By Enyichukwu Enemanna
The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank (AfDB) Group has approved a $474.6 million loan for South Africa’s Infrastructure Governance and Green Growth Programme (IGGGP), marking a significant milestone in the country’s transition towards a sustainable, low-carbon economy.
This IGGGP is the second phase of the Bank’s strategic support for South Africa’s Just Energy Transition, building on the success of the $300 million Energy Governance and Climate Resilience Programme, approved in 2023.
Structured around three interconnected pillars of enhancing energy security through power sector restructuring, supporting a low-carbon and just transition, and improving transport efficiency, the IGGGP is designed to accelerate South Africa’s green transformation and promote inclusive, resilient growth.
South Africa’s Minister of Finance, Enoch Godongwana, described the Bank’s support as valuable.
“Our country faces the significant challenge of energy shortages, leading to loadshedding, as well as significant transport bottlenecks, which have been detrimental to growing our economy and achieving our developmental aspirations.
With your partnership, our government has committed itself to stay the course and implement these critical reforms in the energy and transport sectors, while endeavouring to achieve our international commitments on climate change and our JET objectives,” he said.
The IGGGP also places strong emphasis on green industrialisation, skills development, and job creation, including support for electric vehicle manufacturing and green hydrogen production.
Recent estimates from the IMF show that South Africa’s Just Energy Transition could boost the country’s GDP growth by 0.2 to 0.4 percentage points annually between 2025 and 2030.
“This approval represents more than financing — it’s a blueprint for Africa’s energy future,” said Kennedy Mbekeani, African Development Bank Group’s Director General for Southern Africa.
“South Africa’s success in building a just, green, and inclusive energy system demonstrates that sustainable development and economic growth can go hand in hand.”
This financing includes targeted grant components to promote energy efficiency initiatives and advance rail sector reforms.
Key priorities include accelerating vertical separation and establishing an investment framework to revitalise South Africa’s freight and logistics systems.
These efforts are expected to strengthen competitiveness of the transport sector and contribute to regional integration and economic growth across the Southern African Development Community.
The success of the IGGGP will contribute to several United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, including affordable and clean energy (SDG 7), decent work and economic growth (SDG 8), industry, innovation, and infrastructure (SDG 9), and climate action (SDG 13).