Johannesburg, South Africa. The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), the country’s second-largest political party, have escalated their political crisis into a direct threat to the United Kingdom’s investment climate. In a televised press conference this morning, party leader Julius Malema demanded the immediate dismissal of Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy, Gwede Mantashe, citing gross mismanagement and failure of energy policy. The demand, if not met, could trigger a collapse of bilateral trade agreements worth billions.
This is not a political squabble; it is a thermodynamic reality check. South Africa’s energy grid, already crippled by rolling blackouts, is now a geopolitical asset that the UK desperately needs. The United Kingdom, fresh from its own energy crisis, has pivoted to South Africa for critical minerals like platinum and manganese, essential for battery storage and hydrogen fuel cells. But if the EFF holds Mantashe’s portfolio hostage, the supply chains for these technologies could fracture.
The data tells a stark story. South Africa’s energy sector lost 2.1% of GDP in 2023 due to load shedding. Mantashe’s ministry has been slow to approve renewable energy licences, with an average delay of 18 months. The EFF, while populist, is not wrong about the crisis. But the demand for Mantashe’s head is a short-term solution to a long-term problem. The real issue is the physics of energy: you cannot power an economy on protest alone.
The UK’s exposure is significant. According to the Department for Business and Trade, British firms have invested over £10 billion in South African mineral extraction and energy projects. A political crisis that destabilises Mantashe’s ministry could freeze new licences, halt exports, and send commodity prices soaring. That would be a body blow to the UK’s net-zero transition, which relies on a steady supply of these minerals.
But there is a deeper concern. The EFF’s ultimatum is a symptom of a broader biosphere collapse narrative. South Africa’s water crisis, driven by climate change, is now intersecting with its energy crisis. Coal-fired power plants require massive water cooling, but the drought is reducing river flows. The UK’s investment, built on the assumption of stable resources, is now risk-premium heavy. The demand for Mantashe’s sack is a signal that the political system cannot manage these intersecting stresses.
What happens next depends on President Cyril Ramaphosa. He could sack Mantashe and risk a party rebellion, or he could defy the EFF and face a vote of no confidence. The markets, however, do not wait for politics. The rand is already down 3% against the pound this week. If the crisis deepens, UK investors will pull capital, triggering a cascade of divestment. That would be a tragedy for both countries, because the energy transition is a race against time, and South Africa has the minerals to win it.
In my reporting, I always look for the physical anchor. Here it is the flow of electrons and minerals. The UK needs South Africa’s platinum for catalytic converters in hydrogen electrolysis. South Africa needs UK capital to build solar farms. This is a symbiotic relationship that the EFF, in their political theatre, threatens to sever. The demand for Mantashe’s sack is not just a political move; it is a thermostat check on the global energy transition. If South Africa fails, the UK’s climate targets become that much harder to reach.
There is no time for complacency. The EFF has called for mass protests tomorrow. If the grid goes down again, the message will be clear: political instability is now an economic liability. The UK should prepare contingencies, perhaps fast-tracking trade deals with other mineral-rich nations. But that is a costly distraction. The best outcome is a rapid resolution. Ramaphosa must act, not just for his government’s survival, but for the stability of a critical global supply chain.
This is not a story about a minister; it is a story about the physics of survival. The planet is warming, and our systems for managing resources are crumbling. South Africa’s political crisis is a microcosm of a larger failure: the inability of our institutions to respond to biosphere threats with the urgency they demand. The UK investment climate is a thermometer, and it is redlining.








