Close Menu
Xsum NewsXsum News

    Stay Updated.

    Get the latest Africa-focused business & infrastructure news and more directly to your inbox.

    What's Hot

    Cape Verde secures €17.7 million from African Development Bank, what digital transformation plan actually means for Africa’s future

    FG Gold, AFC and Afreximbank close on USD 330 million senior debt financing for Baomafun Gold Project — TradingView

    Africa needs to build its own cybersecurity intelligence, Tisel CEO says at AfriTech 5.0 – Nigerian CommunicationWeek

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Cape Verde secures €17.7 million from African Development Bank, what digital transformation plan actually means for Africa’s future
    • FG Gold, AFC and Afreximbank close on USD 330 million senior debt financing for Baomafun Gold Project — TradingView
    • Africa needs to build its own cybersecurity intelligence, Tisel CEO says at AfriTech 5.0 – Nigerian CommunicationWeek
    • SA construction comes roaring back: 10% jump signals sector revival
    • Comoros to win subsidy from AfDB for geothermal project
    • Gabon strengthens regional energy profile with minister’s participation in MSGBC 2025
    • 7 recommended books on housing and urban development
    • Water resource management is the key to sustainable development in Africa
    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok
    Xsum NewsXsum News
    • African Development Bank
    • Africa Finance Corporation
    • All Africa – Construction & Infrastructure
    • Africa Intelligence
    • Construct Africa
    • More
      • Mining Review Africa
      • Energy Capital Power
      • Sustainability & Climate-Resilient Infrastructure
      • Private-Sector Infrastructure Players
      • Urban Development & Housing
    Xsum NewsXsum News
    You are at:Home»All Africa – Construction & Infrastructure»The construction industry faces tough targets
    All Africa – Construction & Infrastructure

    The construction industry faces tough targets

    Xsum NewsBy Xsum NewsDecember 2, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read1 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    South Africa’s construction industry has long suffered from a gap between the quality of plans and the pace of delivery on site. Summits were held and declarations were signed, but progress was still too slow and too often stalled. The nation-building summit had another declaration at the end, but it could have easily been dismissed as similar. That’s wrong.

    Over the past year, intentions have begun to turn into measurable actions. The sector grew from cutting jobs to creating about 250,000 jobs in the third quarter. This is one of the biggest growths of any industry. Similar changes can be seen in non-crime scenes. Since the 2024 Durban Summit and Durban Declaration, 770 incidents of vandalism have been recorded, 240 court orders have been obtained and 176 convictions have been secured against perpetrators.

    The 2025 Nation-Building Summit Declaration aims to ensure and accelerate that change. It sets out five priorities. A unified performance improvement framework. Accelerated build program and related skills development. Full implementation of an integrated social facilitation framework to stabilize the ground. Driving sustainability and innovation, including building information modeling (BIM) and digital project management. and a clearer and stronger mandate for public works infrastructure.

    Single performance framework

    The most significant change is the industry’s move to a single performance framework. The manifesto commits to a unified performance improvement framework for the construction industry by the end of June 2026.

    The framework monitors and reports on performance across infrastructure clients, contractors, and professional service providers, flags underperforming clients, allows for unbiased blacklisting of underperforming contractors and professionals, and introduces cost standards across key infrastructure types so that budgets and schedules can be benchmarked more reliably.

    With the Building Industry Development Board’s rating system, database and regulatory powers, we are uniquely placed to turn this into a living dashboard, and the Building Industry Development Board Amendment Act will help cement this performance-focused approach into law.

    skill development

    The second initiative is to treat enterprise development and skills development as core to performance, rather than add-ons. Smaller and emerging contractors, especially CIBD grade 1-4 contractors, are located closest to local communities and are often the first to hire local workers. This declaration therefore strengthens the Build program and commits to training at least 1,000 contractors on construction management systems in 2026 and 3,000 beneficiaries through the CIBD Skills Development Standard on real projects in the same year.

    We are also calling for a digital skills intervention map across CIDB, ​​the Building Education and Training Authority, the Built Environment Council and other development agencies so that training is tailored rather than fragmented and tailored to the needs of real projects.

    Community participation

    The third commitment addresses social stability and community participation in a structured way. The main focus of this year’s Summit was the Integrated Society Promotion Framework, developed by the Department of Public Works and Infrastructure as a direct result of the Durban Summit.

    The declaration commits governments and industry to implement the framework across infrastructure customers by the end of June 2026, and supports ministries, local governments and state bodies on how to apply the framework from the start of projects and the creation of a professional registration category for social facilitators.

    If this is done properly, the character of the construction site will change. Communities will see transparent rules on localization and subcontracting, clear channels for complaints, and trusted people whose job is to mediate interests before disputes escalate.

    Improving sustainability

    The fourth task is to strengthen sustainability and drive innovation. In a country facing tight budgets and climate risks, inefficient and outdated project practices cannot be tolerated. The declaration therefore commits to publishing a national building information modeling framework for the construction industry by the end of September 2026. Standardization and digitalization of project management processes in the public works sector. Update building codes and procurement policies to reflect sustainability and innovation. Strengthen collaboration to speed up and digitize plan approvals for private sector projects.

    The Nation-Building Summit Declaration gives us the tools, the goals, and the timeline.

    Finally, the declaration seeks to strengthen obligations on public works infrastructure. Fragmented laws and distributed responsibility make it difficult to enforce consistent standards and hold someone accountable for systemic failures. The Declaration proposes that all laws and regulations governing the built environment should be brought under the Ministry and its organizations, and calls for progress towards centralizing budgets for infrastructure projects.

    The Nation-Building Summit Declaration gives us the tools, the goals, and the timeline. This plan builds on the work already underway, from the Durban Declaration to the arrests and convictions of the past year, and sharpens our focus for the next steps. It cannot give discipline. It has to come from us.

    Public customers, contractors, professionals, workers and communities all need to play their part, including embracing measurement, paying on time, investing in skills, embracing transparency, and leveraging the frameworks currently in place (integrated social facilitation frameworks, build programs, hotlines, performance dashboards) rather than relying on confusion and informal gatekeeping.

    Suppose we treat this declaration not as a ritual document for archival purposes, but as a binding contract with South Africans. In that case, we can move from a stop-start, crisis-prone industry to one that consistently builds the roads, schools, clinics, public spaces, and the jobs and businesses that this country deserves. That is our accountability.

    • Dladla is CEO of the Construction Industry Development Board.

    construction faces industry targets tough
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleDigital disruption in Africa’s construction industry
    Next Article Former SSA employees Thulani Dlomo and Patrick Muchotla arrested over R12-million theft and fraud scheme
    Xsum News
    • Website

    Related Posts

    SA construction comes roaring back: 10% jump signals sector revival

    December 6, 2025

    Construction mafia shuts down road projects in South Africa’s richest city – TopAuto

    December 5, 2025

    Construction begins on East Africa’s largest railway training facility in Ethiopia

    December 5, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    A United Continent on the Move: Ambassador Kouyateh’s Call for an African Logistics Renaissance

    November 20, 202527 Views

    2 Core infrastructure for African submarine cable completed China Mobile advances digital intelligence development in Africa

    November 20, 202512 Views

    LIBERIA’S DEVELOPMENT AGENDA GAINS GLOBAL ATTENTION

    November 18, 202511 Views

    Africa’s clean cooking drive depends on carbon credit reform and transport upgrades

    November 25, 202510 Views
    Don't Miss
    African Development Bank December 6, 2025

    Cape Verde secures €17.7 million from African Development Bank, what digital transformation plan actually means for Africa’s future

    Cape Verde has secured €17.7 million from the African Development Bank to drive digital transformation…

    FG Gold, AFC and Afreximbank close on USD 330 million senior debt financing for Baomafun Gold Project — TradingView

    Africa needs to build its own cybersecurity intelligence, Tisel CEO says at AfriTech 5.0 – Nigerian CommunicationWeek

    SA construction comes roaring back: 10% jump signals sector revival

    Stay In Touch
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • LinkedIn
    • TikTok

    Stay Updated.

    Get the latest Africa-focused business & infrastructure news and more directly to your inbox.

    About Us
    About Us

    Xsum News is Africa’s digital window into the future of business. We tell stories of innovation, enterprise, and investment that are shaping the continent’s economic rise. African Business, Added Up.

    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok
    Our Picks

    Cape Verde secures €17.7 million from African Development Bank, what digital transformation plan actually means for Africa’s future

    FG Gold, AFC and Afreximbank close on USD 330 million senior debt financing for Baomafun Gold Project — TradingView

    Africa needs to build its own cybersecurity intelligence, Tisel CEO says at AfriTech 5.0 – Nigerian CommunicationWeek

    Most Popular

    African Development Bank praises Algeria’s development model, aims to replicate its success across the continent

    Considering the redefinition of African capital by UBA and Arauba

    G20 Energy Investment Forum brings together Africa’s top finance, insurance and technology leaders

    © 2025 Xsum News. All Rights Reserved.
    • 🌍 About Xsum News
    • 📬 Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.