
Asian brands, EVs dominate 2025 Best Buy Awards
The 2025 Best By Awards, announced by Kelley Blue Book, reflect the rapidly shifting landscape of the automotive market not only in the USA, but also elsewhere.
- Industry News
- 17 April 2025
Ford announced the winners of the Ford College Community Challenge (C3), run in partnership with global non-profit organisation Enactus.
Enactus is a platform to practically demonstrate the power of entrepreneurial action to transform lives and shape a better, more sustainable world.
For the second successive year, the University of KwaZulu-Natal walked away with top honours at the South African finals and the chance to compete on the global Enactus stage. UKZN presented their ‘Ubuntu Social Enterprise’ project – responding to the challenges articulated in the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals around poverty, unemployment and inequality.
The premise of UKZN’s project is to share knowledge with small-scale farmers by providing mentorship and educational assistance on vertical farming, worm farming and drone technology. The project has already generated a total revenue of R512 369, with new farming methods having a measured positive impact on the environment – saving up to 60% of water and producing yields up to five times the generally accepted norm.
Further to the Enactus national finals, each year the Ford Fund selects four universities from the Enactus participants to receive a $5 000 grant (approximately R70 000). The Ford Motor Company Fund is the philanthropic arm of the Ford Motor Company, and in partnership with Enactus, it promotes the development of innovative solutions among university students to address critical needs in their communities.
Last year, the Central University of Technology, Rhodes University, the University of KwaZulu-Natal and the University of Mpumalanga received grants from Ford. This year, finalists from the Central University of Technology, Vaal University of Technology, Walter Sisulu University and the University of Mpumalanga will receive grants from the Ford Fund to implement their projects.
The Central University of Technology will be implementing an EcoBin project, in terms of which they will build dustbins for domestic use as well as large containers to store leftover food for homeless people. Not only will this project address waste management but it will also alleviate hunger by providing food for homeless people.
The Vaal University of Technology has identified a sustainable coal project that addresses issues of more affordable alternative energy, while also providing knowledge of how to run a successful and sustainable coal businesses.
The Walter Sisulu University will undertake a Greenfields farming project, focusing on organic farming and improving the yields of rural farmers. This project aims to introduce new ways of farming and shifting rural farmers from subsistence farming to commercial farming. This will be done by providing mini greenhouse grow beds and seedlings to rural farmers.
And last, the University of Mpumalanga has created a model called Hatching Hope. Hatching Hope is driven by a give-back model, whereby beneficiaries will expand the network of egg layers by bringing back a one-off set of eggs that will be hatched and then redistributed to the next set of beneficiaries.
The 2025 Best By Awards, announced by Kelley Blue Book, reflect the rapidly shifting landscape of the automotive market not only in the USA, but also elsewhere.
Kia took the top honours for the second consecutive year when its all-electric compact crossover was named World Car of the Year during the New York International Auto Show in the USA this week.
The African Association of Automotive Manufacturers (AAAM) is strengthening its commitment to the industrialisation and development of Africa’s automotive sector with the establishment of a new regional office in Tunisia.