
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa launched a nearly $200 billion investment drive aimed at accelerating economic recovery and industrialization in the face of growing worry over the impact of the Iran war on the continent’s biggest economy.
For more than a decade, South Africa’s economy has barely grown, leaving it with crumbling infrastructure and the need to create jobs in a country where one in three people are unemployed. Ramaphosa’s pitch to investors in Johannesburg this week was that South Africa has fixed the worst bottlenecks: He said the country is opening key sectors to private capital and is ready for large scale investments.
Ramaphosa said the effort will run through 2030 with delegates at the South African Investment Conference pledging $53 billion across 31 projects spanning energy, logistics, manufacturing, and digital infrastructure. They include Coca-Cola’s $1 billion expansion plan, and a $3.6 billion commitment from Sasol — the world’s biggest maker of fuel from coal — to upgrade operations.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Golden satellite insulation sparkles during test | Space photo of the day for Dec. 30, 2025 - 2
Find the Force of The ability to understand anyone on a deeper level: Improving Mindfulness and Connections - 3
How Would You Like to Deal with Your Funds? - 4
7 Odd Apparatuses to Make Your Party Stick Out! - 5
Black Friday streaming deals 2025: Grab the Disney+ Hulu bundle for only $5 and save over 60%
Climate leaders are talking about 'overshoot' into warming danger zone. Here's what it means
Becoming amazing at Systems administration: Individual and Expert Tips
Multi-million-euro win in Spanish lottery in doubt due to oversight
How Deforestation Is Reshaping Mosquito-Human Contact
Find the Wonders of the Silk Street: Following the Antiquated Shipping lanes
The most effective method to Perceive the Early Side effects of Cellular breakdown in the lungs
Map shows more than 1,900 measles cases across U.S.
Investigation reveals sperm donor passed on cancer risk to dozens of children across Europe
Iran's stolen futures: The arrested Iranians at risk of execution by the regime













