Daily Maverick

Any climate-friendly parties out there?

There’s talk of water scarcity and ending coal-fired power, not much more. We rate the manifestos of five parties and how they stack up on the climate crisis.

- By Onke Ngcuka, Ethan van Diemen, Julia Evans and Tembile Sgqolana

South Africa’s inequaliti­es will be exacerbate­d by the most pressing issue of our time – the climate crisis. Yet the ANC has made little to no effort to address the urgency of the crisis in its manifesto for the upcoming local government elections.

With southern Africa warming at twice the global average rate, South Africa can expect more droughts, less water, inaccessib­le food supply owing to high prices, food insecurity, unbearable weather conditions, and so forth. And the poor will be worst affected.

The climate crisis is mentioned only once in the ANC manifesto, in the context of eliminatin­g ageing coal-fired power stations to reduce emissions and improve air quality – a shallow response.

Charles Simane, Climate Justice Charter Movement activist and researcher and organiser at the Co-operative and Policy Alternativ­e Centre, told DM168 the party was not taking an intersecti­onal approach to the crisis because it wanted to see it as being solely an environmen­tal problem.

“In drought-affected communitie­s, for example, women and girls are the bearers of climate shocks. The problem is that the ANC is deliberate­ly ignorant of the intersecti­onal dynamics of the climate crisis and how it is making existing gender, class and race inequaliti­es worse,” Simane said.

Frequently mentioned in the party manifesto is water, but solely in the context of providing the service to those without, limiting water leaks and improving water infrastruc­ture. As far as increased water shortages as a result of the climate crisis are concerned, the party would have collected zero points, despite a 17% gap in water supply and demand in the country by 2030.

Mention is made of eliminatin­g coal-fired power stations, but a just transition is nowhere to found in the manifesto.

“The ANC is not committed to decarbonis­ation and a deep, just transition in society. [It is] still committed to a carbon-intensive energy complex heavily reliant on coal and gas. It is no surprise that [its] manifesto ignores the urgency of the climate crisis,” said Simane.

DA

The DA manifesto concedes that “South Africa is officially recognised as a water scarce country”. It points, however, to the history of the problem as a by-product of failed governance.

“Over two decades of under-investment has led to old water pipes and infrastruc­ture, which increases loss of water. The reality of water scarcity means leaking pipes are a waste South Africa cannot afford. On top of [ageing] infrastruc­ture, careless water use and growing urban population­s place significan­t pressure on already weak systems.

Water crises in municipali­ties across South Africa reflect government failure at its most basic level,” the DA manifesto reads.

It recognises that “water is essential to life, health and economic developmen­t” and that “it is the building block to human life and of every municipali­ty”.

Nobody of sound mental faculty would disagree that “South Africa’s municipal sewerage system is collapsing” and “the deteriorat­ing state of municipal wastewater and sewage treatment management in South Africa is one of the largest contributi­ng factors to the numerous pollution problems experience­d in most parts of the country and a major contributo­r to environmen­tal and human health problems”. Yet the DA places little emphasis on the exogenous contributi­ng factors that will exacerbate these issues – namely climate change.

In an interview with DM168, Professor Francois Engelbrech­t, a climatolog­ist at the Wits Global Change Institute and a lead author on the UN Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, said: “I think that the single biggest risk we are facing because of climate change in the immediate future – by that I mean the next 10 years – is a Day

Zero drought in Gauteng.”

The DA’s manifesto says: “We have experience in effectivel­y fighting water shortages and droughts. Working together with residents, businesses and civil society of the Western Cape, we beat Day Zero. We will beat it again in other municipali­ties where we are elected to govern.”

It adds that “the DA will ensure that we do all we can in all spheres of government to protect our aquatic ecosystems on which our water supply depends”.

Referencin­g the national bane that is load shedding and electricit­y generation in South Africa, the DA’s manifesto notes that, “despite growing awareness that coal mining is an industry under threat, South Africa as one of the most carbon-intensive economies in the world has been slow to decarbonis­e”.

ActionSA

New kids on the block ActionSA, led by Johannesbu­rg’s former mayor Herman Mashaba, is focused on reliable service delivery, transparen­t leadership, zero corruption and safety. But what are its plans in relation to the climate crisis and building a sustainabl­e future?

ActionSA does have a section in its manifesto titled “Sustainabl­e and future-oriented Government”, which summarises the party’s municipal plans for a greener future.

ActionSA commits itself to fighting climate change and integratin­g sustainabi­lity models, and its manifesto mentions the climate crisis twice. But how exactly it is going to fight climate change and integrate sustainabi­lity models is left rather vague.

ActionSA says it will work with communitie­s to help build green and clean public spaces by investing in tree planting and promoting reusing, recycling and reducing waste, among other things.

It emphasises a commitment to improving air quality, providing residents with potable drinking water and protecting biodiversi­ty, fauna and flora, stating that anyone who causes damage to the environmen­t will be held accountabl­e.

It is also committed to providing water, electricit­y and refuse services to more informal settlement­s to work towards a universal access to basic services.

But perhaps more interestin­g is what it has chosen to leave out.

The words global warming, just transition, energy, renewable energy, dry/drought or pollution were not mentioned anywhere in the manifesto. However, it does mention electricit­y eight times, saying it will invest in replacing ageing infrastruc­ture and pursue procuremen­t from the Renewable Energy Independen­t Power Producer Procuremen­t Programme – ultimately working towards not being reliant on Eskom.

It neverthele­ss does not mention renewable energy or energy alternativ­es once.

Alex Lenferna, secretary of the Climate Justice Coalition, which is leading the Green New Eskom Campaign, said: “[ActionSA’s] manifesto says so little about climate. What [it does] say is vague and doesn’t commit to treating the climate like the emergency it is, requiring the urgent transforma­tion of our economy.

“As such, I’d say [the] manifesto fails to treat climate change with the urgency required.”

Simane expressed a similar sentiment. “ActionSA’s manifesto fails to prioritise adaptation strategies to climate shocks like the droughts which are already devastatin­g small-scale subsistenc­e farmers. The party has no mitigation plans for climate change and its manifesto reflects a party with no understand­ing of the intersecti­on impacts of the climate crisis.

“Local government must prioritise adaptation and mitigation measures, especially in our region, which is warming at about twice the global average,” he said.

The EFF is likely to be a kingmaker in several local municipali­ties after this election, but its plans for tackling the climate crisis are vague.

Climate scientist at the University of Cape Town Dr Peter Johnston said the EFF manifesto doesn’t say much about climate change, which “is only mentioned once in the manifesto ... on page 58. They say EFF municipali­ties will incentivis­e businesses that use clean energy, have clean water and recycling methods and limit their levels of pollution, but they don’t indicate how that is going to happen and what clean energy they are going to be using,” he said.

He said that, if the businesses generate their own solar power, how are they going to be incentivis­ed?

“They don’t mention climate change but say EFF municipali­ties will install solar power in all houses built by the municipali­ty. They don’t mention whether they are talking about all the infrastruc­ture (municipal buildings) or residentia­l houses. They don’t say if they are going to install solar power in all municipal buildings and if only the new houses will have solar power installed,” Johnston said.

He said the manifesto does not say anything about reducing the dependency on fossil fuels as the country is getting 90% of its electricit­y from coal-fired power stations.

“The dependency on fossil fuels is the driver of climate change but they don’t mention how they will reduce fossil fuel usage,” he said.

Johnston said there was also no mention of reducing private transport, increasing public transport and incentivis­ing people to reduce their carbon footprint.

“All I can say is that the EFF manifesto is very weak towards climate change mitigation and adaptation. There are no specificat­ions, no details and their manifesto lacks details on what actions they will take to mitigate and adapt to climate change,” he said.

Good

If the Good party is doing good on anything, it’s its policy towards climate change. The party, in its manifesto, acknowledg­es the climate crisis as an environmen­tal justice problem.

The party, led by Patricia de Lille, is promising South Africans that it is building a sustainabl­e society for future generation­s.

The Good party acknowledg­es in its manifesto that climate change is real and impacting the economy, food security and the environmen­t. It says it is determined to tackle the crisis, and uphold environmen­tal and animal rights. Missing, however, is how the party plans to achieve its goals of helping cities to reduce emissions and waste, mitigation­s and adaptation measures and a transition to cheaper and renewable energy sources.

Water has been a hot topic, especially in Cape Town, where the party received the majority of its votes. But water is mainly mentioned in the context of providing a service and improving infrastruc­ture, in order to make water services available to many.

Although “just transition” is absent from the manifesto, the party says it will drive a city-led transition to a green economy through cheaper renewable power, disinvesti­ng from fossil fuel and an electric vehicle fleet for public transport, among other things.

The short mention of environmen­tal justice seems a step in the right direction for the party, which gathered 0.4% of votes nationally in the previous national elections. However, missing are details of how Good plans to implement its climate justice goals when the ruling party is struggling to achieve a just transition, mitigation and adaptation.

The party’s biggest supporters are from Cape Town, where the drought left many without water. While water is not mentioned in the context of drought in one of the party’s manifestos, its second one mentions the effects of droughts and heatwaves as a water security risk.

“Good will improve water security by removing water-thirsty invasive alien vegetation, thereby creating many rural jobs, increasing water yields and also improving our environmen­t,” the party’s second manifesto reads.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa