Uh, well ... first thing is you have specified using KOH which makes LIQUID soap not bar soap. I gather you want to make bar soap, so recalculate the recipe using NaOH, not KOH.
With the exception of castor oil, I don't use any fat at less than 5% unless it's for label appeal (or I'm using up dribs and drabs of fats that need to be used up). So the olive, shea, black cumin, argan, and tamanu are in the recipe mainly as garnish.
On a related note, don't confuse the properties of the fat with the properties of the soap made from that fat. Expensive, exotic, luxury oils are demolished into glycerin and fatty acids, so the tamanu, etc. aren't going to stay as tamanu, etc. You're better off saving those fancy oils for a lotion or other leave-on product.
A 70% tallow soap will make a rock-hard bar, so I fail to see why the recipe author is also using beeswax. And over 3% is a lot of beeswax to melt and manage, as well as a lot of beeswax that's going to affect the lather and skin feel of the finished soap. If you're a newer soap maker, I'd suggest you avoid beeswax while you build your soap making skills. In the end, that's your call, though.
Frankly, this is a pretty unbalanced recipe. IMO, the soap, while it will last forever, may also not lather well and might feel uncomfortably hard when used in the bath. While it's nice to have a long lived, physically hard bar, there's such a thing as "too much of a good thing" and I suspect this recipe might be an example. I'd lower the % of tallow, keep the castor, and increase the % of high oleic oil, such as olive, to around 30-40%. Omit the beeswax and the luxury oils.
If you are a newer soap maker or this recipe is new to you, DON'T make such a huge batch. If you make a mistake or just don't like the soap, you've invested a lot of resources into something you can't or don't want to use. Stick with 16 oz / 500 g of fats when learning or testing.
Also, start using lye concentration or water:lye ratio, not "water as % of oils". Set the lye concentration at 33% (water:lye ratio at 2:1) as a reasonable setting to get started.