South Africa’s state owned freight logistics company, Transnet, has secured a €300m financing agreement from the Agence Française de Développement to support the decarbonisation of the country’s freight transport sector while strengthening rail and port infrastructure across strategic economic corridors.
The agreement forms part of broader international cooperation under South Africa’s Just Energy Transition Partnership, an initiative designed to support the country’s transition towards a lower carbon economy while addressing industrial competitiveness, employment sustainability and infrastructure resilience.
According to information released by Transnet and development finance stakeholders, the funding will support the company’s Freight Decarbonisation and Corporate Sustainability Programme. The programme is expected to focus on improving operational efficiency, reducing emissions intensity and enhancing the long term reliability of freight rail and port systems that remain central to Southern Africa’s regional trade architecture.
The financing arrangement arrives at a significant moment for South Africa’s logistics sector, which continues to face operational pressures linked to rail inefficiencies, constrained port performance and infrastructure maintenance backlogs. These challenges have had wider implications for regional supply chains, commodity exports and intra African trade integration.
Transnet Group Chief Executive Michelle Phillips said the financing would contribute towards the modernisation of rail and port operations while supporting the company’s broader reform agenda.
She stated that the organisation remained committed to improving service reliability, competitiveness and sustainability through infrastructure renewal and energy efficiency initiatives aligned with its Reinvent for Growth strategy.
The agreement includes several performance linked milestones that must be achieved before portions of the funding are disbursed. These include the rehabilitation of approximately 550 kilometres of rail infrastructure along priority freight corridors to improve network reliability and encourage a modal shift from road to rail transport.
The programme also includes preparations for the procurement of 30MW of renewable energy capacity and initiatives aimed at strengthening environmental, social and governance frameworks within the organisation.
In addition, Transnet is expected to expand logistical capacity linked to green hydrogen and transition minerals, sectors increasingly viewed across the African continent as strategically important to future industrialisation and global energy transitions. African countries hold substantial reserves of minerals required for renewable energy technologies, including manganese, platinum group metals and rare earth elements, positioning regional transport infrastructure as a critical component of future value chains.
The financing model differs from conventional project specific lending structures by allowing greater operational flexibility in how funds are allocated across Transnet’s broader sustainability and infrastructure programme. Development finance analysts note that such flexibility may assist state owned entities in responding more effectively to evolving operational and economic conditions.
Marie Hélène Loison, Regional Director for Southern Africa at AFD, described Transnet as an important institutional actor in South Africa’s low carbon transition and economic competitiveness strategy.
She said investments in freight rail recovery, port modernisation and transition mineral export corridors reflected the interconnected nature of industrial growth, infrastructure resilience and climate adaptation.
The latest agreement also extends a longstanding financial relationship between Transnet and AFD that dates back more than a decade, including previous support linked to the expansion of the Cape Town Container Terminal.
Across the continent, transport decarbonisation is increasingly being framed not solely as an environmental objective, but as part of a broader developmental agenda focused on industrial capability, regional connectivity and economic sovereignty. Policymakers and infrastructure experts have argued that modern rail systems can play a central role in reducing logistics costs, improving trade competitiveness and supporting the objectives of the African Continental Free Trade Area.
For Southern Africa, where freight mobility remains closely tied to mining, manufacturing, agriculture and port access, investment in resilient transport systems continues to carry implications that extend beyond national boundaries.







