Agri Kultuur November 2018 | Page 26

These proposed power stations - Thabametsi and Khanyisa - are mired in multiple legal challenges and will be among the most greenhouse gas emission and water-intensive plants in the world. “Locking South Africa into fossil fuel projects with high emissions for well beyond 2030 is short- sighted and reckless,” says Hugo. Tasneem Essop, of the National Planning Commission and the Energy Democracy Initiative, says the IPCC report represents an urgent call to action. “The implications of this report for South Africa are huge. We’re ... in the top 20 of high-emitting countries, as well as being particularly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. This means that we would have to be more ambitious in our actions to cut emissions and invest much more in building climate resilience in the country. We need to do this while addressing our triple challenge of poverty, inequality and unemployment.” Scholes says there is a need for climate leadership “which speaks in one voice across government departments” and between the private and public sectors and civil society. “We’re already seeing some leading companies take a progressive stand. Standard Bank, for instance, recently announced that it would no longer fund coal projects.” Happy Khambule, political adviser at Greenpeace Africa, says: “Our government will unfortunately not see this report as important, unless civil society, business and labour stress just how important it is. “Climate change is a threat to our survival ... to peace, security and social cohesion. We’ve seen that with the water shortages in Cape Town and the Eastern Cape.” Source: Saturday Star / 13 October 2018, 10:30am / Sheree Bega: https://www. iol.co.za/saturday- star/climate-change- apocalypse-17462385 © Independent On-line 2018. All rights reserved. AgriKultuur |AgriCulture 26