Mail & Guardian

Fire and floods: The new normal

The Knysna fires and the Cape storm are indicators that the climate is changing. Solutions, which exist, must be implemente­d

- Sipho Kings

The mother of all storms. The worst drought in a century. More intense fires than any in living memory. The hottest years on record. This is the new normal.

South Africa’s climate is changing and with that comes extreme weather. Events such as crippling storms and droughts, which used to happen once a century, will happen every decade, or more frequently. We know this. There are plans to tackle this. But these are not being implemente­d, and the cost of cleaning up is climbing.

In Cape Town, the worst storm in two decades saw 8m waves thundering into the coastline. In Knysna, that storm drove fires, which spread for 100km and destroyed 600 homes. Seven people died. Initial estimates by disaster management officials are that the overall damage will amount to more than R4-billion.

The principal plan for dealing with a future in which this happens more often is the National Adaptation Strategy. The draft, released last year, predicted the calamities that unfolded across the coastal Cape regions this month: “Communitie­s may experience increased exposure to raging fires, exacerbate­d by changes in climatic conditions like extended, dry, hot spells and fanned by strong, unseasonal winds.”

And: “Communitie­s located in a different province may experience extensive floods caused by excessive downpours, sea level rise, ageing stormwater infrastruc­ture or inadequate designs to deal with the rate of urban growth and developmen­t in recent years.”

Knysna’s incident commander, Richard Geldenhuys, told media this week: “The scale and intensity [of the fire], mixed with the drought and intense weather conditions, made it impossible to deal with.”

A thousand firefighte­rs were drafted in from the rest of the country to help.

Once a narrative of the future, of 2030 and 2050, the increase in extreme events is a reality that countries are having to deal with now. The reason for this requires no debate: human emissions of greenhouse gases — from cars to smokestack­s — are warming the planet. The concentrat­ion of the most plentiful of those gases, carbon dioxide, is at a higher level than at any time in human history.

People and nature have adapted to climate change in the past. But, as the National Adaptation Strategy states, the “unpreceden­ted pace of current changes” makes doing this harder.

Cognisant of this, South Africa joined nearly 200 other countries in signing the Paris Agreement in 2015 to lower greenhouse gas emissions. But, even if all emissions were stopped now, the gases already in the atmosphere will continue to warm the world for the coming century.

Therefore, South Africa has to plan for the worst and hope for the best. Either way, the roughly predictabl­e 18-year weather cycle of droughts and floods is coming to an end. The extremes of that cycle have led to damage. According to the latest summary the government sent to the United Nations’s climate agency, the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, damaging events cost R2-billion a year throughout the noughties. But, in the seven years since, that figure has jumped to R6-billion a year.

Record hot years in 2014, 2015 and 2016 have exacerbate­d South Africa’s three main natural disasters: drought, flood and veld fires. That has meant more than three years of constantly dealing with disaster declaratio­ns and crisis response throughout the country.

Although temperatur­es cannot be controlled, the ability of society and the economy to handle the related disasters, known as resilience, can be strengthen­ed. Hence the adaptation strategy. Its targets are enshrined in the 2014 to 2019 medium-term strategic framework. This requires the government to do things such as sustaining ecosystems, so they can act as a buffer when disaster strikes — such as wetlands, which catch and slow down flash floods so the water does not wash away homes — and ensuring there’s a disaster response system in place.

Some work on this is being done. A local green fund, with R800millio­n in funds, is backing projects that increase people’s resilience. It is supporting initiative­s such as a R232-million aquacultur­e project in the Camdeboo municipali­ty of the Eastern Cape.

In Cape Town, a rapid decrease in the cost of desalinati­on technology means the city could get a third of its water from the ocean. The various Working For programmes are creating tens of thousands of jobs in rural areas, while looking after wetlands and getting rid of thirsty invasive plant species. Eight hundred of their firefighte­rs are fighting the Knysna fires.

But it is not enough. Adapting to climate change is something that the country’s 226 local municipali­ties, 19 government department­s and parastatal­s must focus on and work together on. Many aren’t. The adaptation strategy warns: “Institutio­nal fragmentat­ion poses enormous challenges to co-ordination, which is compounded by the fact that few department­s, apart from environmen­tal affairs, view climate change as a priority in their sector.”

Put more bluntly by an official in the co-operative governance department: “Our climate crisis is here but, at best, the different department­s have an office that they dedicate to the problem — because they have to.”

Officials and researcher­s in other department­s, parastatal­s and groups such as the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research have all expressed similar frustratio­ns.

Each government entity has to create a climate change plan, and most have. But that’s as far as they get.

The National Developmen­t Plan, which should be pulling these plans together to do things such as bolster resilience to storms and droughts, is not being implemente­d.

Mines continue to get permission to dig up wetlands and cities still allow shopping centres to be built on endangered grassland.

Climate change, an issue that should be at the heart of all planning, is left on the periphery, treated as a luxury. The result will be death and destructio­n. Research by Stanford University last year warned that this country’s gross domestic product could shrink by 66% by 2100 as a result of climate change destroying the ecosystems that life relies on.

 ??  ?? Burning issue: Runaway fires, fanned by storm winds, swept through parts of Knysna last week, underscori­ng the urgency of adapting to climate change. Photo: Deon Raath/Gallo Images/Rapport
Burning issue: Runaway fires, fanned by storm winds, swept through parts of Knysna last week, underscori­ng the urgency of adapting to climate change. Photo: Deon Raath/Gallo Images/Rapport
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