Green economy (re)industrialisation in South Africa: unlocking prospects for local construction and manufacturing industries through grid expansion

Project name:

Green economy (re)industrialisation in South Africa: unlocking prospects for local construction and manufacturing industries through grid expansion

Project partners:

PhD in Sustainable Development candidate: Alboricah Rathupetsane

Supervisor: Prof. Mark Swilling

Funders:

Submitted paper, “Nipping economic stagnation in the bud – the role of transmission infrastructure in South Africa’s green economy industrialisation” and presentation at the Trade & Industrial Policy Strategy Forum 2023:
• Presentation and paper under session five
• Speaker information

Speed talk presentation entitles: “Expanding the division in the middle” at the 14th International Sustainability Transitions Conference (IST 2023) in Utrecht, The Netherlands

A thesis

Four academic journal articles

Project period:

2023 – 2026

Project outputs:

Project Description

South Africa requires reliable access to electrical power in order to achieve the structural transformation that is needed to promote economic growth and create jobs. A key component of enabling this access to electricity is the infrastructure that transports electricity from power stations across long distances to the various substations, from which it is subsequently distributed to households and businesses that rely on it in their daily operations.

With very limited spare capacity, the transmission grid has become one of the biggest barriers for deploying much needed new generation. As a result, there’s increasingly greater consensus amongst stakeholders that expanding the power transmission infrastructure or grid should be at the centre of energy planning. In line with the Transmission Development Plan, South Africa needs to embark on an accelerated build out of the transmission infrastructure. However, within the grid expansion imperative is also an opportunity for industrialisation. According to the ‘Better Finance, Better Grid’ consultation paper launched by the Centre for Sustainability Transitions (CST) and Blended Finance Taskforce (BFT) in March 2023, the national grid infrastructure requires a build-rate of at least 1500km per annum. Currently, the overall local value chain is able to deliver at a build rate of approximately 400km per annum. Therefore, the grid expansion challenge creates an opportunity for revitalizing the local industry and stimulating (re)industrialisation by encouraging local firms to expand their capacities and capabilities.

The purpose of this study is to understand the requisite policy, financial and institutional conditions under which local industries in the grid construction value chain can scale up their capacity in order to service the grid expansion project. Findings can be used to inform industrial strategies and policy, and aims to include both Engineering, Procurement & Construction (EPCs) companies as well as manufacturing companies further upstream of the value chain.

 

 

Back to Research Themes:

Knowledge
co-production

Social-ecological
resilience

Transformative
futures thinking

Finance and
resource flows

Political economy
and development