US tariffs, AGOA renewal and its meaning for SA’s exports
In early 2026, global trade watchers were shaken by a series of dramatic developments in United States (US) and South Africa (SA) economic relations.
- Industry News
- 23 February 2026
Ahead of the Budget Speech on Wednesday, Zero Carbon Charge (CHARGE) calls on Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana to align import duties on electric vehicles (EVs) with those applied to internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles.
It also calls for the scrapping of ad valorem tax on EVs and allocation of dedicated funding to roll out off-grid, solar-powered EV charging infrastructure nationwide.
South Africa cannot tax clean mobility as a luxury while claiming to prioritise decarbonisation and industrial growth, nor can it expect EV adoption to accelerate without funding the infrastructure that makes ownership practical, CHARGE claims.
While CHARGE welcomes the 150% manufacturing tax incentive for electric and hydrogen-powered vehicles from 1 March 2026, this will not unlock scale if EVs continue to face high import duties and additional ad valorem (luxury) tax.
“You cannot incentivise EV production on one hand and penalise EV adoption on the other,” says Joubert Roux, Co-Founder and Chair of CHARGE. “Without urgent tax reform and infrastructure funding, South Africa risks constraining domestic EV demand at precisely the moment it is trying to attract EV investment.”
According to the Automotive Business Council | naamsa, hybrid and electric passenger vehicle sales rose 8.1% year-on-year in the first ten months of 2025, reaching 13 358 units, after a 105% surge in 2024. Market share now stands at 3.8%, excluding one major EV manufacturer that does not report to naamsa.
“Demand is growing,” Joubert says. “But it will stall if drivers don’t see charging stations where they need them. Without a visible, reliable network, especially along major highways and freight corridors, consumers will lack the confidence to buy EVs.”
National Treasury must now move beyond policy intent and fund charging infrastructure, as envisaged in the 2023 EV White Paper. The policy recognises charging infrastructure as a foundational pillar of South Africa’s EV transition, committing government to enable large-scale rollout, remove regulatory bottlenecks and crowd in private investment. It also acknowledges that off-grid charging solutions can support EV adoption without adding pressure to an already constrained electricity system.
CHARGE is calling on Treasury to fast-track implementation by recognising off-grid charging stations as both energy and transport infrastructure and supporting their rollout accordingly.
The EV charging network will largely be built by the private sector but only if the financial framework makes it viable. The 2026 Budget must therefore provide:
“Charging infrastructure requires significant upfront capital and long payback periods,” Joubert says. “Government doesn’t need to build the network, but it must create the conditions for the private sector to scale it.”
Global automotive manufacturers are recalibrating their ambitions after a costly miscalculation of global demand for electric vehicles.
BMW Group’s Cell Recycling Competence Centre in Salching is rapidly becoming a cornerstone of Europe’s transition toward a resilient circular battery economy.
The European Commission charts a zero-emission vehicle future for vehicles exported to Europe, while holding the commitment to reducing CO2 emissions from all new vehicle sales.