The 44th Southern African Transport Conference opens today at the CSIR International Convention Centre in Pretoria, running from 6 to 9 July 2026 under the theme Developing and sustaining transport systems in an uncertain world.
This year’s conference has several sessions that speak directly to the freight and logistics sector.
One paper looks at delays at 4 South African border posts and estimates average weekly delays of 68,000 hours for heavy goods vehicleswith costs of R350 to R500 per truck per hour and wait times ranging from 7 to 70 hours per crossing.
For cross-border traders, fleet operators, freight forwarders, and cargo owners, these numbers sit inside transport rates, delivery delays, missed slots, working capital pressure, and customer complaints.
Another paper looks at the Road Transport Management System, or RTMS, and notes that only 15,800 trucksabout 3.5% of the national fleetwere RTMS-certified in 2022.
The same research attributes avoided costs and impacts to that certified fleet, including 24.2 million litres of fuel, R153 million in accident costsand 65,000 tonnes of CO2 annually.
The direct question for road freight operations here is “what happens if disciplined fleet management moves beyond a small slice of the market?”
Rail is also firmly on the agenda.
SATC 2026 includes a rail session featuring Rowlen von Gerick of Minrail Solutions, described as South Africa’s first approved private Train Operating Company, with approval to move about 3.3 million tonnes of iron ore per year on a heavy-haul corridor.
This is a practical rail reform story for freight owners who want to know whether private participation can create capacity, reliability, and confidence on live corridors.
Road safety also connects directly to freight and logistics. A session on road-rail crossings applies predictive modelling to South Africa’s 7,665 road-rail intersections and projects that accidents could rise from an average of 76 per year to 153 per year by 2030 without intervention.
For rail recovery, public safety, and cargo movement, that is a number worth following closely.
The programme also covers weigh-in-motion enforcement, with SANRAL’s WIMe accuracy trials at Mantsole on the N1.
As per SATC organisers, 10 WIM systems were installed by mid-February 2026, with trials running to the end of May, and the planned national WIMe network could include more than 170 systems.
For road freight, this points to a future where overloading enforcement becomes more automated and harder to ignore.
SATC is useful because it brings research, policy, and operations into the same room. For SFR readers, the key question is simple: which of these discussions will change how cargo actually moves?
For more information, visit the official SATC website:

