By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
DNE Africa
  • Home
  • Politics
    Ethiopia's Disrupted Polls and Cabo Verde's Transition Prove Security Dictates Elections, African Narratives Study Finds
    Politics

    Ethiopia’s Disrupted Polls and Cabo Verde’s Transition Prove Security Dictates Elections, African Narratives Study Finds

    By DNE Africa 7 Min Read
    Ethiopia Amhara Fano rebels claim 150+ ENDF deaths in 8-day Gojjam battle
    Politics

    Amhara Fano claim 150+ ENDF deaths in 8-day Gojjam battle

    By DNE Africa June 27, 2026
    Abdelmaksoud Elmallah Pic.jpg
    opinionTechnology

    Connected or Controlled: Is it time for Satellite Internet in Africa?

    By Abdelmaksoud Elmallah June 27, 2026
  • Business
    Nigeria, Egypt, South Africa Lead Africa’s Equity Markets, says AfDB
    Business

    Nigeria, Egypt, South Africa Lead Africa’s Equity Markets: AfDB

    Nigeria, Egypt, Morocco, and South Africa continue to dominate Africa’s equity markets,…

    By Ahmed Emam 4 Min Read
    Cheick-Oumar Sylla, Director for North Africa and the Horn of Africa at IFC
    Business
    IFC eyes over $2.2bn investments in North Africa this year
    Mahmoud Mohieldin: Africa’s share of global FDI does not exceed 6%
    Business
    Mahmoud Mohieldin: Africa’s share of global FDI does not exceed 6%
    africa
    BusinessScience
    Pandemic Financial Worries Slowed Digital Finance Adoption in Africa
    climate shocks vulnerability
    BusinessScience
    Climate Change Could Deepen Food Crisis in East Africa by 2050
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • World
  • My Bookmarks
Reading: Africa Is No Longer a Promise. It Is a System Taking Shape
Sign In
  • Join US
DNE AfricaDNE Africa
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • World
  • My Bookmarks
Search
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • World
  • My Bookmarks
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Ayanda Holo, President of BRICS AFRICA CHANNEL

Africa Is No Longer a Promise. It Is a System Taking Shape

Ayanda Holo
Last updated: May 3, 2026 1:17 pm
By Ayanda Holo 8 Min Read
Share
Ayanda Holo, President of BRICS AFRICA CHANNEL
SHARE

The first of May holds personal significance for me as my birth month, but more importantly, it represents workers, dignity, and Africa. Workers’ Day is not just a commemoration; it prompts us to consider what we are building with our hands, minds, and institutions.

In 2021, I wrote about how Africa was often portrayed as lacking, fragile, and dependent. While that perspective was relevant then, it is no longer sufficient.

This marks a pivotal transition in Africa’s narrative.

This evolution is evident not only in perception but also in reality. Africa is viewed differently and is actively transforming.

The shift is now structural and measurable, unfolding in systems, boardrooms, ministerial sessions, and policy frameworks. Today, ambition is turning into execution.

This was most evident in Johannesburg during the final days of Freedom Month, under the theme “Africa We Build.” At the 5th Session of the African Union’s Specialised Technical Committee on Transport and Energy, intent was demonstrated through action. The African Union Commission convened the session, hosted by South Africa.

Representatives from over 34 member countries gathered to assess the progress of integration and determine how to accelerate it, moving beyond discussions of whether integration should occur.

This is the turning point: moving from intent to measurable progress.

As African Union Commissioner for Infrastructure and Energy, H.E. Lerato Mataboge explained in her briefing, the continent stands at a defining moment. Now, ambition must translate into tangible improvements in people’s lives.

Her framing was sober and precise. Over 600 million Africans still lack electricity. Nearly one billion people remain without clean cooking solutions. Infrastructure deficits reduce GDP growth by up to 2 per cent each year. Transport costs are 50-175 per cent above global averages.

These statistics are not isolated; they call for urgent coordination.

This emphasis on coordination signals a fundamental shift in approach.

Minister Kgosientsho Ramokgopa, South Africa’s Minister of Electricity and Energy, has called energy security the backbone of industrialisation. It is both a national issue and a continental imperative. At the Sandton Convention Centre, home to BRICS AFRICA CHANNEL, this view echoed a broader consensus: power must cross borders from Namibia, Kenya, to Nigeria if prosperity is to be shared.

Minister Barbara Creecy, South Africa’s Minister of Transport, describes connectivity as both infrastructure and integration, enabling trade, mobility, and inclusive economic dignity. By prioritizing regulatory harmonisation, safety oversight, and interoperability, Africa can design comprehensive systems instead of merely addressing gaps.

And the systems are taking shape.

The African Single Electricity Market is becoming a reality, linking national grids into a continental network. The Continental Power Systems Master Plan is mapping how energy will flow across Africa, connecting surplus to scarcity and potential to production.

Progress in transport is also clear. The Single African Air Transport Market now covers over 90 per cent of Africa’s air traffic, with more than 118 new intra-African routes introduced since 2023.

These gains are tangible, measured in hours saved, expanded markets, and improved daily life.

At their core, these changes represent movement.

To fully appreciate this progress, two truths must be recognized.

First, Africa’s challenges remain profound. The deficits outlined by Commissioner Mataboge are real, persistent, and structural.

Second, Africa is no longer standing still in response to these challenges.

Africa is organizing.

This period is defined not by ambition, but by coordination. In Johannesburg, discussions shifted from isolated national projects to integrated systems: rail, maritime, road, and air networks designed with a continental perspective. Energy strategies are now linked to a shared transition, and infrastructure plans are built for scale.

Africa increasingly recognizes that its comparative advantage lies in its scale, which must be structured effectively.

In energy, Africa holds 40 per cent of the world’s renewable potential and significant oil and gas reserves. The focus is shifting from what Africa possesses to what it is building with these resources.

Green hydrogen is now embedded in policy frameworks. The Grand Inga Hydropower Project could generate over 40 gigawatts. It is more than an engineering ambition; it is a continental anchor for industrialisation and energy security.

This moment marks a critical transition from shaping narratives to building tangible infrastructure.

Perhaps the most significant transition is psychological.

Africa is no longer negotiating its place in the world from a position of explanation. It is negotiating from a design position.

This is evident in how the continent positions itself globally. The outcomes of the AU Technical Committee align Africa with global investment flows, energy transitions, and evolving financial systems.

Africa is not seeking inclusion; it is defining how it will participate. This distinction is important.

Because perception, as I argued in 2021, has always been both external and internal. It is shaped not only by how the world sees Africa, but by how Africa sees herself.

We are witnessing a recalibration of Africa’s internal perspective.

There is a growing insistence on delivery over romanticizing potential. Policy must produce results, and declarations must translate into roads, power generation, and trade corridors.

Commissioner Mataboge’s briefing highlights the urgency: Africa will need 60,000 to 100,000 kilometres of new roads by 2030 to achieve connectivity. Governments must raise infrastructure investment to at least 4.5 per cent of GDP to close these gaps.

For the first time in years, these challenges are being addressed collectively. Frameworks like the Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa and cross-sector ministerial coordination are tackling these issues.

“Africa We Build” is more than a theme; it marks a shift from aspiration to architecture and from possibility to practice.

Although progress remains uneven, financing constraints persist. Some countries lack strong sovereign balance sheets to support energy infrastructure investments, hindering ambition. Thus, South Africa suggests an Africa-wide approach led by the AU Committee, said Minister Ramokgopa.

Africa is building institutions that outlast individuals and creating frameworks that endure beyond summits. Once operational, these systems will form the foundation for sustained transformation.

As May returns, bringing the spirit of solidarity from Workers’ Rallies across the Global South and the quiet reflection of another year, I find myself less concerned with defending Africa’s image. I am now more invested in documenting its evolution.

In Johannesburg, African ministers gathered during Freedom Month not to declare independence from old narratives, but to design interdependence through integrated transport corridors and transboundary energy transmission lines, thereby improving intra-African trade.

This is the Africa that is emerging: focused, interconnected, and determined. It is not just the Africa we aspire to, but the Africa we are actively building.

By Ayanda Holo, President of BRICS AFRICA CHANNEL

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=684JOOisLIw

You Might Also Like

Ethiopia’s Disrupted Polls and Cabo Verde’s Transition Prove Security Dictates Elections, African Narratives Study Finds

Amhara Fano claim 150+ ENDF deaths in 8-day Gojjam battle

Connected or Controlled: Is it time for Satellite Internet in Africa?

Egypt deepens southern border security sweep amid regional gold mining and trafficking crackdown

How Africans Celebrated Africa Day Across the Continent & Beyond

TAGGED:AfricaAfrican UnionSouth Africa
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Reddit Telegram Email Copy Link

You Might Also Like

Africa’s Agricultural Future Hinges on Insurance Innovation, Expert Says
BusinessInsiderTechnology

Africa’s Agricultural Future Hinges on Insurance Innovation, Expert Says

By Ahmed Emam 3 Min Read
Why the Arab World Keeps Missing the Real Story About Somaliland By Bashe Awil Omar
opinionPolitics

Why the Arab World Keeps Missing the Real Story About Somaliland 

By Bashe Awil Omar 5 Min Read
Nigeria, Egypt, South Africa Lead Africa’s Equity Markets, says AfDB
Business

Nigeria, Egypt, South Africa Lead Africa’s Equity Markets: AfDB

By Ahmed Emam 4 Min Read

More Popular from DNE AFRICA

Ad imageAd image
opinionPolitics

RED SEA CHESS: The Egypt-Eritrea Axis Rewiring the Horn of Africa From Isolation to Influence: Why Every Player in This Alliance is Gaining

The Horn of Africa is no longer drifting through diplomatic turbulence. It is entering a profound…

By Abdiwahab Sheikh Abdisamad
Science

Ancient Lake Mud Shows 2012 Rwenzori Fire Was Unprecedented for 12,000 Years

A wildfire that swept across part of Africa’s Rwenzori Mountains in 2012 was the first large…

By Mohammed El-Said
Culture

Egypt’s Senghor University secures Romanian tech funding to train future African leaders

Senghor University, a flagship academic institution dedicated to training Africa’s future leaders, has received a financial…

By DNE Africa
Politics

Debretsion Sworn In as Tigray President, Defying Federal Order and Raising Stakes in Ethiopia

Debretsion Gebremichael has been sworn in as president of Ethiopia’s Tigray region, marking a bold political…

By Taha Sakr
DNE Africa

News by Africans, For Africans

Categories

  • The Escapist
  • Entertainment
  • Business

Quick Links

  • Advertise with us
  • Newsletters
  • Complaint
  • Deal

DNE Africa.All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?