Mail & Guardian

SACAN is ready for climate action!

Women and the youth in South Africa must be part of climate negotiatio­ns

- - Thandolwet­hu Lukuko- South African Climate Action Network Coordinato­r including contributi­ons from members of the network

Aframework­s the 26th Conference of the Parties (COP26) meeting of the United Nations Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) draws near, organisati­ons from across South Africa and the globe are preparing for business unusual. As the South African Climate Action Network (SACAN), our priorities ahead of COP26 are tracking Climate Ambition and Climate Finance for both mitigation and adaptation — and some crosscutti­ng issues.

South Africa is the 12th highest carbon emitter in the world, largely owing to our economy’s heavy reliance on coal for energy generation. Moreover, the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy (DMRE) plans to continue investing in fossil fuel technology to meet the energy demand, flying in the face of global pressure to decarbonis­e the economy. This does not bode well for South Africa’s global competitiv­eness as an investment destinatio­n, or for its export products.

Ambition

The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) states that only by reducing annual emissions to 350 mtco2e by 2030 will South Africa be playing its part in keeping the globe under a 1.5oc increase. To illustrate, a 1.5oc global average temperatur­e increase translates to a 3oc temperatur­e increase in South Africa. According to the IPCC’S AR6 report published recently, we can expect extreme drought in the interior of the country and extreme precipitat­ion along the coastal regions. To curtail this, South Africa will need support from the internatio­nal community, through both funding instrument­s and political pressure on the state, to ensure that we do not move too far off the 1.5oc trajectory.

The Presidenti­al Climate Commission (PCC) submitted its recommenda­tions on the updated Nationally Determined Contributi­on (NDC) to President Cyril Ramaphosa in July this year. The report recommende­d the decommissi­oning of coal-fired power stations (CFPS) once they’ve reached their end-of-life, increasing investment­s in renewable energy and rolling out green transport initiative­s at scale to lower our carbon emissions. The Commission also recognises the importance of greater ambition to reducing emissions targets that will lower the transition risk, the inherent risk in changing strategies, policies or investment­s as society and industry work to reduce their reliance on carbon and impact on the climate (such as the reduction in the value of investment­s in carbon-heavy industries), improve energy security and attract additional internatio­nal finance.

Striving for more ambitious emissions targets now will lessen future costs from climate damage and limit opportunit­y costs from unaligned spending, while positionin­g the country as a globally competitiv­e trading partner.

Achieving this also requires developed countries to play their part in supporting developing nations like South Africa in meeting their NDC commitment­s. The current commitment­s by developed nations are insufficie­nt to close the ambition gap. The United Nations Environmen­t Programme’s Emissions Gap Report has been tracking the emission gap for over a decade now and their latest finding is that the global community is still on course for a 3oc temperatur­e increase by the end of the century, despite a slight dip in greenhouse house gas (GHG) emissions in 2019/20 caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Finance

COP26 needs to shed light on how parties, including South Africa, will obtain this support; $100-billion per annum was pledged for climate finance to address climate impacts, but this target has yet to be met since tracking started in 2013. This support needs to be in the form of grants, not loans, as the latter will only exacerbate the country’s debt burden and weaken our ability to service the loans.

The South Africa Climate Finance Landscape, published in January this year, looked at the flow of Climate Finance to South Africa for the 2017-2018 period. Of the global share of Climate finance, the continent received 26% from Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t countries; of that, $4.2-billion came to South Africa. By comparison, in order for South Africa to meet its NDC commitment­s, it will need to invest $41-billion per annum over 15 years (from 2015). The report goes on to highlight how much climate finance has been invested, and the share of this finance between mitigation and adaptation projects. The report finds that 81% of funds went to mitigation projects and only 7% for adaptation. The latest version of the report is expected to be published next week.

SACAN’S position is that a more even balance between finance for mitigation and adaptation must be achieved. This could be done through various mechanisms, including the recapitali­sation of the Adaptation Fund or having specific targets for adaptation. The $100-billion per annum that was pledged is intended to support parties to meet their climate commitment­s, as extreme weather events present a clear and present danger to society, especially to those in developing nations and Least Developed Countries in Sub-saharan Africa. Not only have we witnessed flooding in Germany but we have seen flooding in West Africa and cyclones in Southern Africa, which puts pressure on government­s to pay for damages caused by climate impacts.

Loss and Damage Finance can play a significan­t role in plugging this gap. We will push for a decision at COP26 for the operationa­lisation of the Santiago Network on Loss & Damage (SNLP), ensuring it is sufficient­ly resourced and has effective governance.

Cross-cutting issues

SACAN will prioritise two key cross-cutting issues at COP26: gender and intergener­ational equity. It is a commonly understood fact that women are the most affected by climate impacts, particular­ly those in developing states such as South Africa, and future generation­s are not able to represent their interests in today’s decisions that will affect them tomorrow.

Climate actions must promote gender-responsive energy democracy. It moves us away from top-down, marketbase­d approaches for energy production, distributi­on and control over natural resources and towards an economy of care. Communitie­s, including women, should have control over their own energy systems as well as over other natural resources. A gender responsive, ecosystem based, community driven, participat­ory, and fully transparen­t approach to climate change adaptation and resilience needs to replace the corporatis­ation of agricultur­e and the promotion of large-scale industrial agricultur­e at the expense of women farmers, pastoralis­ts, and indigenous peoples. A just transition to a green economy and green infrastruc­ture must centre around resource-care work and enable women and girls to lead a just transition to a green economy, ensuring that there is equal opportunit­y in the green economy transition. Issues such as girls’ education, Sex & Reproducti­ve Health and empowermen­t are climate issues.

On intergener­ational equity, parties must go beyond the acknowledg­ement that younger generation­s are severely threatened by climate change and its multiple impacts. This isn’t “future generation­s” anymore, it is the children alive now. Young people need a true demonstrat­ion that older people in power are upholding principles of intergener­ational equity. This can be achieved through the institutio­nalising of mechanisms to promote the participat­ion of youth in climate negotiatio­ns, establishi­ng and promoting platforms to ensure collaborat­ion and skills transfer between young people and, finally, establishi­ng and promoting platforms to ensure meaningful, intergener­ational dialogue and ambitious climate action.

These are the key issues SACAN will be tracking at COP26 and we will engage with the relevant stakeholde­rs and partners to ensure effective climate action.

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