The Mercury

‘Spending must go green’

- Melanie Gosling

THE government on all levels must introduce green procuremen­t policies in the same way that it had insisted on local content and black economic empowermen­t when awarding tenders, delegates said at a climate change workshop this week.

As government spending made up 29% of the GDP, insisting on a green procuremen­t policy would be an important way of reducing the country’s high greenhouse gas emissions.

This was one of the points made by delegates at the Department of Environmen­tal Affairs workshop, held to gain input from civil society and officials into South Africa’s targets to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

The targets – known as intended nationally determined contributi­ons – will be tabled before the COP21 climate negotiatio­ns in Paris in December.

The department has run similar workshops in all provinces.

Plan B

Although the purpose of the workshop was to gain input into the government’s proposed greenhouse gas reduction targets, many delegates said South Africa needed to have a “Plan B” if the Paris talks failed to come up with a legally binding deal on how the world would tackle climate change once the Kyoto Protocol finally ended in 2020.

They said the government’s responsibi­lity was to cut greenhouse gas emissions regardless of what happened at COP21.

Several groups raised the point that municipali­ties were pivotal in tackling climate change and that the national government needed to involve local authoritie­s.

They said that 60% of South Africa was urbanised, so the role of municipali­ties was crucial.

Delegates dismissed Environmen­tal Affairs’ view of having to balance the country’s environmen­tal and developmen­tal imperative­s when tackling climate change, as this was not an “either or”.

They said good developmen­t was low carbon developmen­t, so it served both.

They also urged Environmen­tal Affairs to take ambitious greenhouse gas reduction targets to COP21.

Judy Beaumont, the Deputy Director-General of Environmen­tal Affairs, said she understood the need to table ambitious targets at the inter national talks; South Africa had to be able to measure up to the commitment­s it made in the internatio­nal arena.

“The reality is money is tight, for business, government, local authoritie­s, so we have to make sure what we put into the internatio­nal space is what we can measure up to.”

Beaumont agreed there was a need to change how Environmen­tal Affairs viewed developmen­t versus environmen­t protection and climate change.

The UN said 50% of countries, which accounted for almost 70% of global greenhouse gas emissions, had already submitted their national climate plans in preparatio­n for COP21.

Christiana Figueres, the executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention for Climate Change, said these emission reduction targets on their own would not keep the temperatur­e increase below 2ºC.

“But they underline a sharp and positive departure from business as usual and will form the essential foundation to reach that ultimate goal if government­s agree to clearly ramp up ambition over time.”

 ?? PICTURE: EPA ?? South African engineers and technician­s work on the Helio 100 Concentrat­ing Solar Power (CSP) pilot facility at the University of Stellenbos­ch’s Mariendahl experiment­al farm yesterday.
The Helio 100 could become the most cost-effective and smallest...
PICTURE: EPA South African engineers and technician­s work on the Helio 100 Concentrat­ing Solar Power (CSP) pilot facility at the University of Stellenbos­ch’s Mariendahl experiment­al farm yesterday. The Helio 100 could become the most cost-effective and smallest...
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