South Africa has ‘unparalleled’ investment opportunities: Pres Cyril Ramaphosa

RIYADH (Saudi Arabia), Oct 16 (NNN-SANEWS) — President Cyril Ramaphosa has told the South Africa-Saudi Arabia Investment Forum that trade relations and investment between the two countries can increase “much further” over the course of the next few years.

The President is on an official state visit to Saudi Arabia aimed at strengthening economic ties, with the investment forum in particular acting as a platform for investors from both countries to foster relations.

“Trade between our two countries already totals $5 billion and we think we can increase it much further in the next few years. In fact, it is our dream and our ambition that we should see this number scaling much higher.

“South Africa stands particularly ready to increase the overall export of the basket of goods with Saudi Arabia to bring together a balance to the trade account,” the President said.

Ramaphosa emphasised that economic relations between the countries can be mutually beneficial citing South Africa’s long history of mining as a particular industry of interest.

“If it could be said that oil is the lifeblood of the Saudi economy, such is mining to the South African economy as well. We have the mineral resources but also the capability, the capacity and above all, the solid experience.

“There are many opportunities for joint ventures and industrial partnerships between businesses on both our countries’ side so as to foster greater growth and investment. For example, we can do partnerships in agro processing, fertilizer production and chemicals,” he said.

Ramaphosa described South Africa as an investment destination of choice with “great prospects” in an array of industries.

“South Africa has what I would call unparalleled opportunities that await investors with the financial capability and great business appetite. Just as Saudi Arabia is positioned as the gateway to the Middle East and to the region, South Africa is a gateway to a dynamic continent with great prospects,” he said.

The President assured the forum that although South Africa faces challenges, it still remains open for business with reforms in industries such as energy, transportation, telecommunications, water, rail and ports also fostering positive investor sentiment.

He cited continued investments – such as those pledged at this year’s South Africa Investment Conference – as a tangible signal of this.

“South Africa is a favourable, reliable and stable place to conduct business. I want to call on Saudi business to be part of the renewed momentum of international investors that are now coming to South Africa.

“Through a targeted outreach to global and local businesses, we have so far attracted investment commitments to the value of approximately $70 billion and this number is growing. We targeted $100 billion in a five year period and we are going to far exceed that,” he said.

President Ramaphosa welcomed the reports he has now received of “various agreements being concluded between private sector firms” during discussions between businesspeople at the forum.

“[The South Africa – Saudi Arabia Joint] Business Council will need to maintain this great momentum that has been built so that it can solidify the economic relationship.

“When I was last here in 2018, we were essentially laying a foundation and digging the trenches. But during this visit, we are actually consolidating and solidifying that foundation. And this great building that we are constructing of economic development between our two countries is now going up,” he said.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Social Development hosts dialogues to address Gender Based Violence and Femicide problem, 17 Oct

Civil society and government dialogues to address Gender Based Violence and Femicide problem

It is now two years since the development and adoption of the National Strategic Plan on Gender-Based Violence and Femicide (NSP-GBVF). Despite progress made in the implementation of the NSP-GBVF, the country is still confronted with the brutality of GBVF meted out against women, children, persons with disabilities and the LGBTQIA+ community.

To speed up the implementation of the NSP-GBVF by protecting the most vulnerable groups, the Department of Social Development will on Monday, 17 October, host dialogues in collaboration with Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) at the Roots Café in Potchefstroom, North West Province.

Civil Society Organisations including government representatives from the Departments of Health, Basic Education, Justice and Correctional Services, the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) and the South African Police Service (SAPS) will participate in the planned dialogues to take stock of the work done in the fight against GBVF.

This initiative, which is also part of Social Development Month currently in full swing under the theme, “United in the Fight Against Poverty and Other Social ills,” is also a build-up to the upcoming Presidential Summit on Gender-Based Violence and Femicide.

The Department of Social Development is responsible for the implementation of Pillar 4 of the National Strategic Plan (NSP) on Gender Based Violence and Femicide which focuses on the provision and strengthening of an integrated community and institutional Response, Care, Support and Healing to GBVF survivors and their families.

Source: Government of South Africa

Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi: Launch of the Global Action Plan Framework on Informal Settlements and Slums

Remarks by the Minister of Human Settlements, Mmamoloko Kubayi at the launch of the Global Action Plan Framework on Informal Settlements and Slums, CSIR, Pretoria, 16 October 2022

Programme Director;

UN-Habitat Executive Director Maimunah Mohd Sharif;

Minister of Lands, Housing, and Urban Development in Uganda Hon. Obiga Kania;

Minister of Works and Housing in Ghana, Hon Francis Asenso-Boakye Minister of Urbanism and Housing of DRC Hon Mbayu Muabilu;

Deputy Minister of Malawi Hon Deus Gumba;

MEC Lebogang Maile, Dukwana, MEC Lusithi, MEC, Miga Mayor of the City of Johannesburg Cllr Dada Morero;

Members of parliament;

Cllrs;

Panel of Experts;

Distinguished Participants;

Ladies and Gentlemen;

Good morning,

I am honoured to welcome you to South Africa and to the launch of the Global Action Plan framework on informal settlements and slums in this historic conference on behalf of our Government and her people. Our government and the people of South Africa are very pleased that together, as countries of the world, we have gathered to take a bold step towards achieving sustainable development goals in particular Target 11.1 of the SDGs. This launch will give impetus to a political engagement process towards a joint Global Action Plan Framework for Transforming Informal Settlements and Slums globally.

The Global Action Plan Framework Initiative is anchored in the Slums and Informal Settlements Network (SiSnet) launched during Habitat III in Quito as part of the global Participatory Slum Upgrading Programme (PSUP), initiated by the Organisation of the African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS), financed by the European Commission and implemented by UN-Habitat.

The intention of the Global Action Plan Framework is to take coordination, collaboration, commitments and partnerships to the next level. It consolidates and amplifies efforts for accelerating the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the New Urban Agenda (NUA) in the Decade of Action. It provides a joint vision to inform actions framed by partnerships and is the basis for Member States to elevate commitments in form of a resolution to be pledged in the UN-Habitat Assembly process.

For as long as we live in a world characterised by inequality, inequity and exclusion, we should never tire in our efforts to relegate all these to the dustbin of history. Now These social and economic injustices are e sharply expressed than in the slums and informal settlements. This means that the implementation of the SDGs and the New Urban Agenda is a necessary step towards the achievement of the global development agenda.

In our country, the apartheid spatial development our cities which is characterised by segregation continues to weigh heavily on the development pattern of our country. The majority of South Africans who are now urbanizing at a rapid rate find themselves relegated to slums and informal settlements as the fail to find decent dwelling in our cities that are unwelcoming for the poor.

The slums and informal settlements are a breeding ground for social ills the burden which is often carried by women, girls and children. These settlements often lack basic services such as sanitation facilities, health, education and recreational facilities. The UN Habitat III Pretoria Declaration on Informal Settlement Upgrading signed in South Africa in 2016, recognizes that informal settlements challenge must be tackled through an integrated approach to sustainable urban development taking into account the national policy frameworks, legal, financial resources and spatial issues. Our country has embraced these approach.

Thus as a country, through an inclusive process, we have made tremendous progress in implementing this policy and our approach includes the following steps which I would like to share with you:

1.            We started by identifying and verifying informal settlements in the country gathering real-time data, monitoring the growth patterns, so that we could get a better understanding, and planning for, the extent of the challenge we are faced with. Presently, informal settlements are estimated to over 2600 informal settlements and counting accommodating about 1.4 million households according to Statistics South Africa estimates.

2.            We completed a baseline assessment of informal settlements whereby we defined variables for monitoring and evaluating informal settlements.

3.            We have established Provincial Forums on Upgrading of Informal Settlements in all 9 provinces of the country. The forums facilitate alignment of upgrading processes with all municipalities and monitor progress in implementation, as well as knowledge exchange with various stakeholders in each province.

4.            To entrench an understanding of informal settlement upgrading among practitioners and public representatives we have developed a 13 module course called Introduction to Informal Settlement Upgrading that unpacks the critical processes required for undertaking informal settlement upgrading.

5.            We are rolling out an intensive capacity development programme to all our provinces, municipalities, civic organisations and communities. Furthermore, we have undertaken activities to ensure that the modules are accredited and incorporated into our tertiary institutions.

6.            The majority of our informal settlements have access to services. Moreover, municipalities have implemented various methods for security of tenure, such as a Letter of Occupation to informal settlement dwellers. This affords the dweller the opportunity to engage in economic activity and entrenches government’s commitment to dignity for all South Africans.

7.            We have established our Community of Practice to engage with our civic organisations and academia and share good practice, exchange knowledge, and disseminate information.

As you are well aware, the time for us to achieve the sustainable development goals is quickly running out, and I have shared these actions with you to encourage knowledge sharing to help us accelerate our pace of implementation. For us to achieve our commitments, it is important for each country to share experiences in the implementation of these policies.

Indeed, the time remaining for us to be able to meet our goals demands that we scale up on our implementation taking into consideration the following critical actions:

•             Accelerate the implementation of the SDGs and the NUA “leaving no one behind” and targeting “the most vulnerable first”

•             Transform from exclusion, inequality and poverty to our desired destination with equality for all.

•             Enable diversity to prosper and empower governments and all of society to transform.

•             “Make the Decade of Action go live” for inclusive development of cities.

We, in South Africa, have learned that upgrading can have a profoundly positive effect on social cohesion, resilience, and safety, especially when there are targeted interventions to protect vulnerable women, youth, children, the elderly and the disabled. We have also learned that when we involve the community in their development, they respond and adapt more positively to change. Thus our approach to Upgrading Informal Settlements Programme has evolved to entail extensive community participation and consultation in the provision of emergency basic services, permanent services, and security of tenure.

We acknowledge, however, that with the rapidly rising urbanization our government is still battling to keep pace with the demand, and we are ever more aware that we need to create more partnerships to respond to the needs of nearly 1.4 million households living in informal settlements across South Africa. It is a national priority to respond systematically to the increasing rate of urbanization. Thus the upgrading of 2600 informal settlements is a central objective of our urban management strategy.

For sustainability, the upgrading of slums and informal settlements will have to be coupled with the creation of economic opportunities for the affected population. Speaking at the launch of the “Cities Without Slums Action Plan” at the inaugural meeting of the Cities Alliance in Berlin, Germany in 1999, former president Nelson Mandela said that “Poverty reduction and upgrading of informal settlements will not be possible unless cities are productive and efficient, and capable of providing the poor with economic opportunities to build their assets and incomes.”

The launch of the Global Action Plan Framework on Informal Settlements and Slums is a great milestone in the preparation for the development and tabling of a Global Action Plan at the United Nations’ Habitat Assembly in 2023.

The Global Action Plan Framework on Informal Settlements and Slums is a necessary tool for the world to achieve SDG Target 11.1 which is to “ensure access for all to adequate, safe and affordable housing and basic services and upgrade slums”.

I thank you!

Source: Government of South Africa

Water and Sanitation hosts 4th public commentary for National Pricing Strategy for Raw Water Use, 17 Oct

DWS to host 4th public commentary for National Pricing Strategy for Raw Water Use

The Department of Water and Sanitation will host its fourth public commentary for the National Pricing Strategy for Raw Water Use.

Members of the public and water sector stakeholders are invited to make inputs on the revised pricing strategy.

The revised pricing strategy caters to five water resource charges, namely: Water Resource Management Charge, Water Resources Infrastructure Charges, Waste Mitigation Charge, Water Research Levy and Economic Regulation Charge.

The pricing Strategy was gazetted on 5 August 2022 and interested parties have until 3 November 2022 to make comments.

Source: Government of South Africa

Minister Senzo Mchunu hosts meeting with municipalities over concerns of water use in Gauteng, 17 Oct

Minister Mchunu to host an urgent meeting with municipalities over concerns of water use in Gauteng

Water and Sanitation Minister, Hon. Senzo Mchunu, will on Monday 17th October, engage with the municipalities of Gauteng Province affected by Rand Water’s water restrictions. The meeting will be between the Ministry, DWS, Rand Water represented by the Chairperson and CEO, all three Metros, as well as affected District and Local municipalities.

As water use has risen in recent weeks due to the continued heatwave which has been happening in this period over the last two to three years, delayed summer rains in the inland provinces leading to people using potable water for uses that would have been taken care of by rains, e.g., watering gardens and car was enterprises which could be having rainwater harvesting jojo tanks, as well as water losses due to leaks in the reticulation part of the system.

There continues to be overuse in the province which puts a strain on the system that led to Rand Water having to inform their customers of the need to restrict. This does not imply that there is a crisis of water availability but is rather a means to manage the system through reduction and therefore bringing balance to the system.

Source: Government of South Africa

Minister Gwede Mantashe delivers a keynote address at the 2022 Africa Energy Week, 18 Oct

Minister Mantashe to address the Africa Energy Week

The Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy, Mr Gwede Mantashe (MP) will deliver a keynote address at the 2022 Africa Energy Week set to take place from 18 to 21 October at the V&A Waterfront, Cape Town.

Convened under the theme: “Exploring and Investing in Africa’s Energy Future while Driving an Enabling Environment,” the four-day conference brings

together African energy leaders, global investors, and executives from across the public and private sectors to robustly engage on the future of the African energy industry. Source: Government of South Africa

SA on the cusp of billions of dollars in investments

President Cyril Ramaphosa says the “phenomenally successful” official State Visit to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia this weekend has paved the way for billions of dollars’ worth of investments to flow into South Africa.

The visit to the Middle Eastern country was aimed at strengthening bilateral ties and trade relations between the two countries.

The President was accompanied by Minister of International Relations and Cooperation Naledi Pandor, Minister of Agriculture, Rural Development and Land Reform Thoko Didiza, Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition Ebrahim Patel, Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy Gwede Mantashe and Minister of Transport Fikile Mbalula on the visit.

The Ministers signed at least 17 Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) in areas such as transport, defence, energy and agriculture.

Coupled with that, some $15 billion in investment agreements were signed between businesses during the South Africa – Saudi Arabia Investment Forum held in the country on Saturday.

“This has been a phenomenally successful visit for us and the good thing is that this visit has been more focused on the economy as well as advancing our diplomatic, as well as political relations with Saudi Arabia.

“But the economic side and the business side have really underpinned the real substance of this visit. We had extensive discussions with His Royal Highness the Crown Prince [Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz al Saud] last night…and we covered a great deal of ground. The fact that we signed up to 17 MOUs testifies to the real great success that we have achieved here,” he said.

President Ramaphosa reflected that the last official State Visit to the country in 2018, where Saudi Arabia committed to invest some $10 billion in South Africa, in many ways planted the seed for fostering greater ties between the two countries.

“That seed has been germinating and thus far $1 billion has been invested in South Africa through a company called ACWA Power and Renewable Energy. We are now going to be seeing more of those billions that the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is very keen to invest in South Africa beginning to flow underpinned by the 17 MOUs that we have signed, and of course, our budget in 2018.

“COVID-19 intervened and stalled and delayed everything [however] we’re now going to see everything gathering pace and momentum,” he said.

Bearing fruit

President Ramaphosa emphasised that although many agreements have been signed, implementation is key to see them bearing tangible fruit.

Within three months, meetings will be held to “see the extent to which this is going to be implemented”.

“Both private sector owned businesses as well as public sector owned businesses are very serious, they are action oriented, they’re outcomes oriented [and] they want to see implementation. [The] Crown Prince and myself have committed that we are going to be monitoring the implementation of all this.

“We want the implementation to be immediate. For us on our side, clearly we are in a great deal of hurry. The unemployment rate in our country is undesirable and we need to ensure that whatever economic opportunities we get, we grasp with both hands and ensure that all those who are responsible get to implement,” he said.

Relations between the two countries have been formalised since 1994 and President Ramaphosa said this long standing cordiality is a good foundation on which to build.

“[The] solid relationship that exists between our two countries is a good springboard from which to be able to base the great success that we hope to achieve. So we’re very happy and I think we go home not empty handed.

“During the business forum, business people were able and Saudi business people were able to craft agreements that will amount to about $15 billion both ways. So I’m looking at easily, quite a lot of billions of dollars being invested also in our economy.

“So I think we are on a good roll in terms of our relationship with Saudi Arabia which is based on really solid economic parameters and that, for me, behoves well for a future that will be a good one for all peoples,” he said.

Source: South African Government News Agency