Cesa to advance ethical leadership strategy

8th June 2018

By: Marleny Arnoldi

Deputy Editor Online

     

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Consulting Engineers South Africa’s (Cesa) president Naresh Pather used the body’s yearly presidential breakfast last month to highlight the organisation’s 2018 ‘The Future Is Now’ theme, which is aimed at harnessing effective ethical leadership to address industry challenges.

Cesa carefully considers its themes and strategies, since engineering impacts directly on people’s lives – making clean water possible and providing reliable energy, safe transport and fast communication for life-saving medical equipment, as well as food and supplies.

Also affecting the strategy for each year are issues that are pertinent in the country, for example, the sweeping changes and restructuring taking place in South Africa since the election of President Cyril Ramaphosa – the reshuffle of Cabinet, spotlighting the land reform issue and the focus on bringing State-owned entities back on track.

This, coupled with changes in neighbouring countries such as Zimbabwe and Angola, spells a new dawn of opportunities for South Africa and other Southern African Development Community countries.

“Consulting engineers, therefore, have to focus on economic growth and building towards poverty alleviation and employment creation,” said Pather.

A key focus area Cesa intends to address is effective ethical leadership – creating the role models that inspire future generations, which will include transformation efforts.

Cesa will also embrace the Fourth Industrial Revolution, including digitalisation and new ways of doing things using data-informed techniques.

Pather said the organisation would focus on industry integration and working collaboratively on common issues that benefited both the consulting engineering industry and the broader society.

Additionally, Cesa would encourage its member firms to work with their clients in addressing corruption, governance and client leadership.

“South Africa has been fraught with the controversy of corruption, State capture and economic decline. We have had to navigate through these troubled times and it is Cesa’s firm belief that the answer in addressing these challenges [lies] in ethical leadership,” noted Pather.

He added that, as a nation, South Africa would need to tackle the issue of how to provide skills for more than a generation of our country by not only developing skills, but also addressing social imbalances that had scarred communities.

“These answers do not lie in unsustainable enrichment practices that are masked as empowerment, but rather lie in skills development and training to ensure that future generations are encouraged and capable.

“Encouraging trade relations with neighbouring countries, as well as employment creation, should be accelerated to allow for leapfrogging regarding technical advancements,” Pather suggested.

Another priority for consulting engineers would be to develop African industrialists, because this would grow economies and awaken the ‘sleeping giant’ of the world – Africa.

“In representing our 560 member companies, we are addressing the views and challenges facing our industry, and some key objectives set for 2018 include improved planning in the public sector, a move away from lowest-cost to value-for-money procurement, using appropriate technical skills for infrastructure decision-making, and working with the National Treasury in appointing an infrastructure directorate,” said Pather.

Cesa would also drive the full execution of the Standard for Infrastructure Procurement and Delivery Management programme, as it had been doing since 2015.

Moreover, Pather said that the industry needed to constantly challenge government’s drive to procure services on a lowest-cost basis, as this did not guarantee the best value-for-money solutions, “especially when considering the larger construction estimates and certainly the larger operations and maintenance exposures that clients face in the full cycle of infrastructure assets”.

Pather concluded that Cesa would continue its encouragement of the consulting engineering industry, recognising the importance of the client’s role, as well as aiding in skills development programmes and informing government of best practice procurement systems.

Edited by Chanel de Bruyn
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor Online

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