NATIONAL NEWS - Transnet and the French Development Agency (AFD), with support from the European Union (EU), have announced a major partnership aimed at accelerating the decarbonisation of South Africa’s ports and rail network.
Transnet, which manages South Africa’s rail, port, and pipeline infrastructure, has set an ambitious decarbonisation and corporate sustainability goal and the AFD is proposing a €300 million (R6 billion) loan in support of those objectives.
“The funding package from AFD will assist us in revitalising our infrastructure while supporting the clean energy initiatives under the capital investment programme.
“In addition, this initiative will contribute significantly to supporting Transnet’s decarbonisation journey while actively exploring the company’s strategic role and potential opportunities within the green hydrogen value chain,” Transnet Group Chief Executive Michelle Phillips said on Tuesday.
The agreement to curb carbon emissions was concluded on the sidelines of the first-ever G20 Leaders’ Summit hosted on African soil by South Africa this past weekend.
As a sustainability-linked loan, disbursements will be tied to progress on strategic targets.
These include diversifying into transition minerals and increasing the use and purchase of 300 GWh of renewable electricity per year -- equivalent to 20 percent of Transnet’s electricity needs.
The French contribution will also aim to promote a shift from road transport to rail, including the rehabilitation of 550 km of railway.
It will participate in the modernisation of port infrastructure, strengthening service quality, reliability, competitiveness, and overall attractiveness across Transnet’s network.
“Transnet is a long-standing partner of AFD, and is a key actor in South Africa’s low carbon transition. Our support will enable Transnet to pursue opportunities that will emerge from the green hydrogen economy, contribute to the modernisation of its operations and reduce its environmental footprint,” AFD CEO Rémy Rioux said.
This prospective AFD loan to Transnet forms part of France’s contribution to the Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP), which AFD has been implementing since 2021, and fulfils France’s €1 billion commitment announced at COP26 in support of South Africa’s just energy transition.
Completing the loan, a €7 million (R140 million) grant from the EU, AFD will assist Transnet in advancing its green hydrogen strategy, a cornerstone of its decarbonisation pathway, across key sectors including ports, rail, pipelines, and facilities.
The funding will support key studies, impact assessments, pilot projects, and technical assistance that will refine Transnet’s green hydrogen roadmap and accelerate the scale-up of low-carbon hydrogen initiatives across South Africa.
“Through our investment strategy Global Gateway, the EU is supporting concrete investments in South Africa’s green hydrogen economy. Investments that cut emissions and create high quality jobs. With its central role in rail, ports and pipelines, Transnet is essential to building a credible and scalable hydrogen ecosystem. This partnership will help deliver the expertise and infrastructure needed for South Africa’s 2050 net-zero goals,” EU Commissioner for International Partnerships Jozef Síkela said. -SAnews.gov.za
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