South Africa’s green hydrogen power play
The continent’s largest economy sees an opportunity to join the global export market, but funding gap and lack of regulatory framework present challenges
Like its Saharan neighbours to the north, South Africa is banking on the growth of the green hydrogen economy. The government has set out ambitions to produce 1mt/yr of green hydrogen by the end of the decade and says exports could add ZAR$74b ($3.9b) to the domestic economy by mid-century. The country is well positioned thanks to its vast renewable resource potential. By some estimates, developing just 1% of the South Africa’s landmass would be sufficient to produce 10mt of green hydrogen. That volume alone the government expects would constitute a 7% share of the global market. For production of synthetic e-fuels, such as ammonia and methanol, South Africa already has significant competito
Also in this section
2 December 2025
Oil major cites deteriorating demand and a planning debacle as it abandons one of UK’s largest blue hydrogen projects
1 December 2025
Project at Emden in northwest Germany due online in 2027, but wider ramp-up of clean hydrogen sector in Germany will require overhaul of government policy, company warns
25 November 2025
The northwest African country’s vision of integrating green power, molecules and steel is alive and kicking, and serves as a reminder of hydrogen’s transformative potential
19 November 2025
The creation of ‘lead markets’ to generate hydrogen demand in the EU has potential, but implementation would pose complex challenges for producers and industrial offtakers






