
South Africa secures R10.4 billion loan from German bank
ALSO READ | South Africans doubt R7 billion BRICS loan will be used to fix roads
This loan is part of South Africa's third Development Policy Operation and participants included the World Bank, African Development Bank, Japan International Cooperation Agency, and the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries Fund.
'It supports structural reforms to enhance the efficiency, resilience and sustainability of the country's infrastructure services, with a specific focus on the energy sector and climate mitigation.
'KFW's financing forms part of government's broader efforts to implement structural reforms that strengthen public institutions, crowd in private investment, and improve service delivery across priority sectors of the economy,' National Treasury said on Monday.
This loan agreement builds on the two policy loans concluded in 2022 and 2023, and forms part of Germany's pledge at COP26 to support South Africa's Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP).
Germany's three policy loans, implemented by KFW, total €1.3 billion and form part of a larger package of JETP projects supported by the German Government via loans, technical assistance and grants.
'The Minister of Finance, Enoch Godongwana, [has] highlighted the significance of South Africa's partnership with Germany and KFW that remains critical to South Africa's development agenda and marks a significant step towards strengthening South Africa's short- and medium-term energy security measures, promoting decarbonisation and enhancing the socio-economic benefits of the energy transition for disadvantaged communities, thereby enabling inclusive economic growth and fostering job creation.
'The Minister also emphasised the need for further policy and institutional reforms in the energy sector to create an enabling environment for the investment required for a just energy transition,' National Treasury said.
KFW's Country Director for South Africa, Cornelia Tittmann, said the loan seeks to support the government of South Africa's continued commitment to reforms in the energy sector, which give effect to South Africa's climate commitments and enable the private sector to participate, opening new avenues to strengthen economic cooperation between Germany and South Africa.
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