As transport operators face rising operational costs and increasing sustainability expectations, Scania is positioning the Scania Super powertrain as a practical efficiency solution built for the realities of modern logistics operations.
Scania South Africa will showcase the Scania Super at NAMPO Harvest Day 2026, presenting a next-generation transport solution engineered to deliver measurable gains in fuel efficiency, operational performance, and sustainability.
Presented at South Africa’s premier agricultural exhibition, the Scania Super responds directly to the growing pressure on transport operators to reduce operating costs while maintaining reliability, productivity, and uptime in demanding operating conditions. Road transport continues to move the majority of goods across South Africa, while fuel remains one of the single largest operating expenses for fleet owners. In heavy-duty transport operations, fuel can account for between 30% and 50% of total operating costs, making every efficiency gain commercially significant.
The new 13-litre Scania Super engine achieves up to 50% brake thermal efficiency and delivers fuel savings of up to 8% compared with the previous generation. These gains are supported by enhancements to the Scania Opti cruise gearbox, rear axle, and Scania’s modular chassis architecture, which together improve durability, payload potential, and overall operating economy.
“We are operating in an environment where efficiency is no longer just a technical performance metric. It has become a key driver of both profitability and sustainability,” says Erik Bergvall, Managing Director at Scania Southern Africa. “Customers are increasingly focused on what efficiency delivers per kilometre, per load and across the full lifecycle of the vehicle.”
In addition to fuel costs, operational inefficiencies such as unnecessary idling, inefficient route planning, poor load optimisation, and unplanned downtime continue to place pressure on margins across the transport sector. Technologies that improve predictability, efficiency and uptime are becoming increasingly critical to maintaining competitiveness in a challenging economic environment.
While the transition to lower-emission transport technologies continues, Scania believes meaningful sustainability improvements can already be achieved by improving the efficiency of existing internal combustion technology. Lower fuel consumption, improved payload efficiency, and maximised uptime all contribute toward reducing emissions intensity while supporting commercially viable transport operations
“Sustainability in transport is determined by how efficiently goods are moved today, not only by future energy transitions,” added Mark Templeton, Sustainability Manager at Scania South Africa. “Improving efficiency within current fleets is one of the most immediate and scalable ways to reduce environmental impact and lower fuel costs.”
The official unveiling took place on Wednesday, 13 May, at NAMPO Park, drawing farmers, agribusiness leaders, fleet operators, and logistics stakeholders from across the country.
“We are excited to engage with stakeholders across the logistics and agricultural sectors at NAMPO, where efficiency is the central theme of our presence,” concluded Bergvall.
Scania South Africa’s presence at NAMPO 2026 reinforces the company’s long-term commitment to the agricultural and transport sectors. As South Africa’s logistics ecosystem balances economic pressures with evolving sustainability expectations, the Scania Super offers a trusted and locally relevant solution built around lower fuel consumption, higher uptime, and improved operational performance.







