The Herald (Zimbabwe)

SA optimistic tax breaks will kick-start EV industry

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SOUTH Africa expects efforts to boost its electric vehicle manufactur­ing to yield swift results, as manufactur­ers start to take advantage of tax incentives from early 2026.

“We are ready now for carmakers to begin to gear up,” Trade and Industry Minister Ebrahim Patel told reporters in Pretoria on Monday.

“A carmaker can commence immediatel­y to put in place the production capabiliti­es and production systems,” he said on the sidelines of a Black Industrial­ists and Exporters Conference in the capital.

South Africa, in an effort to preserve a key export industry, last month announced a 150 percent tax deduction on investment­s in the local production of electric and hydrogen-powered vehicles from March 2026.

The country’s vehicle exports generated more than US$21 billion in earnings last year. But car companies were worried about the lack of government support for EVs, amid shrinking demand for convention­al petrol and diesel-powered engines in Europe, South Africa’s primary export market.

Patel said the long lead time was designed to give South African carmakers enough time to prepare production facilities and win support from their parent companies.

“As they incur that expense off the back of our incentive, they know they will be reimbursed,” he said.

The tax break is key for South Africa, which despite its natural advantages, has done little to develop an EV industry in the country. South Africa has abundant supplies of raw materials vital for the manufactur­e of lithium-ion batteries, including increasing supplies of nickel and the world’s largest reserves of manganese. It also holds the world’s largest platinum reserves, a metal used in fuel-cell engines that run on hydrogen.

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