Engineering News editor Terence Creamer discusses some of the key outcomes of the first meeting between Cabinet member and business leaders since the formation of the Government of National Unity.  
Hydrogen and fuel cells solutions Center of Competence (CoC) HySA Infrastructure, at North-West University (NWU) and the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, is making a concerted effort to help South Africa and Africa transition towards a green economy by championing developments in water electrolysis for hydrogen production and storage, in addition to exploring the use of ammonium as a carrier for green hydrogen, particularly for long-distance transportation and storage. HySA Infrastructure CoC director Professor Dmitri Bessarabov highlights the importance of HySA’s most recent hydrogen and ammonium production projects, under the Science and Technology Research Partnership for Sustainable Development (SATREPS), aimed at facilitating hydrogen and ammonium production, storage and transport initiatives.
The inaugural Global African Hydrogen Summit, which will take place in Windhoek, Namibia from September 3 to 5, will supplement ongoing efforts to address the lack of access to electricity for more than 600-million people across Africa. The event is endorsed by the Ministry of Mines and Energy Namibia and patronaged by the Namibia government, and at the heart of the Global African Hydrogen Summit is its mission to drive critical investments and financing into bankable green energy projects across Africa. 
Mauritania is positioning itself to capture up to 1.5% of the global green hydrogen market by 2050, and has large-scale projects in progress that are aimed at producing 12.5-million tonnes of green hydrogen each year by 2035. Last year, business management consultant Conjuncta, in partnership with renewable-energy producer Infinity Power, signed an agreement with Mauritania’s Ministry of Petroleum, Mines and Energy to produce up to 8-million tonnes of green hydrogen a year for international markets. 
WesBank has added residential solar finance to its portfolio, extending its product mix beyond vehicle and leisure finance products. The new addition gives personal clients in South Africa access to credit to finance the installation of home solar solutions.
Amid waning loadshedding, government and business have agreed to begin “repurposing” the National Energy Crisis Committee (Necom) to shift focus from interventions aimed at arresting the operational crisis at Eskom’s coal stations to addressing system-wide pressures, including growing concern over electricity affordability. Speaking following the first meeting between members of the Cabinet and senior business leaders since the formation of the Government of National Unity, Energy Council of South Africa CEO James Mackay said there was agreement that it remained urgent to accelerate the market reforms initiated under the Energy Action Plan to facilitate the competition required for a least-cost system outcome.
Late last year, residents of Yeoville and Bellevue — crumbling inner city areas of Johannesburg — went without power for four weeks after a 63-year-old cable broke. For several months after, power to the electricity supply was rotated between the two areas in four-hour blocks. Then the cuts were reduced to two hours a day as the city’s ageing infrastructure grappled with overloading. And yet, on July 1 electricity costs for some of South Africa’s poorest people, including in Yeoville and Bellevue, went up as much as 60%.
Deputy Finance Minister David Masondo has called on the Development Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA), which is a major lender to local government, to play a leading role in supporting the Government of National Unity’s plan to fix municipalities as part of the second phase of Operation Vulindlela. Addressing the development finance institution’s results presentation, Masondo acknowledged that more reform progress was still required to fully address the supply-side problems of electricity and water supply, freight logistics and costly digital infrastructure, which had been prioritised during the first phase of Operation Vulindlela.
A group of Chinese companies led by China Harbour Engineering Co has won a contract to build a 100 MW solar plant in Botswana, the country’s second utility-scale renewables facility. China Harbour is partnering with China Water and Electric Development Co and local investors for the project which is due to be commissioned in the second quarter of 2026. Zhitong Finance put the value of the contract at $78.3-million. President Mokgweetsi Masisi attended the contract signing Monday in Jwaneng, a diamond mining town 200 km west of the capital, Gaborone.
Cement manufacturer PPC has partnered with renewable-energy project developer Sturdee Energy for the construction and management of two 10 MW solar plants to provide supplemental power for PPC’s Slurry and Dwaalboom facilities in the North West province. The partnership signals a move towards decreasing PPC’s reliance on traditional energy sources.