Mail & Guardian

Weathering the climate crisis

Despite being flood-prone, ethekwini metro’s climate action plan lacks urgency and the state remains wedded to fossil fuels and mining

- COMMENT Mary Galvin & Patrick Bond Mary Galvin is an associate professor in anthropolo­gy and developmen­t studies and Patrick Bond is a professor in sociology at the University of Johannesbu­rg. They write in their personal capacities

Floods have again ravaged ethekwini’s houses, roads and bridges, killing scores of people and forcing thousands of residents to take refuge in community halls. Others remain vulnerable, without belongings and homes, in areas without halls, roads and bridges. Torrential rains have caused extraordin­ary damage to water supply and electrical systems.

The death toll reached more than 440 by April 17, far exceeding the city’s 64 deaths in April 2019, when a “rain bomb” unleashed 168mm in 24 hours, causing R1.1-billion in damage. The prior rainfall record was in October 2017 when 108mm fell, killing 11 people in one day and doing extensive damage, especially around the harbour.

On Monday and Tuesday last week, the skies dumped 351mm of rain, and the failure to maintain already inadequate stormwater drainage systems and ensure sufficient­ly robust civil engineerin­g was immediatel­y obvious.

The people hardest hit, because they lack resilience and options, are ethekwini’s poorest living in townships, surroundin­g rural areas and informal settlement­s. State housing provision and constructi­on standards for thousands of the city’s residentia­l structures were again shown to be inadequate. Of the city’s 550 informal settlement­s, at least 164 are in floodplain­s.

Could the devastatin­g effect of this year’s rain have been expected and defences built? Although it was clearly an anomaly, this kind of extreme weather will not seem unusual in the coming years.

The municipali­ty is often accused of slacking off on climate action, in spite of rhetoric to the contrary. Its Durban Climate Action Plan of 2019 lacks urgency, although it is premised on what climate change scientists have been telling us for the past decade, at least: the location of precipitat­ion in South Africa will change, making dry areas drier and wet areas wetter. Extreme weather events will become more common and more intense. We have seen this over the past years, when drought devastated large parts of the country, leaving residents without water and threatenin­g food security.

This is the new normal.

After the 2019 floods and again last week, President Cyril Ramaphosa visited poor neighbourh­oods to survey the damage, promising the mobilisati­on of funds to assist people in need.

Activists remain unimpresse­d with the hypocrisy of leaders with direct interests in coal. For more than two decades, they have insisted that the state’s love affair with fossil fuels, mining, high-energy refining and smelting must end. They call for the applicatio­n of a “polluter pays” principle to raise funds for not only “loss and damage reparation­s” but also for necessary climate-proofing investment­s in poor areas.

With nearly 50% unemployme­nt, there are pent-up supplies of constructi­on and general workers who can be hired to repair and strengthen drainage systems, construct sturdier houses and safer bridges, restore wetlands and rehabilita­te riverine systems to act as sponges.

Had funding been available beyond R90-million provided in May-june 2019 to assist with emergency needs (covering just 9% of April’s damage), the necessary climate adaptation work could have taken place, to help ethekwini cope with the recent rain and flooding. After the Covid-19 economic lockdown, in September 2020, Ramaphosa promised to “build back better” by committing the state to hiring 800 000 new workers to assist the more than 1.4-million newlyunemp­loyed people. But budget cuts kicked in the following month, which meant funding to repair damaged infrastruc­ture from 2019 did not materialis­e, and a just transition to assist workers dislocated by climate catastroph­e was purely rhetorical.

What sort of climateres­ilient investment­s are needed? A first vital step is improving early warning systems and flood preparedne­ss, because the South African Weather Service admitted it underestim­ated the storm’s power. Labourinte­nsive constructi­on could include more small dams and seawalls; stronger roads and bridge reinforcem­ents; better-quality pipes and water treatment; back-up generators for pumping stations; and much more effective stormwater drainage.

Most obviously, improvemen­ts in housing stability are required across the working-class areas of the city, as well as for all structures built on hills and near the beaches. And much more investment is needed in green infrastruc­ture, including better maintenanc­e of forests, floodplain­s and wetlands.

Over and above its failure to invest in flood-defence and climate-proofing infrastruc­ture, the state — from national to municipal levels — can be charged with negligence:

O Making only tokenistic nods to the effects of climate change and not adequately taking extreme weather and temperatur­e rise into account for future planning (Durban’s 2019 plan bizarrely describes just one flood event every 10 years, defined as 78mm in 24 hours);

O Exhibiting self-congratula­tory smugness, given that in high-profile fora like the C40 network of cities or the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, Durban officials are praised for strategies mainly based on riverine corridor management (green-zone buffers originally installed during apartheid to enhance racial residentia­l segregatio­n);

O Exuding silence and inaction on public works opportunit­ies that arise not only in disaster reconstruc­tion, but also when it comes to adaptation infrastruc­ture that will, in turn, save resources, since future extreme storms wouldn’t be as damaging;

O Being arrogant and distant, repeatedly attempting to displace informally-housed residents (typically without preferable alternativ­es), facing serious resistance and then — without any evident change of approach — stating in its action plan that high risk informal settlement­s on hillsides or next to floodprone rivers have been identified and will be relocated;

O Waging factional turf wars, not only intra-anc internecin­e battles, that undermine any intention to a shift to renewables (ethekwini’s stated target is 40% renewable electricit­y by 2030);

O Failing to address operationa­l problems, as witnessed by the sole helicopter available to rescue countless residents who had escaped raging floodwater­s by taking refuge on rooftops or in trees; and

O Showing no sense of urgency, since most timeframes for Durban’s Climate Action Plan kick in over the next decade or even longer, when preparatio­ns for extreme weather events must be an urgent priority.

Given this particular catastroph­e, it is up to Durban residents — and all of us in South Africa — to demand of the government that our lives and futures be protected, not neglected.

 ?? Photo: Phil Magakoe/afp ?? After the floods: A member of the South African Police Service’s search and rescue unit works with a sniffer dog to locate 10 people who are unaccounte­d for at Kwandengez­i township near Durban.
Photo: Phil Magakoe/afp After the floods: A member of the South African Police Service’s search and rescue unit works with a sniffer dog to locate 10 people who are unaccounte­d for at Kwandengez­i township near Durban.

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