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24 March 2015

Ms. Cecilia Blye, Chief
Office of Global Security Risk
Division of Corporation Finance
Securities and Exchange Commission
100 F Street, N.E.
Washington, D.C. 20549

Dear Ms. Blye,


Sasol Limited Annual Report on Form 20-F for the Year Ended 30 June 2014
Filed 29 September 2014
File No. 1-31615

We refer to the comment letter, dated 23 February 2015, from the staff of the
Division of Corporation Finance (the "Staff") relating to the Form 20-F of
Sasol Limited (the "Company") for the year ended 30 June 2014. Set forth below
in detail are the responses to the Staff's comment letter, which have been
provided in each case following the text of the comment in the Staff's letter.
The Staff is referred to the definitions contained in the Form 20-F for the
year ended 30 June 2014.

1. In your letter to us dated May 15, 2012, you discussed contacts with Sudan
and Syria. Sudan and Syria are designated by the U.S. Department of State as
state sponsors of terrorism, and are subject to U.S. economic sanctions and
export controls. You do not provide disclosure about these countries in the
Form 20-F. Please describe to us the nature and extent of your past, current,
and anticipated contacts with Sudan and Syria since your 2012 letter, whether
through subsidiaries, affiliates, distributors, resellers or other direct or
indirect arrangements. You should describe any products or services provided,
directly or indirectly, and any agreements, commercial arrangements, or other
contacts with the governments of those countries or entities they control.

Response
The Company does not have any operations in Syria or Sudan and is not
contemplating investing in operations in these countries. The Company does not
have any direct agreements, commercial arrangements, or other contacts with the
governments of Sudan or Syria, nor, to our knowledge, with entities controlled
by them.

Contacts with Sudan
Since 2011, neither the Company nor any of its affiliates, directly or
through distributors, has sold any products to persons or entities
located in Sudan. The Company and its affiliates do not currently have any
offices, transactions, investments, activities or planned activities in
Sudan, nor with any person or entity located in Sudan or any entity owned
or controlled by any entity in Sudan.

Contacts with Syria
In 2012, the Company, directly through its affiliate, Sasol Olefins and
Surfactants, sold chemical products to entities in Syria. These sales
agreements were cancelled in 2012 with immediate effect, and the Company
has not sold chemical products to Syria since then.

The Company has however, indirectly, through a joint venture domiciled
in Egypt, sold de minimis paraffin wax, which is produced by the joint
venture partner, to entities in Syria. Paraffin wax is used in the
production of candles. With effect from October 2014, all sales of
paraffin wax to Syria were discontinued.

None of these products were manufactured in the Company's US
based operations, nor were any of these products sold by an entity
incorporated in the US.

General
As of the date of this letter, the Company can confirm that it has
no contact with Syria or Sudan. All sales agreements to entities in
these regions have been discontinued.

2. Please discuss the materiality of any contacts with Sudan and
Syria you described in response to the comment above, and whether
those contacts constitute a material investment risk for your
security holders. You should address materiality in quantitative
terms, including the approximate dollar amounts of any associated
revenues, assets, and liabilities for the last three fiscal years
and the subsequent interim period.Also, address materiality in terms
of qualitative factors that a reasonable investor would deem important
in making an investment decision, including the potential impact of
corporate activities upon a company's reputation and share value.
As you know, various state and municipal governments, universities,
and other investors have proposed or adopted divestment or similar
initiatives regarding investment in companies that do businesswith
U.S.-designated state sponsors of terrorism.  You should address
the potential impact of the investor sentiment evidenced by such
actions directed toward companies that have operations associated
with Sudan and Syria.

Response
The following table illustrates our sales into Syria for the six
months ended 31 December 2014 and for the years ended 30 June 2014,
2013 and 2012, expressed in South African Rand (ZAR) and as a
percentage of total group revenue.


			Half year	Full year	Full year	Full year
			2014*		2014		2013		2012
			R' million	R' million	R' million	R' million
Syria			4		8		3		10
Total group revenue	99 837		202 683		169 891		159 114
% of group revenue	0,004%		0,004%		0,002%		0,006%

* For the period 1 July 2014 to October 2014.

Based on the above, the revenues generated by these products
do not constitute a material portion of group revenue. The
Company did not have any associated assets or liabilities,
except for the related trade receivables associated with the
revenue generated above, which is not material. The Company
does not believe that a reasonable investor would consider
Sasol's past interests and activities in Syria to be a
material investment risk, either from an economic, financial
or reputational point of view, given their extremely limited
extent and nature and discontinuation of sales agreements
since October 2014.

Although the Company cannot predict future interpretations
of sanction provisions and/or implementation policies of
governments, we believe that our activities, as mentioned
above, do not infringe any current U.S. or European
Union sanctions and United Nations resolutions. The
Company continues to evaluate the risk and implications of
sanctions on our activities, and we have implemented
measures to ensure that the Company, and in particular
our U.S. employees, investors and subsidiaries of the group
do not violate U.S.
sanction legislation.

We acknowledge that:
- The Company is responsible for the adequacy and accuracy
of the disclosure in the filing;
- Staff comments or changes to disclosure in response to
Staff comments do not foreclose the Commission from
taking any action with respect to the filing; and
- The Company may not assert Staff comments as a defence
in any proceeding initiated by the Commission or any person
under the federal securities laws of the United States.

We appreciate the Staff's review of the Form 20-F for the
year ended 30 June 2014. Should the Staff have any questions
or require any additional information, please telephone the
undersigned at +27-11-441-3435. My email address is
paul.victor@sasol.com.


Yours faithfully


/s/ Paul Victor 		/s/ Bongani Nqwababa
Paul Victor			Bongani Nqwababa
Group Financial Controller	Chief Financial Officer


Sasol Limited   1979/003231/06
1 Sturdee Avenue Rosebank 2196   PO Box 5486
Johannesburg   2000   South Africa
Telephone +27 (0)11 441 3111  Facsimile +27 (0)11 788 5092
www.sasol.com

Directors:  MSV Gantsho  (Chairman) DE Constable
(President & Chief Executive Officer)(Canadian) C Beggs
HG Dijkgraaf (Dutch)  VN Fakude (Executive)  NNA Matyumza
IN Mkhize  ZM Mkhize  MJN Njeke  B Nqwababa (Executive)
PJ Robertson (British and American) JE Schrempp (German)
S Westwell (British)

Company Secretary: VD Kahla
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