Thursday, May 7, 2026 - 11:17:55
Loading weather…

New Data Shows 93% Of South African Low‑Carbon Players Back CCS, But Diversification Is Coming

Industrial carbon capture and storage facility in South Africa for low-carbon energy.
  • We partnered with Censuswide to survey a sample of 964 VC investors (525 from fund sizes: >$50,000,000 active in the low carbon space) and Developers (439 companies who have developed low carbon technologies). The data was collected between 12.02.2026-24.02.2026. Censuswide abides by and employs members of the Market Research Society and follows the MRS code of conduct and ESOMAR principles. Censuswide is also a member of the British Polling Council.  
  • To build a focused view of appetite for CCS, we asked Censuswide to combine responses relating to carbon capture (both pre-combustion and post-combustion) with those on carbon storage (including onsite, subsea and onshore options). We then aggregated these datasets to provide a single, comprehensive picture of respondents investing in either carbon capture or storage. 
  • 45 respondents were based in South Africa: 25 VC investors, 20 low carbon technology developers. Whilst caution should be applied to drawing generalisations from samples <50, this sample size has been calculated as roughly representative of the size of the VC and low carbon technology market in South Africa and so can still act as a helpful indication of trends.
Question   Findings for South Africa 
1.   In which countries, if any, do you expect to launch or expand low carbon activities in the next 12 months? (Select all that apply)  South Africa respondents:  South Africa 56% Germany 24% Hong Kong 20% France 18% US 18%  Indonesia 18%   Global respondents: Overall, 8% said they planned to launch or expand in South Africa 7% investors  8% developers   
1b. 
What are the biggest reasons, if any, you plan to do this? (Select up to 3)  
South Africa respondents: Increasing demand in that market 44% Availability of workforce 44%  Anticipating positive change to the regulatory landscape 42%   
Q2. What low carbon or renewable technologies have you invested in or developed in the last 12 months? (Select all that apply)  South Africa respondents: 93% said carbon capture/storage (net) 60% said storage (net)  33% On-site carbon storage projects 33% Under sea carbon storage projects  23% On shore 79% said carbon capture (net) 56% said post-combustion carbon capture i.e. solvent absorption 49% said pre-combustion carbon capture i.e. integrated gasification  37% Direct Air Capture  42% low carbon hydrogen 26% solar power  23% e-fuels 16% nuclear fission advanced  14 wind power  14% geothermal    
Q3. Which energy system optimisation technologies, if any, have you invested in/ developed? (Select all that apply)  South Africa respondents: 67% said long duration energy storage  58% said grid optimisation  51% Short duration energy storage  47% demand optimisation  29% battery storage  
Q4.  
What low carbon or renewable technologies do you intend to invest/ develop in the next 12 months?  
South Africa respondents: 82% Carbon Capture/storage 50% Carbon Capture  18% said direct air capture  30% post combustion carbon capture 27% pre combustion capture  57% storage  25% onshore carbon storage  18% onsite carbon storage  34% under the sea carbon storage projects 34% low carbon hydrogen  36% Nuclear Fission  39% solar power  23% e-fuels 22% wind power  20% tidal  18% geothermal    
Q5. In which countries, if any, have you made use of a government’s financial incentive for developing or investing in low carbon technology?  South Africa respondents: 49% South Africa   24% France 18% Hong Kong  18% US 16% Germany  13% UK  13% Indonesia   Global respondents: 7% said they had made use of South Africa’s government financial incentive for developing or investing in low carbon technology 6% investors  8% developers   
Q5b. Which types of governmental financial incentives have you made use of for developing or investing in low carbon technology?  South Africa respondents:  44% said capital cost rebates 44% said reduced tax rates 44% said loan guarantees 38% tax credits/rebates 33% contracts for difference  33% preferential interest rates  33% grants  22% PPPs   
Q6. To what extent do you agree or disagree with the following statement in the locations below: There is a supportive regulatory landscape for investing / developing in low carbon technologies in…  South Africa respondents: 96% agree and 0% disagreed re Africa  89% agree and 0% disagree re Asia Pacific  96% agree and 2% disagree re Australia  84% agree and 4% disagree re Canada  78% agree and 9% disagree re Eastern Europe  93% agree and 7% disagree re EU  82% agree and 0% disagree re Latin America 89% agree and 9% disagree re Scandinavia  78% agree and 2% disagree re South Asia  93% agree and 2% disagree re The Middle East  89% agree and 2% disagree re the UK  91% agree and 0% disagree re the US   Global respondents:  86% agree and 3% disagree re Africa  
Q7. What reasons, if any, have most prevented you from investing in a low carbon technology in the last 12-24 months?  South Africa respondents: 56% High cost of compliance  52% Technology is difficult to scale  40% Unstable regulatory landscape  36% lack of government backed incentives  36% lack of demand for the technology  4% no reasons have prevented me  
Q8. What, if anything, factors most into your decision over whether to research and develop a low carbon technology? South Africa respondents: 55% Anticipating positive change  45% Increasing demand for the technology 45% tax breaks or subsidies  35% stable regulatory landscape  35% suitably skilled/qualified workforce  30% access to existing infrastructure to enable the technology  30% ease of scalability   
Q9. 9.b Would you prioritise investing in technologies with guaranteed carbon credit eligibility over those with broader low carbon potential? 
 
Are you developing technologies with carbon credit eligibility as a core feature?  
South Africa respondents: 100% Yes (net)  20% Yes, somewhat  All respondents are investors  100% Yes (net)  25% Yes, sometimes All respondents are developers    
Q10. To what extent do you agree that…  South Africa respondents:  49% agree (net) that it’s difficult to keep up with changing regulation around carbon credits 27% somewhat agree  47% disagree (net)   49% agree (net) that international regulatory divergence creates barriers to scaling carbon credit solutions 49% disagree   53% agree (Net) that market volatility makes carbon credits an unattractive investment objective 44% disagree (net)  53% agree (net) that a lack of harmonised global (or regional) standards for carbon credits makes investment unattractive outside of the EU, the UK or the US 42% disagree (net)   51% agree (Net) that legal uncertainty is the biggest risk factor for investing in carbon credit projects 47% disagree (net)   51% agree (Net) that verification processes for carbon credits are too complex and costly 42% disagree (net)   93% agree (Net) that carbon credits will play a critical role in achieving global net-zero targets 76% strongly agree  6% disagree (net)   91% agree (Net) that government incentives are essential for scaling carbon credit markets 7% disagree (net)   
Q10.b When asked which ONE of the above statements they agreed with most strongly… South Africa respondents: 43% said carbon credits will play a critical role in achieving global net-zero targets 23% said government incentives are essential for scaling carbon credit markets 9% said verification processes for carbon credits are too complex and costly 9% said international regulatory divergence creates barriers to scaling carbon credit solutions 5% said market volatility makes carbon credits an unattractive investment objective 5% said a lack of harmonised global (or regional) standards for carbon credits makes investment unattractive outside of the EU, the UK or the US 5% said it is difficult to keep up with changing regulation around carbon credits 
Q11.  To what extent do you agree or disagree with the following statement: ‘The effectiveness of AI used in grid optimisation and other emission-lowering projects outweighs the emissions cost required to support it (ie power & cool AI systems)’?  South Africa respondents:  100% agree  58% strongly agree  42% somewhat agree  

Share this article

Categories

Headlines

CMS Africa logo with vibrant colors representing digital content management across Africa.