Software
SA’s ‘science Oscars’ add research prize
National Science and Technology Forum’s acclaimed NSTF-South32 Awards will now include a Research Software category.
The acclaimed National Science and Technology Forum’s acclaimed NSTF-South32 Awards has launched a Research Software category in partnership with the South African Centre for Digital Language Resources (SADiLaR).
The Research Software Awards join 15 other categories, and recognisesg outstanding contributions to science, engineering, technology (SET) and innovation through the development, extension or maintenance of research software that enables research in SA.
The new category resulted from deliberations of the University of Cape Town’s eResearch Centre (UCT eResearch), outlined during its Research Software Symposium on 4 November 2025 under the theme, Research Workflows, Code & Software: Critical Pillars of the South African Digital and Open Research Infrastructure.
“The new category represents a significant step toward acknowledging the role of research software and its creators as critical enablers of scientific discovery and innovation,” the NSTF said in a statement.
It provided the following information about the new awards:
The Research Software Awards celebrate individuals or teams who have developed, maintained, or extended research software that has directly supported research in SA. Two sub-categories will be awarded:
- Research Software – recognising contributions that advance research in any scientific field, including humanities and social sciences
- NSTF-SADiLaR Research Software: Human Language Technologies (HLT) – recognising software that processes, understands, or analyses human language in written, spoken, or signed form in the South African context.
The awards acknowledge diverse contributors to research software, from postgraduate students and researchers to research software engineers, computational scientists, data scientists, and digital humanists, while promoting best practices in openness, sustainability and collaboration.
“Research software is the invisible infrastructure that drives discovery across all fields of science and scholarship,” said Jansie Niehaus, executive director of the NSTF. “These awards will shine a light on the often-unseen contributions of software developers and researchers whose work underpins SA’s innovation ecosystem.”
SADiLaR says it supports the new award category as part of its national mandate under the South African Research Infrastructure Roadmap (SARIR) to strengthen digital research infrastructure and promote the reuse and sustainability of digital research assets.
Prof Langa Khumalo, chief director of SADiLaR, said: “Human Language Technologies are central to digital transformation in SA. Through this award, we celebrate the ingenuity and collaborative spirit of our research software community, from the sciences to the humanities, and reinforce the importance of sustainable, locally relevant innovation.”
The UCT eResearch Centre, the South African partner of the Software Sustainability Institute’s 2026 edition of the International Research Software Engineering Survey, played a leading role in conceptualising the award criteria.
Prof Mattia Vaccari, director of UCT eResearch, said: “UCT eResearch is honoured to have hosted the inaugural Research Software Symposium and the launch of the new award. The strong participation from across disciplines highlights a growing national community of research software stakeholders.
“Partnering with the NSTF and SADiLaR to launch the award at this gathering helps raise awareness of research software as vital infrastructure and is expected to encourage nominations in the 2025/2026 NSTF-South32 Awards cycle.”
The Research Software Awards reflect the growing recognition that sustainable and well-engineered research software is essential for transparency, reproducibility, and long-term accessibility in research. This initiative aligns with national priorities under the Decadal Plan for Science, Technology and Innovation (2022–2032) of the Department of Science, Technology and Innovation (DSTI), and with international efforts to strengthen digital research infrastructure.
Nominations for the NSTF-South32 Awards opened on 20 November 2025, and winners will be announced at an annual Awards Gala Event planned for July 2026. By recognising excellence in research software development, the initiative aims to strengthen SA’s emerging research software community of practice and ensure continued alignment with global developments in open science, digital research infrastructure, and innovation.
The NSTF-South32 Awards are described as SA’s ‘Science Oscars’. They were established in 1998, making 2025 the 27th year that the NSTF presented awards to the top scientists, related professionals, practitioners, teams and organisations involved in science, engineering, technology (SET) and innovation. South32 is the co-branding sponsor.




