Local Power, Local Industry: Breaking Through Barriers
October 28 @ 10:00 am - 12:00 pm
Following our first workshop held in August 2025, the National Business Initiative (NBI), supported by GIZ, invite you to a second session. During the initial event entitled “Local Power, Local Industry: Aligning Heavy Manufacturing with the Transmission Development Plan (TDP)”, participants overwhelmingly identified procurement related issues and barriers in the TDP as a major concern. This next engagement will focus on addressing these key areas.
The TDP (2024 – 2032) is arguably the largest infrastructure programme South Africa will undertake in the next decade — creating an unparalleled opportunity to anchor a bold industrialisation agenda.
The accelerated rollout of this could signal a steep industrialisation curve, opening new pathways for localisation, reindustrialisation, and long-term competitiveness of South Africa’s industrial base, while enabling large-scale access to renewable energy.
The Public Procurement Act 2024 presents a powerful opportunity to advance economic empowerment, local industrialisation, and transformational procurement, including designated set-asides (reserved/ targeted suppliers) and local content thresholds. While the Act was signed into law in 2024, the subordinate regulations are still to be developed to make the Act enforceable. Given this context, the procurement regulations developed under the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA) remain in force. The pre-qualification criteria for companies within the Independent Transmission Project (ITP) process are also of interest, given their implications for the role of local industry in grid expansion.
What to expect:
We will outline the complexities of the heavy manufacturing sector’s dual role in decarbonising their own operations, while contributing to the national effort to decarbonise the grid.
We will deep dive on the procurement issues that have implications for local company participation and investment, and how this impacts on national level industrialisation.
We will learn more about government’s role in enabling the TDP through the dedicated ITP procurement programme.
Why you should attend this event
This session will give you insight into decarbonisation barriers for the heavy manufacturing sector. It will also consider how the TDP can unlock large scale green industrialisation through renewable energy access, and focus on the specific role of national level procurement in rejuvenating South Africa’s manufacturing sector.
Following our first workshop held in August 2025, the National Business Initiative (NBI), supported by GIZ, invite you to a second session. During the initial event entitled “Local Power, Local Industry: Aligning Heavy Manufacturing with the Transmission Development Plan (TDP)”, participants overwhelmingly identified procurement related issues and barriers in the TDP as a major concern. This next engagement will focus on addressing these key areas.
The TDP (2024 – 2032) is arguably the largest infrastructure programme South Africa will undertake in the next decade — creating an unparalleled opportunity to anchor a bold industrialisation agenda.
The accelerated rollout of this could signal a steep industrialisation curve, opening new pathways for localisation, reindustrialisation, and long-term competitiveness of South Africa’s industrial base, while enabling large-scale access to renewable energy.
The Public Procurement Act 2024 presents a powerful opportunity to advance economic empowerment, local industrialisation, and transformational procurement, including designated set-asides (reserved/ targeted suppliers) and local content thresholds. While the Act was signed into law in 2024, the subordinate regulations are still to be developed to make the Act enforceable. Given this context, the procurement regulations developed under the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA) remain in force. The pre-qualification criteria for companies within the Independent Transmission Project (ITP) process are also of interest, given their implications for the role of local industry in grid expansion.
What to expect:
Why you should attend this event
This session will give you insight into decarbonisation barriers for the heavy manufacturing sector. It will also consider how the TDP can unlock large scale green industrialisation through renewable energy access, and focus on the specific role of national level procurement in rejuvenating South Africa’s manufacturing sector.
For more information contact: Alexa Brown-Robinson: AlexaB@nbi.org.za or Gillian Maree: GillianM@nbi.org.za
Event Details:
Date: Tuesday, 28 October 2025
Time: 10:00 to 12:00 (SAST) followed by a networking lunch
Venue: FutureSpace
61 Katherine Street Sandton
Details