Future Cities Africa podcast

Dan @ Future Cities Africa

Future Cities Africa hosts discussions with thought leaders and experts at the forefront of major trends, projects, innovations, challenges and opportunities impacting the future of African Cities. Major drivers such as rapid urbanisation, health crisis, climate change, inadequate infrastructure, technology advancement and more are creating an urgent need for African Cities to become sustainable, livable and workable. New ways of thinking about governance, funding, mobility, urban planning and design, construction and implementation of projects coupled with major advancements in technology like 5G, blockchain, artificial intelligence, the internet of things, data science, machine learning, renewable energy and more give promise of an uncertain but exciting future. To learn and stay at the forefront of trends, projects, innovations, challenges and opportunities impacting what future African Cities will look likesSubscribe to stay informed.

  1. Built on Values: Governance and Innovation in Bergrivier

    May 25

    Built on Values: Governance and Innovation in Bergrivier

    Built on Values: Governance, Digital Transformation and a Vision for Bergrivier | Innovation in Local Government Series Presented by Business Engineering | Future Cities Africa Bergrivier Municipality in the Western Cape has achieved 10 consecutive clean audits, 10 consecutive funded budgets, and is one of only 40 municipalities in South Africa participating in the UN's voluntary SDG review process. But this conversation goes well beyond the numbers. Municipal Manager Advocate Hanlie Linde unpacks what actually makes Bergrivier work - from financial discipline and digital transformation to an extraordinary 12-year partnership with a Belgian twin city, and a community vision built around prosperity and dignity for all. WHAT WE COVER On sustaining good governance Bergrivier's foundation is three equal partners: the professional administration, an elected council that makes difficult long-term decisions, and an organised public that holds both accountable. Strong oversight structures, ethical values and a culture of service excellence are lived daily - not stated on a wall. On digital transformation When Hanlie joined in 2012, the municipality had 16 unintegrated systems. Today Bergrivier uses PhoenixERP as its core financial system and the Collaborator document management platform from Business Engineering for daily operations. A citizen-facing app has been rolled out across all nine towns, and an interdepartmental ICT committee drives the smart city agenda incrementally - because rural municipalities must bring their communities along, not leave them behind.   On the twin city partnership with Heist-op-den-Berg, Belgium Running for 12 years, the partnership is built on reciprocity - both municipalities learn from each other. A seven-year Waste Ambassadors Programme brought world-leading recycling and composting skills to Bergrivier. In return, Bergrivier has taught Belgium about public participation. A biannual youth exchange sends 10 learners in each direction, giving young people from the poorest families experiences that would otherwise have been unimaginable. On embedding the SDGs into municipal planning Bergrivier is reporting on four SDGs: No Poverty, Water and Sanitation, Sustainable Cities and Communities, and Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions. Each is underpinned by a baseline, SWOT analysis and KPIs mainstreamed into quarterly performance assessments. Public meetings in all nine towns ask residents directly which of the 17 SDGs matters most to them. On Bergrivier's vision "A prosperous community where all want to live, work, learn and play in a dignified manner." Prosperous means happy, safe and educated - not wealthy. Dignity means the one fifth of families registered as indigent are not left behind. The word "all" is intentional: everyone who commits to those values is welcome. To investors: Bergrivier is open for business. To other municipalities: it is three equal partners doing hard work every day with clear roles, strong values and a shared vision.

    18 min
  2. Connected and Competitive: African Transport Infrastructure Lessons from the Front Lines

    Feb 18

    Connected and Competitive: African Transport Infrastructure Lessons from the Front Lines

    Key Themes from the Discussion Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) and Stakeholder Participation Drawing from experience on cross-border projects like the Maputo Corridor, Hannes stresses that successful PPPs require early, genuine, and integrated stakeholder engagement (communities, businesses, government departments, media). It's not a one-way info dump - show willingness to adapt designs/processes based on feedback. Address "what's in it for them" (e.g., subcontracting, jobs). Harmonize legislation, operations, and processes across borders to avoid conflicts. Communities are sophisticated (including professionals like engineers/lawyers); involve them respectfully to avoid resistance. Direct, open, fact-based communication (including with media) builds the right perception and counters misinformation. Innovative Approaches for Urban Resilience and Sustainability Africa's rapid urbanization and congestion create big opportunities for smarter transport solutions. Tolcon is evolving beyond traditional tolls/weighbridges/ITS to address emerging needs via its renewable energy and software companies. Key innovations highlighted: Smart tolling (satellite-based, multi-lane free-flow, congestion/time-based pricing). Integration with navigation apps (e.g., Google Maps/Waze) for incentives to avoid peak congestion. Intelligent traffic management (adaptive traffic lights using real-time data). These reduce unnecessary congestion, improve efficiency, and help make cities more competitive and sustainable while tackling infrastructure funding gaps. Lessons for Future Urban Projects Proper project preparation is essential (feasibility studies, traffic/environmental assessments) to attract funders. Strong project structure: Harmonize cross-border elements and create unified implementing authorities where possible (as in Maputo Corridor). Prioritize local involvement for equitable benefits - make communities feel ownership, create jobs, and build local capacity rather than relying on external firms that "build and leave." Tolcon's Excitement and Future Role Hannes is optimistic about growing government willingness across Africa to develop infrastructure and close the competitiveness gap. Tolcon wants to contribute by: Leveraging its deep African understanding and experience. Delivering sustainable solutions with skill transfer, local employment/contractor use, and training - so countries become self-reliant. Avoiding dependency; aim for projects where locals can operate independently after Tolcon exits. This supports job creation, economic development, connected cities, and scalable transport corridors/urban mobility solutions. The company is eager to participate in the expanding pipeline of African projects, especially ahead of events like Infrastructure Africa 2026. Overview of Tolcon Group Tolcon Group is a leading South African provider of transport infrastructure management services, operating since 1985 as an ISO-accredited company. It consists of six operating companies and specializes in: Toll and weighbridge operations and maintenance Freeway/intelligent transport systems Route management and routine road maintenance Toll system development and supply Additional areas like renewable energy (solar) solutions, software development, and specialist electrical installations The company has 40 years of experience in South Africa (e.g., managing contracts for SANRAL and private concessionaires) and is expanding into Africa, with an established presence in Zambia and active exploration in countries like Mozambique, Tanzania, Kenya, Nigeria, and Uganda. Tolcon positions itself as a trusted, integrity-driven African partner focused on sustainable growth, not just short-term projects.

    15 min
  3. Kouga Municipality: Leadership, Accountability, and the Power of Digital Innovation

    12/02/2025

    Kouga Municipality: Leadership, Accountability, and the Power of Digital Innovation

    Presented by Business Engineering Guest: Dawie de Jager, Deputy Municipal Manager, Kouga Local Municipality Episode Focus: How Kouga went from financial distress in 2016 to becoming the best-performing municipality in the Eastern Cape (2025 SAPOA | Ratings Africa Awards) and achieving repeated clean audits. Key Takeaways: Turnaround Foundation (2016 onwards) Clean, ethical governance and strict financial discipline were non-negotiable Appointed competent, ethical people despite salary-cap challenges Strong consequence management for fraud and unethical behaviour Excellent CFOs enforced compliance with the MFMA led to Kouga's first clean audit and continuous improvement Performance Management & Oversight Cascaded performance agreements from top to bottom Introduced Ignite system with monthly tracking and live dashboards Strong political-administrative alignment and council oversight Infrastructure & Visible Results Fixed dilapidated bulk water & wastewater treatment works (e.g., state-of-the-art upgrades at KwaNomzamo) Massive road resealing program (targeting 71% of roads) + new gravel-to-tar projects Innovation in Service Delivery Smart technology on suction tankers, smart metering pilots, upgraded wastewater plants Central incident management system: call centre - job dispatch - photo proof - SMS notification - customer rates the service Ward-based WhatsApp groups, multilingual communication, online building-plan submissions Digital Transformation (Collaborator & Beyond) Collaborator platform streamlined document management, policy reviews, council resolutions, and agenda preparation PowerBI service-delivery dashboards give real-time ward-level insights Early AI exploration: internal search on documents, future WhatsApp AI assistant (with caution) Future Outlook Balancing cutting-edge tech with the human touch South Africans still value Embracing AI and smart tools proactively 'so we are not left behind' Kouga's success recipe = ethical leadership + financial discipline + competent people + smart digital systems that make governance and service delivery transparent, fast, and accountable. A standout example for local government in South Africa.

    18 min

About

Future Cities Africa hosts discussions with thought leaders and experts at the forefront of major trends, projects, innovations, challenges and opportunities impacting the future of African Cities. Major drivers such as rapid urbanisation, health crisis, climate change, inadequate infrastructure, technology advancement and more are creating an urgent need for African Cities to become sustainable, livable and workable. New ways of thinking about governance, funding, mobility, urban planning and design, construction and implementation of projects coupled with major advancements in technology like 5G, blockchain, artificial intelligence, the internet of things, data science, machine learning, renewable energy and more give promise of an uncertain but exciting future. To learn and stay at the forefront of trends, projects, innovations, challenges and opportunities impacting what future African Cities will look likesSubscribe to stay informed.