An unstable energy grid, climate-stressed farms, rising waste, and inefficient transport
systems are weighing down South Africa’s growth prospects. However, local innovators see
these same provincial pressures as an opportunity to unlock potential.
This golden thread wove itself through this year’s Global Cleantech Innovation Programme
South Africa (GCIP-SA) National Awards Ceremony. Appropriately held in South African
Innovation Week, these awards mark the end of the 2025/26 GCIP-SA accelerator
programme run by the Technology Innovation Agency.
The GCIP-SA programme takes early-stage ideas and pushes them closer to market. This
year, 38 startups completed, producing ten finalists:
Dakar Consulting (Northern Cape) – Solar-powered desalination and off-grid
electricity system
Gemanlee (Gauteng) – High-purity graphite recovery from electric vehicle batteries
Kasi Gas (Gentle Ginger Holdings) (Mpumalanga) – Biogas and biofertiliser from
organic waste
Godisang Spaces (Gauteng) – CircularBuild digital platform for construction waste
reuse
Mosebe Enterprise (Western Cape) – Tsepo V3 off-grid energy system for low-
income communities
NutriXect (Mpumalanga) – Insect-based poultry feed using organic waste
Phoka M Holdings (Mpumalanga) – Chemical-free water treatment for industrial and
mining use
The Itsile Group (Gauteng) – Smart logistics platform to track and reduce carbon
emissions
The Makers Club (KwaZulu-Natal) – Smart farming system for irrigation and soil
optimisation
Vonnie Projects (Limpopo) – Biomass-based animal feed and energy briquettes
Vusi Skosana, Executive for Innovation and Enabling Support at the Technology Innovation
Agency believes South Africa’s transition to a more resilient, lower-carbon economy cannot
be solved by policy alone.
“This is not about ideas that sit stuck on a shelf,” said Skosana. “It’s about solutions that can
be implemented, that can create jobs, and that can respond to real challenges in the
economy.”
He said the ten finalists reflect just how close some of those solutions already are.
In the Northern Cape, Dakar Consulting developed a solar-powered system to produce clean
drinking water AND off-grid electricity. This is a potential life saver for communities facing
water and power unreliability.
In Mpumalanga, Kasi Gas turns organic waste into biogas and fertiliserto address the cost of
energy and agricultural inputs at the same time.
Gauteng-based Gemanlee is tackling a different kind of waste problem by recovering high-
value graphite from used electric vehicle batteries. Skosana said this was a formidable step
towards building a local circular economy with clean technologies.
“We’re so proud to see our cleantech sector go from ambition to fruition,” said Skosana.
“We’re seeing businesses big and small tackling real, immediate problems.”
Since 2014, GCIP-SA has supported more than 265 innovators, with many moving into
advanced acceleration and commercialisation stages. Through initiatives like the Climate
Impact Fund, over R150 million has been mobilised to help these ventures grow.
The programme is also quietly reshaping participation in innovation. The latest cohort was
made up of 60% youth, 35.2% women and 85% hailed from previously disadvantaged
groups. Skosana said this reflects how cleantech in South Africa is booming beyond the
more exclusive, and inaccessible tech hubs of the past.
GCIP-SA forms part of a global initiative led by the United Nations Industrial Development
Organisation and supported by the Global Environment Facility. This coalition comes
together to accelerate clean technology solutions in emerging markets. But its success in
South Africa will ultimately be measured locally, noted Skosana.
“The challenge is to take these ideas and see how we can accelerate them at the speed of
need. While innovation is needed, can it be translated into a business of scale to solve
provincial and national problems? I have no doubt,” concluded Skosana.