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Innocent Gininda shares his journey to becoming a registered Professional Engineer (PrEng), emphasizing the importance of mentorship, early preparation, and understanding ECSA requirements. He offers advice to aspiring PrEngs, highlighting the value of diverse feedback and a positive mindset. My journey to becoming a registered Professional Engineer (PrEng) culminated successfully in November 2024. I was fortunate to begin my career at a company with a Commitment and Undertaking (C&U) Agreement with ECSA and a robust mentorship program. This commitment to training engineers to the standard required for Professional Registration provided me with essential resources and a structured path to track my experience against ECSA requirements. Early exposure to these expectations instilled a positive outlook on registration and solidified my desire to achieve this milestone. My views on Professional Registration have remained consistently positive throughout this journey. Working alongside ...

NEWS: 4 ways to get the infrastructure wheel spinning

There’s an unfortunate narrative that portrays private sector capital as a bottleneck to infrastructure development in SA. This growing pool of capital, the story goes, is sitting idle in the bank accounts of businesses and corporations, which are unwilling to fund productive infrastructure projects that could improve lives and drive economic growth. That narrative is deeply flawed says Richard Wainwright.


To begin with, private sector savings are not growing. In real terms, taking inflation into account and net of depreciation costs, non-financial corporate savings are significantly lower than they were a decade ago. And because of this real depreciation of savings over time, companies are actively seeking investment opportunities.

Their capital represents a ready source of funds for infrastructure development. But in the absence of an enabling environment and a reasonable prospect of fixed investment projects generating returns within defined and predictable time frames, there is no incentive for this money to move.

The need for such an enabling environment could not be more urgent. Fixed investment growth has been waning since 2010 and the consequences are painfully evident. Electricity shortages, inadequate transport networks and ailing civil infrastructure have, for too long, been a binding constraint on SA’s economic growth and thus on our ability to reduce desperately high levels of unemployment and poverty.

In the absence of new government-led infrastructure projects, private sector investors are growing increasingly sceptical. With every project that gets delayed or snarled up in red tape, the investment case deteriorates. There’s a very real threat that the pool of private finance potential will dry up, partly because of natural seepage as our economy continues to drift, and partly as investors grow impatient and seek opportunities elsewhere.

But there is still a narrow window of opportunity to reverse the trend. As new infrastructure comes on stream, so the environment should become more conducive to productive investment, resulting in accelerated and inclusive economic growth.

This is not a pipe dream. We know it is possible because we’ve done it before. In the first decade of our democracy, sensible economic policies, combined with strong political will and a willing private sector, helped reverse the fortunes of a functionally bankrupt state.

So how do we get back to the promise of that era? Case studies in this and other countries suggest there are four prerequisites for success:

Authorised leadership and alignment within the public sector.

Time and time again, projects that start out with clear objectives land up mired in conflicting agendas, overly burdensome regulation and excessive bureaucracy.

What’s needed is a sponsoring cabinet minister responsible and accountable for delivery of infrastructure. That minister should have the unqualified support of the president, as well as the backing of every relevant government department and parastatal.

This is not to say that the interests of other government stakeholders should fall by the wayside. It is rather a commitment by these public officials to the overarching goal of infrastructure development, understanding that achieving this objective will require hard work, innovative thinking, and compromise.

It cannot be the responsibility of private sector participants to secure this alignment or to clear political bottlenecks. Unless all participants buy into the project objective — a road, a dam, a functioning power station — that project is destined to fail.

Competent government functionaries capable of structuring investable projects.

Unfortunately, most of the projects tabled at the 2020 Sustainable Infrastructure Development Symposium are simply not structured to attract private sector investment in their current form.

A lack of technical capacity is now evident in local, provincial and national departments. Some are seeking out private sector expertise to plug these gaps, and some highly capable people from the private sector have been seconded to contribute. But I propose we go further.

The government should scour the globe for international talent with hands-on experience in setting up concession arrangements and other public-private funding models. We are not the first country to face this challenge and there is no need to reinvent the wheel.

These local and international experts will know long before projects are brought to market whether they are bankable or not. And private sector bidders will have the confidence that projects have been properly thought out, with due regard to feasibility, environmental impact, stakeholder alignment and, critically, the investment risks relative to the prospects of financial returns.

A clear, efficient and transparent policy framework.

If we keep on leading projects using cumbersome, confusing and antiquated policy frameworks, we’re likely to keep getting the same results. Investors won’t deploy capital in an environment where policies are conflicting or subject to change.

It was encouraging to hear President Cyril Ramaphosa recently acknowledge that the legal and policy framework for public infrastructure is fragmented, with overlapping institutional roles and poor accountability.

This is something the private sector has been saying for some time now. Policy reform is needed urgently, and we look forward to seeing and contributing to the amendments that the head of the investment and infrastructure office in the presidency, Kgosientsho Ramokgopa, and his team will be proposing in the Infrastructure Development Act and existing private-public partnership regulations.

Hopefully these amendments will have the effect of appropriately balancing the allocation of risks on specific infrastructure projects, thereby making them more attractive to the government, project developers and private sector investors.


Here again, international best practice should be our starting point. But I would caution that in drafting new policy we don’t fall into the trap of setting benchmarks that are impractical in an emerging country such as ours.

A track record of success.

The president has on several occasions called infrastructure the “flywheel” of economic recovery. The thing about a flywheel is that once it gets turning, it gathers its own momentum. So, let’s get it turning. Not with 62 projects, or even 50, but with three or four.

Once investors can see the wheel turning — once they can see evidence of strong sponsors, alignment within government and a workable framework for realising financial returns — that’s when our R440bn infrastructure funding backlog will begin to look like a huge private sector investment opportunity.

Written by Richard Wainwright CEO of Investec Bank for Business Live

HAVE YOUR SAY:  Is it too little too late can we  reverse the trend and get the private sector a lot more invested in infrastructure resulting in accelerated and inclusive economic growth?

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