
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.
Israel violated ceasefire with Hezbollah more than 10,000 times, UNIFIL claims
King Charles shares cancer treatment update, says it's a 'personal blessing'
2024's Driving Clearing Robots: Master Suggestions and Surveys
One third of Spanish pork export certificates blocked since swine fever outbreak, minister says
Israel reports second missile fire from Yemen since start of Iran war
First Phosphate advances battery-grade phosphate project as analysts highlight strategic Federal support
Infants will no longer receive hepatitis B vaccine at birth, CDC announces
'Pluribus' release date: Everything you need to know about the new series from 'Better Call Saul's' co-creator
Well known SUVs With Low Energy Utilization In 2024 vote













