19.12.2023 Views

South African Business 2024

Welcome to the 12th edition of the South African Business journal. First published in 2011, the publication has established itself as the premier business and investment guide to South Africa, supported by an e-book edition at www.southafricanbusiness.co.za. A special feature in this journal focusses on the relationship between tertiary education, training and the jobs market. The youth unemployment rate is referenced in a discussion of the various measures that are being taken in the public and private sectors to help prepare young people for work, or to encourage them to start businesses. The role of the country’s Sector Education and Training Authorities (SETAs) is highlighted. Regular pages cover all the main economic sectors of the South African economy. This includes tracking the rapidly evolving renewable energy landscape and reporting on the progress of exploration and discoveries of oil and gas off the coast and on land. Landmarks such as BMW’s 50-year celebration of making cars in South Africa are noted and a snapshot of each of the country’s provinces is provided. South African Business is complemented by nine regional publications covering the business and investment environment in each of South Africa’s provinces. The e-book editions can be viewed online at www.globalafricanetwork.com and www.southafricanbusiness.co.za. These unique titles are supported by monthly business e-newsletters. The Journal of African Business joined the Global African Network stable of publications as an annual in 2020 and is now published quarterly.

Welcome to the 12th edition of the South African Business journal. First published in 2011, the publication has established itself as the premier business and investment guide to South Africa, supported by an e-book edition at www.southafricanbusiness.co.za.

A special feature in this journal focusses on the relationship between tertiary education, training and the jobs market. The youth unemployment rate is referenced in a discussion of the various measures that are being taken in the public and private sectors to help prepare young people for work, or to encourage them to start businesses. The role of the country’s Sector Education and Training Authorities (SETAs) is highlighted.

Regular pages cover all the main economic sectors of the South African economy. This includes tracking the rapidly evolving renewable energy landscape and reporting on the progress of exploration and discoveries of oil and gas off the coast and on land. Landmarks such as BMW’s 50-year celebration of making cars in South Africa are noted and a snapshot of each of the country’s provinces is provided.

South African Business is complemented by nine regional publications covering the business and investment environment in each of South Africa’s provinces. The e-book editions can be viewed online at www.globalafricanetwork.com and www.southafricanbusiness.co.za. These unique titles are supported by monthly business e-newsletters. The Journal of African Business joined the Global African Network stable of publications as an annual in 2020 and is now published quarterly.

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

OVERVIEW<br />

Energy<br />

Sasol’s partnerships are defining a new direction for the energy giant.<br />

A<br />

series of international and domestic partnerships that Sasol<br />

has signed in recent months illustrate that the company has<br />

decided that the energy future must be markedly different<br />

to the present. A disruption of the company’s AGM by<br />

climate activists and doubts about the company’s carbon-reduction<br />

strategy expressed by some big investors have helped bring that<br />

awareness to broader public attention.<br />

International chemicals and energy company Sasol has several large<br />

plants in the Free State and Mpumalanga, pictured, and is the dominant<br />

national player in these sectors. Products manufactured by Sasol include<br />

synthetic fuel, petroleum, paraffin, jet fuel, creosote, bitumen, diesel and<br />

lubricants. The primary feedstock for synthetic-fuel production is coal.<br />

With more than 30 000 employees and a presence in 30 countries, the<br />

decisions Sasol makes have a big impact.<br />

Subsidiary company Sasol ecoFT is producing sustainable fuels and<br />

chemicals from green hydrogen and sustainable carbon sources via the<br />

Power-to-Liquids process and using the Fischer-Tropsch technology (FT)<br />

which has helped set the company apart in its field.<br />

In 2010 Sasol flew the world’s first passenger aircraft using fully<br />

SECTOR INSIGHT<br />

A market for carbon credits<br />

has been created.<br />

synthetic jet fuel and it has<br />

been investigating solutions<br />

ever since. Sasol is part of a<br />

consortium based at its Secunda<br />

operations called HyShiFT with<br />

Linde, Enertrag and HydRegen,<br />

a spinoff company from the<br />

Department of Chemistry of the<br />

University of Oxford. The project<br />

aims to invest in about 500MW of<br />

renewable energy that will supply<br />

a 200MW electrolyser for green<br />

hydrogen production, resulting in<br />

SOUTH AFRICAN BUSINESS <strong>2024</strong><br />

36<br />

PHOTO: Sasol

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!