October 2020.
The Globeleq Scholarship Fund (GSF), has expanded its footprint and focus for the upcoming 2021 academic year, offering opportunities for youth across the Northern Cape.
The programme, which launched six years ago, to help develop young engineering students for the renewable energy industry and actively support the transformation of the industry, has grown and evolved to include a category for scarce skills as well as for rural communities targeting specific rural beneficiary communities in the Northern Cape.
This means that the scholarships can be truly localised and support the development of scarce skills to bring about real development and socio-economic interventions for students who reside in the Northern Cape.
“The GSF is accountable for a sizeable percentage of renewable energy funded-scholarships, supporting 100% black youth and mostly women beneficiaries, setting an ambitious target not only for the renewable energy industry but for other sectors who are striving to support the transformation agenda of this country,” said Hlengiwe Radebe, Economic Development Director for Globeleq.
The GSF Engineering fund is designed to support the renewable energy sector and ensure a pipeline of qualified talent. It is offered nationally through institutions offering mechatronic or electrical engineering and is specifically aimed at students studying mechatronic or electrical engineering.
Whilst the GSF Scarce Skills programme is specifically offered to students in the Northern Cape wishing to pursue degrees or certificates in education, agriculture or nursing. These areas need these types of skills to support regional economic development.
The third fund, namely GSF Communities, supports localised development, as it is offered to students residing within a 50km radius in which Globeleq’s renewable energy power plants operate, namely De Aar Solar Power, Droogfontein Solar Power, Aries Solar Power, Konkoonsies Solar Power and Boshof Solar Power. This is a broad reach from the northern Upington, across to Kimberley in the East and down to towns around De Aar and Bristown in the south of the Province.
Since 2016, the GSF recipients have been 100% black youth and over 55% female for the last three years. The programme utilises a less conventional and holistic approach to funding, by typically not only focusing on academic achievement, but rather on financial need, location of the students and gender to demonstrate its commitment to increase the cache of women engineers in the country and to the sector.
The GSF has adjusted over the years, to consistently provide young people with exposure to the renewable energy industry, as well as offering opportunities through an internship programme for beneficiaries to gain the necessary work experience. Specifically, the opportunity for national diploma students to complete their required in-service training and thereby fill the technical skills gap within the renewable energy industry.