Our Expert in South Africa
No results available
The landscape of electronic ADR in South Africa has shifted decisively with the 2026 regulations under the Electronic Communications and Transactions (ECT) Act, compelling construction parties to rethink how they initiate, conduct and enforce dispute resolution proceedings. For an industry where multi-million-rand claims routinely hinge on voluminous technical documentation, programme records, variation orders, site instructions and payment certificates, the formalisation of online alternative dispute resolution creates both operational efficiencies and compliance obligations that did not exist twelve months ago.
This guide translates the regulatory provisions into concrete, construction-sector actions: how to run a remote hearing that will withstand judicial scrutiny, what makes digital evidence admissible, which contract clauses need updating, and exactly how to enforce a settlement or award obtained through an electronic process.
The ECT Act ADR regulations formally recognise that mediations, arbitrations and adjudications conducted through electronic communications carry the same legal weight as in-person proceedings, provided certain procedural safeguards are met. For construction arbitration in South Africa, this means that a remotely convened tribunal can receive electronic evidence, hear witnesses via video link and issue an enforceable award, all without the parties ever sharing a physical hearing room.
The practical changes are significant. The regulations define “electronic record” and “electronic signature” in terms that interact with existing provisions of the ECT Act, establishing clear admissibility standards for digital documents. They set out consent and notice requirements for online proceedings, prescribe minimum standards for the integrity and retrievability of electronic records, and provide a framework within which online mediation in South Africa can produce settlement agreements capable of being made orders of court.
Construction teams should act now. Industry observers expect that parties who delay updating their standard dispute resolution clauses and internal evidence-management protocols will face avoidable procedural challenges when disputes arise under contracts currently in execution.
The ADR regulations sit under the Electronic Communications and Transactions Act 25 of 2002 and were published by the Department of Communications and Digital Technologies. They apply to any alternative dispute resolution process, mediation, arbitration, adjudication or conciliation, conducted in whole or in part through electronic communications within the Republic of South Africa. The regulations do not replace existing arbitration or mediation legislation; they supplement it by confirming the validity of electronic processes and imposing minimum standards on how those processes must be conducted and recorded.
The Legal Practice Council’s March 2026 guide, issued under Regulation 6(10)(h), underscores that legal practitioners facilitating or representing parties in electronic ADR must be competent in the procedural and technological requirements. This guidance applies equally to advocates acting as arbitrators, mediators serving as neutrals, and attorneys advising construction clients on remote proceedings.
| Regime / Issue | Key Regulation or Act | Practical Effect for Construction Disputes |
|---|---|---|
| Electronic ADR (ECT ADR regulations 2026) | Electronic Communications and Transactions Act 25 of 2002, ADR Regulations | Confirms validity of electronic communications in ADR; sets standards for e-signatures, electronic records and OADR procedures; requires consent and notice mechanisms before proceedings may be conducted electronically. |
| Arbitration awards | Arbitration Act 42 of 1965 (and New York Convention for foreign awards) | Enforcement route for awards remains under the Arbitration Act; awards produced remotely are enforceable provided due process and evidence integrity are demonstrable. |
| Court enforcement of mediated settlements | High Court / Magistrates’ Court rules (consent order procedures) | Mediated settlements can be converted into consent orders; electronic signatures and properly authenticated records facilitate judicial recognition. |
Yes. The 2026 ECT ADR regulations expressly provide that ADR proceedings conducted through electronic communications are legally valid, provided procedural safeguards, principally notice, consent and record integrity, are observed. This extends to both online mediation in South Africa and remote arbitration in South Africa, encompassing all forms of construction dispute resolution.
A remote hearing carries the same legal standing as an in-person session when the following conditions are met:
The regulations do not mandate that all ADR must be conducted electronically. Parties retain the right to request in-person hearings, and a tribunal or mediator has discretion to direct physical attendance where the complexity of the evidence, the number of witnesses, or connectivity concerns make a remote format impractical. In construction arbitration, site inspections, often critical in defects disputes or delay claims, may require hybrid arrangements where the tribunal conducts a physical site visit but holds oral submissions remotely.
Construction disputes present unique challenges for remote hearings: technical witnesses may need to share detailed programme analyses, experts may disagree on quantum calculations running to hundreds of pages, and documentary bundles routinely exceed thousands of items. The following checklist addresses both procedural and technical requirements.
| Role | Pre-Hearing Responsibilities | During-Hearing Responsibilities |
|---|---|---|
| Tribunal / Mediator | Select and test platform; issue procedural directions; appoint a hearing administrator | Control recording; manage witness entry/exit; rule on objections; preserve hearing log |
| Parties’ Legal Representatives | Exchange bundles; prepare witnesses for remote testimony; test connectivity and equipment | Present submissions; conduct cross-examination; manage document display; raise technical objections promptly |
| Expert Witnesses | Prepare screen-sharable exhibits; test presentation software; confirm bandwidth adequacy | Present opinion via screen share; respond to questions; refrain from off-camera coaching |
| Hearing Administrator | Distribute access links; run platform test session; prepare backup communication channel | Monitor recording status; manage breakout rooms; log connectivity incidents; distribute real-time transcript access |
Bandwidth should be tested at least 48 hours before the hearing. A minimum symmetrical speed of 10 Mbps per participant is advisable for stable video and screen-sharing. Each party should have a designated backup communication channel, a separate phone line or messaging app, to report technical failures without disrupting the hearing. The hearing administrator should maintain a written incident log of any disconnections, noting the time, duration and impact on proceedings.
The admissibility of electronic evidence in arbitration proceedings turns on two interrelated requirements: authenticity and integrity. Under the ECT Act, an electronic record is admissible as evidence if the court or tribunal is satisfied that the record is what it purports to be and that it has not been tampered with since creation. Academic research on implementing e-dispute resolution systems in South Africa has consistently identified chain-of-custody documentation as the single most important factor in persuading tribunals to admit and rely on digital evidence.
In construction arbitration in South Africa, the types of electronic evidence routinely submitted include contract correspondence (emails, messaging-platform records), programme files (Primavera, MS Project), BIM models, drone survey imagery, site photographs with GPS metadata, electronically signed variation orders, and payment applications generated through project management software. Each category requires attention to the following:
Standard-form construction contracts used in South Africa, FIDIC, JBCC, GCC and NEC, contain dispute resolution clauses that were drafted before electronic ADR in South Africa became formally regulated. While none of these standard forms prohibit remote proceedings, none expressly provides for them either. The likely practical effect of the 2026 regulations is that parties must proactively amend their contracts to avoid procedural disputes about the permissibility and mechanics of electronic hearings.
“Any arbitration conducted pursuant to Sub-Clause 21. 6 may, at the election of the arbitral tribunal after consultation with the Parties, be conducted in whole or in part by electronic means, including video-conference hearings, electronic submission of documents and the use of electronic signatures. The Parties shall agree on a suitable platform within 14 days of the constitution of the tribunal, failing which the tribunal shall designate the platform. All electronic records of the proceedings shall be maintained in accordance with the Electronic Communications and Transactions Act 25 of 2002 and its regulations.
In the event of a material technology failure, the tribunal may adjourn and, if necessary, direct that any affected session be reconvened in person at the seat of arbitration.
“Dispute resolution proceedings under Clause 40 may be conducted by electronic communication, provided that: (a) the parties consent in writing (which may be by electronic signature); (b) each party is given not less than 10 working days’ notice of any electronic hearing; (c) a record of all electronic proceedings is preserved in retrievable form; and (d) any mediated settlement is confirmed by advanced electronic signature or wet-ink signature before being submitted to court as a consent order.”
“The Adjudicator (or tribunal, as applicable) may direct that any hearing, meeting or submission under Option W1 or W2 be conducted electronically. The Project Manager shall ensure that the Contractor and all Subcontractors have access to the designated electronic platform. Evidence submitted electronically shall comply with an evidence protocol agreed by the parties or, failing agreement, prescribed by the Adjudicator within 7 days of referral. The Adjudicator’s decision shall be communicated electronically and shall bear an advanced electronic signature.”
The enforceability of outcomes produced through electronic ADR in South Africa depends on the type of outcome (mediated settlement, adjudicator’s decision or arbitral award) and the extent to which the electronic process complied with applicable procedural requirements. The 2026 regulations reinforce, rather than replace, existing enforcement mechanisms under the Arbitration Act 42 of 1965 and the court rules governing consent orders.
An arbitral award made following a remote hearing is enforceable in the same manner as one made after an in-person hearing. Under the Arbitration Act, any party may apply to the High Court to have an award made an order of court. The critical requirements are that the award is in writing, signed by the arbitrator (an advanced electronic signature satisfies this requirement under the ECT Act), and that the arbitral process afforded both parties due process.
For cross-border construction disputes, common in infrastructure projects involving international contractors or development-finance institutions, awards may also be enforceable under the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, to which South Africa is a signatory. The electronic nature of the proceedings does not, by itself, constitute a ground for refusal of recognition, provided the requirements of the Convention are otherwise satisfied.
A mediated settlement agreement reached through online mediation in South Africa can be made an order of court by the following process:
Industry observers expect that courts will increasingly accept electronic filings in this process, particularly as the judiciary’s own digital transformation continues. However, parties should confirm the specific filing requirements of the relevant court division, as not all registries accept electronic submissions for consent orders at the time of writing.
While the 2026 regulations create a solid legal foundation for electronic ADR, construction parties face specific risks that require proactive management. The following are the most common pitfalls observed in early electronic proceedings:
The 2026 Electronic ADR regulations represent a structural shift in how construction disputes can be resolved in South Africa. The rules are now clear: electronic proceedings are valid, digital evidence is admissible, and remotely produced awards and settlements are enforceable, provided the right procedural architecture is in place. Construction teams that treat this as a box-ticking exercise, rather than an opportunity to build robust, litigation-ready dispute resolution infrastructure, will find themselves at a disadvantage when claims crystallise.
Three actions deserve immediate attention. First, review and amend every live contract’s ADR clause to expressly accommodate electronic proceedings, using the sample clauses above as a starting point. Second, implement a project-wide electronic evidence protocol, file naming, hash generation, secure storage, before the next site instruction is issued. Third, invest in a single test hearing: convene a mock remote arbitration or adjudication with your legal team, test the platform, practise the evidence workflow and identify the gaps before a real dispute forces you to learn on the fly. For parties seeking specialist guidance on electronic ADR in South Africa, the Global Law Experts lawyer directory connects construction teams with experienced ADR practitioners across the country.
Last reviewed: 27 May 2026. This article will be updated if the ECT ADR regulations are amended or relevant case law developments occur.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Roelf Nel at RN Inc., a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 5 minutes ago
posted 38 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message