Cape Argus

SA’s ‘Just Transition’ gets R10.7bn loan boost at COP27

- KRISTIN ENGEL kristin.engel@inl.co.za

FOLLOWING the recent release of the country’s Just Energy Transition Partnershi­p (JETP) Investment Plan, the JETP reached a milestone yesterday at the UN climate conference, COP27, where France and Germany signed loan agreements that will see each nation extend R10.7 billion towards South Africa’s de-carbonisin­g efforts.

The JETP was establishe­d at COP26 last year to signify a collaborat­ion between South Africa and the Internatio­nal Partners Group (IPG) to fasttrack the country’s reduced reliance on coal through a Just Transition to cleaner energy sources.

The two loan agreements form the first part of the R153bn pledged by the IPG and indicates that actual money will now begin to flow to South Africa – though the R153bn pledge was just a snippet of the R1.5 trillion investment plan President Cyril Ramaphosa handed over to the IPG on Monday for the next five years.

A dialogue on “Financing the Just Transition in South Africa” was hosted by the Presidenti­al Climate Finance Task Team and the Presidenti­al Climate Commission yesterday at the South Africa pavilion, on the sidelines of COP27 in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt.

A moderated panel discussed how to ensure the money was allocated accordingl­y and accountabl­y to meet South Africa’s Just Transition needs.

Daniel Mminele, head of the Presidenti­al Climate Finance Task Team, said the loans would be provided by the French and German public developmen­t banks AFD and KfW, directly to the South African government via its National Treasury, and this money would likely flow early next year.

However, the big push after COP, Mminele said, was for them to develop an implementa­tion plan to track progress, ensure accountabi­lity and set up governance structures.

“This is what we are going to do without delay in the first quarter of next year and have it finalised so that we can get to the real hard work, the actual implementa­tion of the JETP,” Mminele said.

Lebogang Mulaisi, Cosatu head of policy and Presidenti­al Climate Commission commission­er, said there was increasing anxiety about job displaceme­nt among people who worked in industries that relied on fossil fuels and the coal value chain.

Mulaisi said they needed to address what these plans, deals and concepts meant in terms of bread and butter needs of the ordinary workers that relied on these sectors.

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