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  • Business
    From R7 chilled water from a cooler box, entrepreneurs are turning summer heat into a thriving small business hustles.

    Enterprising street vendors turn water into profit

    Small businesses are still feeling the pinch despite recent economic growth, with many consumers sticking to essentials and delaying larger purchases

    SMEs cautious as GDP growth fails to translate into real gains

    Rising pump prices have added new pressure to small businesses that rely on daily transport.

    Fuel price shock forces SMEs to rethink survival strategies

    Siviwe Township Tours opens a window into community, creativity and resilience, giving visitors an authentic sense of place and identity.

    Social media tools give township tourism a boost

    Bus vandalism threatens commuters, operators, and township economies across South Africa. Photo: Facebook

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    SMEs say cost pressures are increasing as price hikes become unavoidable. Photo: Facebook

    SMEs brace for tough 2026 amid rising costs

    Local processors say retailers are making more enquiries as import uncertainty grows.

    Poultry farmers get the jitters over US chicken imports

    Poultry SMEs gear up for December demand. Photo: Udemy

    Small scale poultry farmers brace for high festive season demand

    JSE initiative set to unlock funding channels for Limpopo SMEs

    Import dependent SMEs hope RMB payments will reduce delays and exchange rate losses.

    RMB payments set to improve import trade for SMEs

  • Agriculture
    Local processors say retailers are making more enquiries as import uncertainty grows.

    Poultry farmers get the jitters over US chicken imports

    Poultry SMEs gear up for December demand. Photo: Udemy

    Small scale poultry farmers brace for high festive season demand

    Cash flow survival tactics every entrepreneur should know

    Limpopo litchi farmers cash in on the seasonal fruit

    SMEs in the agriculture sector say they are eager to grow their presence in global markets, but producers say they continue to face steep financial and technical barriers that make export participation difficult. Photo. Lucas Ledwaba\Mukurukuru Media

    Small scale farmers face steep barriers in export market

    Mangoe farmers in Limpopo are cashing in on the high demand from the booming atchaar industry. Photo. Facebook

    Mango season drives atchaar trade in Limpopo

    Small scale grain producers are set to benefit from a R23million government cash injection. Photo. CSPI

    R23m cash injection set to boost small-scale grain producers

    Small-scale farmers say limited access to major fresh-produce markets continues to restrict their growth.

    Small farmers struggle to crack the big fresh-produce markets

  • Innovation
    Import dependent SMEs hope RMB payments will reduce delays and exchange rate losses.

    RMB payments set to improve import trade for SMEs

    South Africa’s tourism sector is positioning itself for a more tech-driven future following the launch of a Smart Tourism Visitor Information Centre (VIC) at OR Tambo International Airport.

    ORT airport digital centre gives SMEs exposure

    The Chief Commercial Officer of HisWay Labs, Mr Kent Gibbon, showcasing TrackView on Day 1 of the Rail Live 2025.

    South Africa’s small rail engineers target international markets

    SMEs in the Tshwane Metro have been given an opportunity to learn online marketing skills. Graphic. nanos.ai

    SMEs look to score from Tshwane’s free digital marketing course

    Shesha Energy Drink, made from locally sourced sugarcane, marks a new step toward innovation in South Africa’s agro-processing sector.

    Shesha energy drink refreshes canegrowers’ hopes

    Global information services company Experian is using artificial intelligence (AI) to help scores of South Africans who have lived and worked outside the formal banking system into the network. Photo. Lucas Ledwaba\Mukurukuru Media

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    The Faraday Taxi Association has introduced a cashless VIP card to help commuters save time

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  • Finance
    Small businesses are still feeling the pinch despite recent economic growth, with many consumers sticking to essentials and delaying larger purchases

    SMEs cautious as GDP growth fails to translate into real gains

    SMEs say cost pressures are increasing as price hikes become unavoidable. Photo: Facebook

    SMEs brace for tough 2026 amid rising costs

    Import dependent SMEs hope RMB payments will reduce delays and exchange rate losses.

    RMB payments set to improve import trade for SMEs

    Experts agree that global commitments made at the G20 Leaders’ Summit could unlock significant benefits for small businesses

    G20 Summit could unlock significant benefits for SMEs

    The United Kingdom has announced a series of new partnerships and investments aimed at helping small businesses grow, creating jobs, and supporting digital innovation in South Africa.

    UK partnerships to boost SA small businesses

    From left to right: Charles Wyeth, HEINEKEN Beverages; Vignesh Subramani, Absa CIB; Jordi Borrut, HEINEKEN Beverages; Sade Morgan, HEINEKEN Global; Joanna Price, HEINEKEN Global; Stephen Seaka, Absa CIB; Jan de Kock, Absa CIB

    Black-owned SMEs to gain from Absa and Heineken R1.2 billion fund

    African Bank is rolling out a new system to help small suppliers to manage cash flow

    Bank’s new system to help small suppliers manage cash flow

    Minister of Finance Enoch Godongwana delivering his mid term budget. Photo. GCIS

    Medium term budget gives SMEs hope

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  • Tourism
    South African and Mozambican flags fly together, reflecting the countries’ renewed commitment to deeper tourism cooperation and regional growth.

    SA – Moz tourism deal to unlock opportunities for SMEs

    Siviwe Township Tours opens a window into community, creativity and resilience, giving visitors an authentic sense of place and identity.

    Social media tools give township tourism a boost

    South Africa’s tourism sector is positioning itself for a more tech-driven future following the launch of a Smart Tourism Visitor Information Centre (VIC) at OR Tambo International Airport.

    ORT airport digital centre gives SMEs exposure

    Shabalala Interpretation of Culture Centre in Mpumalanga is ready to welcome tourists during the festive season.

    Tourism cultural villages spice up services ahead of holidays

    Tourism SMEs across South Africa gearing up for festive season. Photo. www.sowetotowers.co.za

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    Medical tourism is on the rise in South Africa.

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    Tomato fields at M.V. Zulu Farming

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    Visitors to the Singo Tented Camp enjoy the experience of spending a night in a tent under the towering baobab trees Photo: Lucas Ledwaba/Mukurukuru Media

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    Siviwe Township Tours opens a window into community, creativity and resilience, giving visitors an authentic sense of place and identity.

    Social media tools give township tourism a boost

    Cash flow survival tactics every entrepreneur should know

    On a picturesque farm in Fochville in western Gauteng, André Badenhorst the owner of Animal Farm is taking steps to implement the Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA). Photo. Animal Farm

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    Meet the AI tools changing the game for SMEs

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South Africa moves to open oil & gas sector to youth

by Lazola Zuma
June 30, 2025
in Business, Top story
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A

During Youth Month, a new conversation took shape, one that challenges the long-standing exclusion of young entrepreneurs from capital-heavy industries like oil and gas.
With the country facing persistent youth unemployment and a small business sector under strain, questions are being asked about who gets to participate in the economy of the future.

That question was at the centre of a recent webinar titled Opening Access to Market, Capital and Trade in South Africa’s Oil and Gas Sector.

The event formed part of a build-up to the upcoming Youth in Trade Theory of Change Workshop. It was hosted by the South African Youth Trade Association in partnership with the Department of Small Business Development and the South African Oil and Gas Alliance.

The discussion explored the real opportunities and constraints facing young entrepreneurs in a sector often regarded as too complex, too regulated and too expensive for SMEs to meaningfully enter.

Programme director Sam Ding opened the session by describing start-ups and MSMEs as the heartbeat of innovation. However, in industries like oil and gas, that innovation was often stifled by high barriers to entry.

“This webinar is your gateway to understanding how to scale in one of the world’s most dynamic sectors,” Ding said.

He urged young business owners to explore all points of the value chain, upstream, midstream and downstream.

Upstream activities include exploration and drilling. Here, SMEs could provide data services, surveying and even safety training. Midstream operations involve transport and storage, which opens the door to logistics providers, compliance experts and digital tracking solutions.

Downstream, where products are refined and sold, opportunities exist for packaging, distribution, catering and waste management.

But across the board, access to finance and market information remains a major hurdle.

South African Oil and Gas Alliance CEO Adrian Strydom said that success in the sector must be measured differently.

He cited Guyana’s President Irfaan Ali, who recently said that oil and gas progress should be evaluated by how many people were trained and developed—not just how much oil is pumped.

“If we fail our young people, we fail. Period. The real value of this sector lies in human capital,” Strydom said.

That value was not being realised, according to SA Youth Trade Alliance (SAYTA) president Loyolo Dwesi, who said the current generation of young people was not fighting for education like the generation of 1976.

“We are fighting to participate in the economy,” he said.

Dwesi argued for a youth-centric model of industrial development and highlighted the need for demographic data that tracked youth participation in oil and gas.

“Ask how many young people are benefiting from the sector and you won’t get a clear answer,” he said.

SAYTA is responding by launching a Youth School of Export and formalising its partnership with the International Trade Institution of South Africa.

Dwesi also emphasised the need for targeted data collection and trade advocacy, particularly in support of informal enterprises.

Small Business Development Deputy Minister Jane Sithole said the time for implementation has come.

“People are tired of speeches that lead nowhere. Our youth are standing up and ready. What they need now is an enabling environment, not another round of promises,” she said.

Sithole added that the National Development Plan projected the creation of 11 million jobs by 2030, with at least nine million expected to come from small enterprises.

“That is not going to happen unless we create space for young SMEs to thrive in every sector, including oil and gas,” she stated.

The webinar also highlighted how many youth-owned businesses remained unaware of the practical entry points available in the oil and gas value chain. For example, a small logistics company could offer transport services in the midstream segment, while a digital marketing agency could assist with downstream branding and compliance.

These businesses may not require direct contact with fossil fuel products, but still play a critical role in the sector’s supply chain.

The Youth in Trade Theory of Change initiative aims to map out a long-term plan for integrating young entrepreneurs into key sectors of the economy, including those linked to the African Continental Free Trade Area.

SAYTA and its partners believe that by building a pipeline of informed, skilled and funded youth enterprises, South Africa can achieve not just economic recovery, but inclusive industrial growth.

Tags: Oil and gas sectorSMEs in oilYoung entrepreneursYouth in Trade
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Lazola Zuma

Lazola Zuma

Lazola Zuma is a journalist at Vutivi Business News, where she covers business and agriculture stories with a focus on South Africa’s small and medium enterprises (SMEs). Passionate about telling stories that spotlight township and rural entrepreneurs, Lazola’s reporting explores how policy, finance, and innovation shape the daily realities of small businesses. In addition to her reporting role, she assists Vutivi’s social media team by creating engaging digital content that connects readers to the publication’s latest news. Outside the newsroom, Lazola is a content creator who shares beauty, lifestyle, and fashion content.

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