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NHE Series – Part 3: The Team, the Work, and the Path Ahead
This chapter steps away from the past and looks at the team that’s now in place and the plan they’re executing, which is where the real future of NHE sits. The company has stabilised its capital structure, reset its leadership, and brought in people who are actually doing the work. The question now is whether this group can turn a promising geological idea into a commercial project.
The answer sits in capability, discipline, and the quality of the work underway.
The Team Now Running the Project
The most important change at NHE is the people. The company finally has a group behaving like they intend to deliver a real project rather than talk about one.
A board that is aligned and acting like owners
The board is not drawing salaries. Several have put their own money into the company, including interest‑free loans. That is unusual in small caps and signals alignment, confidence, and a willingness to shoulder risk alongside shareholders. It also sets a cultural tone: capital matters, and waste is not tolerated.
A technical team with genuine basin and helium experience
For the first time, NHE has a fully formed technical bench rather than a rotating cast of consultants. The team now includes:
This is a step change in capability. The company now has people who can build a defensible technical case and present it credibly to potential partners.
Leadership that is operational, not promotional
The tone has shifted. The new leadership style is quiet, disciplined, and focused on delivery. No grandstanding. No over‑promising. No “next quarter” theatre. The company is behaving like a group that understands execution is the only thing that matters.
The Work Underway
The team is not waiting for sentiment to turn. Several streams of work are progressing in parallel, each aimed at strengthening the technical case and preparing the project for a credible partner.
Technical tightening
The seismic interpretation is being refined and integrated with new data. The goal is to produce a clearer structural model and a target hierarchy that stands up to scrutiny. This is the work that removes ambiguity and gives a partner confidence that the targets are real and drillable.
Reservoir characterisation
This is the heart of the helium case. The team is working through:
These are the elements that determine whether helium is present in commercial quantities. This work turns a geological concept into a technical argument that can be funded.
Farm‑out preparation
The data room is being structured properly, with the technical work feeding directly into partner discussions. The company is preparing for targeted engagement with groups that bring capability, not just capital. The focus is on a JV that reduces dilution, strengthens execution, and sets up a multi‑well program.
Capital discipline
The board has cut unnecessary spending, stabilised the balance sheet, and created a funding runway that avoids panic dilution. This is the first time in years the company has behaved like capital actually matters. It also gives the technical team the breathing room to do the work properly.
What Success Looks Like With This Team
Success is no longer theoretical. It is tied directly to the capability and behaviour of the people now running the project.
The difference now is that the company has the people to deliver these steps. The project is still high‑risk, although it is now being managed by a group that understands how to sequence risk rather than amplify it.
How to Think About Value With This Setup
Valuation remains a probability‑weighted path, although the probabilities shift when the team improves.
The upside is real. The risks are real. The company is now behaving like a group that intends to earn the upside rather than talk about it. That alone changes the shape of the story for me.
In the next part I'm going to explore the reasons I'm investing in this story and attempt to put a value on it. If you have questions, please feel free to ask, happy to answer what I know and even find the answers for the questions I don't know.
Last week I laid out why NHE is one of the few frontier explorers where the underlying geology still matters. This part is about the moment everything pivoted — the board coup. It wasn’t noise, it wasn’t politics, and it wasn’t a distraction. It was the single most important governance event in the company’s history.
The old board had lost the confidence of the market. Capital was drying up, communication was inconsistent, and the strategy was drifting. Investors were frustrated, and the share price reflected it. The coup wasn’t a surprise; it was the inevitable correction.
The new board stepped in with a very different posture. The people who arrived weren’t placeholders. They’re operators with real networks and real experience. They brought capital‑markets credibility, government relationships, and industry reach that the previous board simply didn’t have. This wasn’t a cosmetic reshuffle. It was a shift toward people who know how to run a listed company, raise money in tough markets, and rebuild trust with institutions.
Dennis Donald is the standout example. He’s one of the few people in this sector who has taken a frontier explorer through appraisal, into production, and then into a major corporate transaction. His work at Warrego Energy is the proof. That experience matters. It means he understands operational risk, capital discipline, and the difference between a good story and a real project. His presence on the board isn’t symbolic. It signals that NHE now has leadership with the track record to execute, not just talk.
Another point that matters is how the new board is behaving financially. They aren’t taking pay. In fact, the opposite is happening. Several directors have been lending money to the company to keep it moving, some of it at zero interest. That is real skin in the game. It’s the clearest signal you can get that the people in charge believe the project is worth fighting for, even in the toughest market conditions.
The coup didn’t fix everything, although it created the conditions for NHE to move forward. It was the reset the company had to have. In Part 3 I’ll go deeper into the operational plan — what’s real, what’s achievable, and what the next drilling campaign actually needs to deliver.
Disclosure: Hold, sits in speculative portfolio
WARNING: Low liquidity, sit at the market, don't go chasing, you'll get filled, just takes time.
NHE: The Opportunity and the Warts
I’ve been around long enough to know the difference between a good story and a good project. NHE has been both at different times, and sometimes neither. What keeps me watching isn’t blind optimism — it’s the fact that the underlying geology is genuinely unusual, and the company has finally gone through the kind of hard reset that most small caps avoid until it’s too late.
Let’s start with the simple bit:
North Rukwa is not your typical “maybe there’s something here” exploration play.
It’s a 5,500 km² position across four basins in what is probably the most helium‑rich rift system on the planet. The independent NSAI upgrade in 2025 didn’t come from marketing spin — it came from new data, new modelling, and a better understanding of how helium actually moves through this system. The mean prospective resource went from 175 Bcf to 225 Bcf. That’s not trivial.
But potential is the easy part. Delivery is where NHE has repeatedly face‑planted.
The last two years have been messy:
Then February 2025 happened — the shareholder revolt.
29% of the register effectively said: enough.
The entire board (except Wood) resigned.
Donald, MacNiven and Franks stepped in and immediately started cleaning up the mess.
And here’s the part most people miss:
This isn’t a board made up of directors who own a token parcel or whatever they were handed in a performance package.
These guys have real stakes — bought, not gifted — and they’ve doubled down by lending the company money out of their own pockets.
Donald alone has tipped in unsecured and secured loans.
MacNiven has put in over $1.6 million.
Clarke was a lender before he was even on the board.
If this thing fails, they wear it harder than most of the register.
You don’t see that often.
Most boards dilute shareholders first and ask questions later.
This one reached for their wallets.
Alongside that, they’ve done the hard yards:
And the geology itself has moved forward.
The hydrogen readings at Mbelele weren’t a sideshow — they were the key to understanding the helium charge system. The new model explains why Rukwa is so prolific and why helium migrates the way it does. It’s also why Kinambo suddenly looks like the standout shallow target.
But let’s be honest:
NHE is still unproven.
There is no commercial discovery.
There is no cashflow.
There is no guarantee the 2026 drilling campaign will deliver what the model suggests.
What we do have is:
This is why I’m still watching.
Not because it’s safe — it isn’t.
Not because it’s guaranteed — it isn’t.
But because the combination of geology, timing, and a board that’s finally behaving like adults gives this story a second life.
Next week, I’ll go into the board coup properly — what triggered it, what it fixed, and what it didn’t.