South Africa has launched the 2026 National Cleantech Innovation Challenge, and this time, they’re doing things differently. Instead of one big competition, they split the program into nine separate challenges. Each one targets a specific problem in a specific province.
Applications opened on February 5 and will close on April 21, 2026. The program seeks innovators, entrepreneurs, small businesses, and research teams with solutions that can scale.
Why Nine Challenges Instead of One
TIA executive Vusi Skosana explains the shift in approach. Provinces face different transition realities. Mpumalanga needs alternatives to coal jobs. The Northern and Western Cape struggle with grid access despite expanding renewable energy. The Free State deals with declining soil quality and climate pressures. Gauteng drowns in waste and traffic congestion.
“This is all built around actionable delivery,” Skosana says. “We wanted to create a framework where national coordination can support solutions ready to be tested and taken to market by local innovators.”
The program puts small and medium enterprises at the center of climate responses. Each province gets a defined challenge based on its most pressing gaps.
What Each Province Needs
Eastern Cape looks for waste-to-value solutions in both urban and rural areas. The province needs technologies that transform low-value waste into useful products and strengthen circular economies.
Free State focuses on regenerative agriculture for large-scale commercial farming. With soils under strain and climate impacts intensifying, the province seeks technologies that restore soil health, conserve water, and embed sustainability across productive farming landscapes.
Gauteng tackles smart mobility. The province needs digital solutions that ease urban congestion, improve access, and create a more connected low-carbon city.
KwaZulu-Natal addresses clean port logistics. The challenge seeks technologies that support cleaner freight, resilient energy systems, and circular manufacturing around busy ports and industrial corridors.
Limpopo concentrates on regenerative agriculture for small-scale farming. The province wants accessible, clean technologies that bolster water, soil, and energy resilience for emerging producers.
Mpumalanga pursues clean energy solutions. As the region shifts from coal, communities need practical innovations that expand power access, repurpose local skills, and support a just transition.
Northern Cape seeks renewable energy generation and transmission solutions. The landscape offers abundant sun and wind but faces transmission limits and water scarcity.
North West challenges innovators to rehabilitate mining lands for agricultural use. The province needs clean technology solutions that restore soil and water systems while enabling food, energy, and circular opportunities.
Western Cape wants hybrid optimization of wind, solar, and biomass technologies. The province seeks solutions that blend renewable sources into reliable systems supporting households, enterprises, and municipal services.
More Than Just a Competition
TIA partners with Network for Global Innovation, regional innovation hubs, and Start-Up Culture to run the program. This collaboration ensures participants get more than recognition.
Winners gain access to technical and commercial expertise. They enter acceleration pathways and connect with networks of partners and investors. The program helps move viable ideas from the pilot phase into everyday use.
Skosana notes that since 2014, more than 800 South African ventures have entered this pipeline through the Global Cleantech Innovation Programme. Hundreds progressed into structured acceleration and post-acceleration support. The NCIC 2026 represents South Africa’s participation in this UN Industrial Development Organisation initiative, supported by the Global Environment Facility.
Participants can access up to R160 million in impact and follow-on funding for scalable proofs-of-concept. They also receive technical assistance for high-potential solutions.
Who Can Apply
Any South Africa-based innovator, entrepreneur, small business, or research team can apply. Solutions must be scalable and align with provincial priorities. The program specifically targets those with cleantech solutions addressing climate, energy, agricultural, and economic challenges.
TIA created the challenge because provinces face increasing pressure to translate climate policy into action. Traditional approaches haven’t delivered fast enough. The agency believes enterprise-level innovation, guided by provincial priorities and national coordination, offers a better path forward.
How to Participate
Interested applicants should visit the NCIC website at ncic-sa.org for full eligibility criteria and application details.
The application process requires demonstrating how solutions address specific provincial challenges. Applicants must show scalability potential and readiness to move beyond pilot phase. The program prioritizes technologies that can deploy quickly and create measurable impact.
Regional innovation hubs and partner organizations offer support throughout the application process. They help refine proposals and connect applicants with resources. This collaborative approach ensures even early-stage innovators can participate effectively.
South Africa’s climate challenges demand urgent action. The NCIC 2026 provides a structured pathway for turning ideas into deployed solutions. With technical support, funding access, and commercial networks, the program reduces barriers that typically prevent cleantech innovations from reaching market scale.
The country’s participation in the Global Cleantech Innovation Programme has already produced hundreds of ventures that progressed to acceleration stages. NCIC 2026 builds on this foundation by adding provincial specificity and targeted support.
For innovators ready to solve real problems with real solutions, the doors are open. South Africa needs cleantech that works. The question now is who will deliver it.










