reinjection, associated gas, reservoir heterogeneity, gas monetisation, infrastructure architecture, Venus, Mopane, Kudu, PEL 39, Shell write-down, TotalEnergies, regulatory frameworks, basin-wide infrastructure.
Ryszard Dzikowski (Fri,) studied this question.