By 2030, half of all new entrants into the global labour force will come from sub-Saharan Africa. To simply keep pace with that demographic reality, the continent must generate up to 15 million new jobs annually, a challenge that will not be met by hesitant foreign direct investment or the calculations of offshore private equity. It demands the rise of African industrialists: men and women for whom the continent is not an extraction frontier but a home to be built.
The story of Robert Matana Gumede and the Vision Sugar Group’s intervention in the Tongaat Hulett rescue illustrates what that looks like in practice. Vision is the largest secured creditor in the THL business rescue process, with R11.7 billion at stake. Rather than withdrawing, Gumede and Co-Director Rute Moyo have committed R4 billion of Vision’s own capital to the rescue, a level of conviction that stands in marked contrast to the conditions-first posture of other creditors.
Gumede’s trajectory embodies the industrialist narrative that Africa needs more of. He worked as a golf caddie and petrol attendant in Nelspruit before building Gijima into a technology business and expanding into a conglomerate employing over 51,000 people across 32 African countries. His interest in Tongaat Hulett is not opportunistic, it is an act of industrial preservation at a company whose potential collapse would threaten 250,000 livelihoods in the cane-growing sector and cut off the primary route to market for over 15,000 small-scale growers.
His vision for THL extends beyond sugar refining. The roadmap includes converting export sugar into ethanol and generating renewable electricity from bagasse, sugarcane residue, to feed the national grid, transforming a struggling legacy business into a diversified agri-energy platform aligned with global green energy trends. That is the kind of thinking the continent needs: not extraction dressed up as investment but genuine industrial commitment rooted in Ubuntu, the understanding that individual prosperity and collective wellbeing are inseparable. Alongside figures like Aliko Dangote in the north, industrialists like Gumede are demonstrating that African problems, approached with African capital and African ambition, can yield African solutions.






