In a landmark moment for Africa’s emerging electric vehicle (EV) market, Everlectric, co-founded by Paul Plummer and Ndia Magadagela, has accepted the first ten BYD electric vehicles, personally handed over by Chairman Wang Chuanfu, founder of the world’s largest new energy vehicle (NEV) manufacturer.
The handover signals a significant step in South Africa’s transition to sustainable mobility, as Everlectric gears up to expand its fleet and catalyse the local EV ecosystem. Meeting one of the global leaders in electric mobility underscored the opportunities for Africa to integrate into a rapidly evolving global market.
“Meeting Chairman Wang was inspiring, especially as the spotlight shines on the progress being made right here in South Africa,” said Ndia Magadagela. “It’s not every day you get handed the keys to your new cars by the founder of BYD, Chairman Wang Chuanfu himself. Everlectric has accepted the first 10 of many BYD electric vehicles heading into our fleet. South Africa’s EV industry is growing.”
Building the EV Infrastructure
BYD plans to install 200–300 charging stations across South Africa by 2026, laying the groundwork for a reliable national EV network. The company is also expanding its vehicle lineup, introducing the Dolphin Surf a compact, affordable model designed for South African consumers.
While local manufacturing is not currently on BYD’s immediate agenda, the focus on infrastructure and accessibility demonstrates a strategic approach to fostering adoption and building confidence in electric mobility.
Strategic Importance for Africa
The potential benefits for South Africa are significant. Accelerated EV adoption is expected to boost confidence in electric mobility while creating opportunities for local technicians, electricians and service providers. In the long term, the shift toward EVs promises to reduce carbon emissions and reliance on fossil fuels, while reinforcing South Africa’s role as a regional hub for sustainable transport in southern Africa.
However, challenges remain: high vehicle costs limit affordability for mass consumers, load-shedding and power instability could affect charging reliability, and the lack of local manufacturing slows broader job creation in the automotive value chain.
Africa’s shift to electric mobility represents more than a technological trend it is a strategic transformation toward energy independence, industrial modernization and climate responsibility. BYD’s investment signals growing confidence in Africa’s EV market potential, increasing collaboration between global innovators and African economies and a pathway toward reducing fossil fuel imports while building sustainable infrastructure.
As Africa accelerates its electric mobility journey, partnerships like Everlectric and BYD illuminate the potential for homegrown innovation to meet global standards while addressing local realities. For South African entrepreneurs, technicians and policymakers, this moment represents both an opportunity and a challenge: to embrace a clean, sustainable future while building the infrastructure, skills and markets necessary for lasting impact.