FREE TO READ | Failing to plan energy solutions means planning to fail
Developing the skills that SA needs to drive our energy transition is one of the issues addressed in this revamped issue of Renewable Energy Solutions
24 June 2025 - 10:25
byAnthony Sharpe
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It’s no secret that SA has abundant potential to generate renewable energy. If you don’t believe me, just go outside on one of the unseasonably warm late summer days we’ve had and feel the breeze on your face. What we have lacked until recently, however, is a co-ordinated effort to exploit this potential — and to establish a sound position for SA in the renewables value chain.
The cabinet’s recent approval of the SA Renewable Energy Masterplan thus represents an exciting step forward. Electricity and energy deputy minister Samantha Graham-Maré says that, crucially, the plan is the result of collaboration between civil society, industry role players, labour, government, independent power producers and others, making it holistically aligned with the whole renewable energy ecosystem.
One of the key things the plan addresses is developing the skills SA — and indeed most countries worldwide — need to drive our energy transition. From engineers and data scientists to environmental impact assessors and welders, there are thousands of jobs that can be created should the various stakeholders across that ecosystem work together.
This is just one of the issues we address in this revamped, and thus inaugural, issue of Renewable Energy Solutions. We also check out the Global African Hydrogen Summit taking place in Windhoek later this year, the potential for biogas development in the country, how we can make those proliferating data centres of ours a bit more sustainable, what the evolution of the battery industry means for a country stocked with crucial minerals, how private trading is transforming the energy market, and just how we’re going to fund the Just Energy Partnership with Donald Trump having withdrawn funding.
If anything illustrates how you can’t plan for everything, it’s that last point. Nevertheless, it still helps to have a plan.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
FREE TO READ | Failing to plan energy solutions means planning to fail
Developing the skills that SA needs to drive our energy transition is one of the issues addressed in this revamped issue of Renewable Energy Solutions
It’s no secret that SA has abundant potential to generate renewable energy. If you don’t believe me, just go outside on one of the unseasonably warm late summer days we’ve had and feel the breeze on your face. What we have lacked until recently, however, is a co-ordinated effort to exploit this potential — and to establish a sound position for SA in the renewables value chain.
The cabinet’s recent approval of the SA Renewable Energy Masterplan thus represents an exciting step forward. Electricity and energy deputy minister Samantha Graham-Maré says that, crucially, the plan is the result of collaboration between civil society, industry role players, labour, government, independent power producers and others, making it holistically aligned with the whole renewable energy ecosystem.
One of the key things the plan addresses is developing the skills SA — and indeed most countries worldwide — need to drive our energy transition. From engineers and data scientists to environmental impact assessors and welders, there are thousands of jobs that can be created should the various stakeholders across that ecosystem work together.
This is just one of the issues we address in this revamped, and thus inaugural, issue of Renewable Energy Solutions. We also check out the Global African Hydrogen Summit taking place in Windhoek later this year, the potential for biogas development in the country, how we can make those proliferating data centres of ours a bit more sustainable, what the evolution of the battery industry means for a country stocked with crucial minerals, how private trading is transforming the energy market, and just how we’re going to fund the Just Energy Partnership with Donald Trump having withdrawn funding.
If anything illustrates how you can’t plan for everything, it’s that last point. Nevertheless, it still helps to have a plan.
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