Imiesa February 2022

Page 5

MANAGING EDITOR Alastair Currie SENIOR JOURNALIST Kirsten Kelly JOURNALIST Nombulelo Manyana FEATURES WRITER Ziyanda Majodina HEAD OF DESIGN Beren Bauermeister DESIGNER Lizette Jonker CHIEF SUB-EDITOR Tristan Snijders CONTRIBUTORS Peter Fenton, Prashil Gareeb, Jitesh Harripershad, Vladimir Milovanovic, Luke Reid, Bhavna Soni, Santosh Soobryan, Kevin Volmink PRODUCTION & CLIENT LIAISON MANAGER Antois-Leigh Nepgen PRODUCTION COORDINATOR Jacqueline Modise GROUP SALES MANAGER Chilomia Van Wijk BOOKKEEPER Tonya Hebenton DISTRIBUTION MANAGER Nomsa Masina DISTRIBUTION COORDINATOR Asha Pursotham SUBSCRIPTIONS subs@3smedia.co.za PRINTERS Novus Print Montague Gardens ___________________________________________________ ADVERTISING SALES KEY ACCOUNT MANAGER Joanne Lawrie Tel: +27 (0)11 233 2600 / +27 (0)82 346 5338 Email: joanne@3smedia.co.za ___________________________________________________

PUBLISHER Jacques Breytenbach 3S Media Production Park, 83 Heidelberg Road, City Deep Johannesburg South, 2136 PO Box 92026, Norwood 2117 Tel: +27 (0)11 233 2600 www.3smedia.co.za ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION: R600.00 (INCL VAT) ISSN 0257 1978 IMIESA, Inst.MUNIC. ENG. S. AFR. © Copyright 2022. All rights reserved. ___________________________________________________ IMESA CONTACTS HEAD OFFICE: Manager: Ingrid Botton P.O. Box 2190, Westville, 3630 Tel: +27 (0)31 266 3263 Email: admin@imesa.org.za Website: www.imesa.org.za BORDER Secretary: Celeste Vosloo Tel: +27 (0)43 705 2433 Email: celestev@buffalocity.gov.za EASTERN CAPE Secretary: Susan Canestra Tel: +27 (0)41 585 4142 ext. 7 Email: imesaec@imesa.org.za KWAZULU-NATAL Secretary: Narisha Sogan Tel: +27 (0)31 266 3263 Email: imesakzn@imesa.org.za NORTHERN PROVINCES Secretary: Ollah Mthembu Tel: +27 (0)82 823 7104 Email: np@imesa.org.za SOUTHERN CAPE KAROO Secretary: Henrietta Olivier Tel: +27 (0)79 390 7536 Email: imesasck@imesa.org.za WESTERN CAPE Secretary: Michelle Ackerman Tel: +27 (0)21 444 7114 Email: imesawc@imesa.org.za FREE STATE & NORTHERN CAPE Secretary: Wilma Van Der Walt Tel: +27 (0)83 457 4362 Email: imesafsnc@imesa.org.za All material herein IMIESA is copyright protected and may not be reproduced without the prior written permission of the publisher. The views of the authors do not necessarily reflect those of the Institute of Municipal Engineering of Southern Africa or the publishers. _____________________________________________ Novus Holdings is a Level 2 BBBEE Contributor: novus.holdings/sustainability/transformation

EDITOR’S COMMENT

Forging a social

AND CONNECTED COMPACT

F

ollowing the 2022 State of the Nation Address (SONA), and the National Budget Speech on 23 February, South Africans across the board are analysing and digesting the facts and statements presented. Collectively, we’re all ‘shareholders’ in South Africa Inc. and heavily invested in terms of lives and livelihoods in a positive outcome. After a tough 24 or so months of Covid-19, the solutions are even more significant and, as taxpayers, we’re depending on ethical and decisive leadership to take us forward. At SONA 2022, President Cyril Ramaphosa referred to “a new consensus which embraces our shared responsibility to one another and acknowledges that we are all in this together.” As is the case for leading nations worldwide, he also emphasised the role of government to create an enabling environment for the private sector as the vital catalyst for socio-economic prosperity. Key to this is the ease of doing business, so it’s encouraging to see that there’s a renewed commitment to cutting the red tape.

A construction resurgence in 2022 Could 2022 be the year that South African construction takes pole position in terms of GDP sector ranking? Perhaps we’re not quite there yet, but the fact is that many of the SONA or Budget Speech objectives can only be achieved with private sector infrastructure investment. Going for ward, South Africa’s overriding objective is to address youth unemployment, and unemployment in general. Futuristic industries, like the emerging green hydrogen sector, have far-reaching benefits. But it doesn’t help those with no immediate job prospects or employable skills. To be inclusive, the economy must create paths for unskilled or semi-skilled jobseekers to enter the market. One of the starting points is labour-intensive construction (LIC), an initiative that has always formed part of government’s Expanded Public Works Programme but has

An inclusive digital economy Before employment creation can start in earnest, though, the pathway to prosperity for all learners, jobseekers, aspiring SMMEs and everyone else is the internet of things. Free Wi-Fi or access to affordable cellular services and the web are now make or break factors in our increasingly smart world. For this reason, opening the market up to new network providers is essential. The most recent development here is the radiofrequency auction scheduled to take place in March 2022 under the auspices of the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA). This will be the country’s first spectrum auction, and the outcome is expected to have a positive ripple effect on pricing and connectivity. When everyone is connected, irrespective of their financial means, then we have made a breakthrough that opens the doors to exciting new possibilities.

Alastair To our avid readers, check out what we are talking about on our website, Facebook page or follow us on Twitter and have your say.

www.infrastructurenews.co.za

IMESA

@infrastructure4

Infrastructure News

The official magazine of the Institute of Municipal Engineering of Southern Africa

INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT • SERVICE DELIVERY • ROADS • BUILDING • MAINTENANCE

INDUSTRY INSIGHT Product leadership doesn’t happen by chance John Fleetwood

Managing Director, Bell Equipment Sales South Africa

Thought Leadership Moving people and the economy

Municipal Focus: eThekwini

EMERGENCY REHABILITATION OF THE SEAWARD ROAD BRIDGE

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arguably lacked traction in terms of capacity and sustainable skills transfer. Prime LIC opportunities include government’s unfolding roads programmes, so vital for socioeconomic prosperity. At SONA, for example, it was stated that plans are in place to use LIC techniques to construct or upgrade 685 km of rural routes over the next three years. Allied initiatives include the Welisizwe Rural Bridges Programme being rolled out by the Department of Public Works and Infrastructure Development, with the SANDF as the implementing agent. These and other initiatives create a perfect platform for aspiring jobseekers to enter the construction sector and build their foundational skills.

Building Systems 3D printing in Malawi

Information & Communications Technology

Cover opportunity

In each issue, IMIESA offers advertisers the opportunity to get to the front of the line by placing a company, product or service on the front cover of the journal. Buying this position will afford the advertiser the cover story and maximum exposure. For more information on cover bookings, contact Joanne Lawrie on +27 (0)82 346 5338.

The value of connectivity

Environmental Engineering Kuils River corridor plan unlocks development

IN THE HOT SEAT We understand the importance of a shared vision and a common purpose, benchmarked against local and international best practice.”

David-Fredrick Leukes Managing Director of BVi

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IMIESA February 2022

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Articles inside

Milling in the compact class

3min
page 53

Mapei: 85 years old and still looking to the future

4min
pages 50-52

The evolution of a screening legend

9min
pages 44-47

The act of refuge

2min
page 41

BIM is not a software application

5min
pages 42-43

One small sensor helps

2min
page 40

Teamwork needed to rebuild SA’s economy

4min
pages 34-35

What could cause fouling of membranes?

2min
page 33

Kuils River corridor plan unlocks development

6min
pages 36-37

Gabions build a foundation for SMME development

5min
pages 38-39

Think and act globally, execute locally

4min
pages 30-32

Legacy infrastructure: the hidden threat

2min
page 27

Moving people and the economy

6min
pages 28-29

Certification provides assurance and is more than a test report

7min
pages 24-26

Leading from the front

6min
pages 22-23

Building knowledge, delivering insight

5min
pages 18-19

Bridging the gap between emerging and established contractors

5min
pages 20-21

Infrastructure news from around the continenent

5min
pages 8-9

Product leadership doesn’t happen by chance

6min
pages 12-13

The value of connectivity

3min
pages 10-11

Emergency rehabilitation of the Seaward Road Bridge

8min
pages 14-17

Editor’s comment

5min
pages 5-6

President’s comment

2min
page 7
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