Author
Listed:
- Oliver Ibor Inah
(Department of Electrical Engineering, Tshwane University of Technology, Pretoria 0183, South Africa
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Cross River State, Calabar 1123, Nigeria)
- Prosper Zanu Sotenga
(Department of Electrical Engineering, Tshwane University of Technology, Pretoria 0183, South Africa)
- Udochukwu Bola Akuru
(Department of Electrical Engineering, Tshwane University of Technology, Pretoria 0183, South Africa)
Abstract
South Africa’s manufacturing sector, a driving force for sustainable development, faces a profound challenge in decarbonizing without deindustrializing. This study provides an optimized, scenario-based assessment of the sector explicitly aligned with its Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP) objectives. A novel framework is applied, integrating an extended Kaya–Logarithmic Mean Divisia Index (Kaya–LMDI) decomposition with scenario forecasting and Genetic Algorithm (GA) optimization. The decomposition disaggregates a conventional carbon intensity (CI) driver to include Electrification Share (ELE), Renewable Share (REN), and a newly defined Residual Carbon Factor (RCF) that captures direct fossil fuel use for industrial process heat. Historical analysis (2002–2022) shows that emissions growth was primarily driven by the RCF (224.1 MtCO 2 , 160%) and Economic Activity (187.5 MtCO 2 , 134%), partly offset by gains in Energy Intensity (−141.8 MtCO 2 , 101.35%) and REN (−202.2 MtCO 2 , −144.53%). Carbon emissions projections to 2040 reveal a critical sustainability trilemma: the Just Transition accelerated scenario (JTAS), despite achieving rapid renewable deployment, increases emissions by 469% as economic growth overwhelms decarbonization efforts. Conversely, the mathematically optimal (GA) pathway achieves a 90.8% reduction but only through structural contraction that implies socially unsustainable deindustrialization. This tension exposes the systemic limits of incremental decarbonization and underscores that a truly sustainable pathway requires transcending this binary choice by directly addressing the fossil fuel substrate of industrial production.
Suggested Citation
Oliver Ibor Inah & Prosper Zanu Sotenga & Udochukwu Bola Akuru, 2026.
"Systemic Carbon Lock-In Dynamics and Optimal Sustainable Reduction Pathways for a Just Industrial Transition in South Africa,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(2), pages 1-34, January.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:2:p:956-:d:1842660
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