CHIETA tackles skills mismatch in chemical sectors

19th July 2022

The mismatch between skills in demand within the chemical industry and skills that are being developed in South Africa is negatively impacting the employability of many locally trained artisans, and needs urgent action, according to Yershen Pillay, CEO of CHIETA, the chemical industries Seta. 

Pillay says CHIETA is constantly working to address this mismatch and the resulting skills gaps across the board – but that the issue needs greater engagement by all relevant participants in government, private sector, and training institutions, in order to impact South Africa’s high level of unemployment.

"South African companies are faced with importing skills from Europe and Asia because specific and high-quality welding skills are in scarce supply. In South Africa, we do not lack general welding skills, we have a sufficient supply of welders to meet the demand, what we lack are specific types of welding skills such as underwater welding and aluminium coded welding where demand far outstrips the supply,” explains Pillay.

It is becoming clear that digital savvy artisans are also in short supply. South Africa needs a pool of digitally savvy artisans such as mechanical fitters who understand the fundamentals of coding as the factory floor becomes increasingly automated and digitised.

Top 10 skills in demand

The current top 10 professional skills in demand identified in CHIETA’s stakeholders’ workplace skills plans in 2022 include:

  1. Chemical engineer
  2. Mechanical engineer
  3. Environmental scientist
  4. Chemist
  5. Retail pharmacist
  6. Industrial engineer
  7. Industrial pharmacist
  8. SHE&Q practitioner
  9. Medical product sales representative
  10.  Pharmaceutical product sales representative

This list does not take future skills needs into account.

SMMEs and start-ups

In terms of specific skills in demand among SMMEs and start-ups in the chemical industry, a recent study by CHIETA revealed a skills gap in management coaching, management and entrepreneurial skills, and mentorship. These incorporate agility, governance, innovation, leadership, performance management, R&D leadership, numerical, packaging, problem solving, programming, project management, communication, negotiating, and marketing.

Digital skills development

CHIETA’s skills development initiatives are increasingly being designed to address specific skills mismatches, and a focus area for CHIETA is digital skills development. Pillay says, “The more our wider skills development shifts from traditional to digital skills training, the more likely it will be to see an increased absorption of trainees and artisans by industry.”

An initiative within this category is CHIETA’s Smart Skills Centre programme, which is bridging the digital skills divide by taking training directly to rural communities. The first Smart Skills Centre which will open in Saldanha Bay, Western Cape, this year is aimed at providing access to basic digital skills in 4IR-related occupations to local communities. CHIETA is investing a further R50m in Smart Skills Centres across the country by 2025.

CHIETA’s efforts to deliver relevant and quality training in line with the needs of the chemical industry sectors is continuing through a range of offerings and funding windows, which include work integrated learning (WIL), bursaries and learnerships.

Close the gaps

Pillay notes, “We remain committed to maintaining a stakeholder-centric approach to our evolving skills development initiatives, and to strengthening our capacity to adapt to the rapid pace of change in skills needs within our industry. At the same time, we strongly encourage wider engagement between all stakeholders, government, other SETAs, and training institutions across the board to ensure that closing scarce skills gaps is contributing to job creation in SA.”