Environment

SACSIS is concerned about the impact of climate change and environmental degradation on the lives of the poor. The poor carry a disproportionate burden as result of environmental injustice. SACSIS supports the ethical, balanced and responsible use of land and renewable resources.

The Age of Cheap Oil Has Ended

Picture: madaboutasia/Flickr Glenn Ashton - While motorists feel the pain of the recent ascent of the oil price to near record levels, the underlying reality of rising oil prices has profound implications right across society. Barring an unprecedented oil discovery, the world will never again see the return of cheap oil. Oil prices will certainly never return to the levels of the 1990s, or even the first half of the first decade of this century. The rise in oil prices is the harbinger of a major restructuring of modern...

Do Environmentalists Lack a Theory of Change?

Picture: Sabino/Flickr Saliem Fakir - Environmentalists in South Africa are largely seen as lone and desperate voices. Often they are perceived to be white and middle-class, but that is changing slowly. Environmentalists remain at the margins of the mainstream economy and outside of key decision-making channels. Where they cannot control the excesses and harm belched out of the belly of a gluttonous economy, they mop up the aftermath. Their fire fighting battles range from dealing with issues such as acid mine drainage to...

South Africa's Biofuel Policies: On a Road to Nowhere

Picture: www.InfoBarrel.com Glenn Ashton - The South African Department of Minerals and Energy (DoE) is holding its final public consultation meetings about the adoption of regulations relating to the mandatory blending of biofuels with petrol and diesel at the end of February. This follows the publication of the draft regulations in September 2011. There is a concerted local drive to promote so-called “biofuels” by their supporters and agro-fuels by their opponents. The logic behind these different terms is worth...

Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust: The Case for Green Funerals

Picture: www.citi5.org Glenn Ashton - The burden of an increasing global population forces us to reconsider how we deal with our dead. Our present system of burials and cremations is not only wasteful, it is unsustainable. Most of us now live in cities where space is at a premium. Using our limited land to house the dead is an anachronism. Incinerating dead bodies demands huge amounts of energy and releases serious pollutants. Therefore, we not only need to tread more carefully on the earth when we are alive but we also need...

Solar Water Heaters, Jobs and the Challenge of Creating a Green Economy in South Africa

Picture: Abri Beluga Saliem Fakir - The Western Cape branch of COSATU recently called for protest action in front of parliament to push government to promote localisation in the solar industry, as jobs are being destroyed because of foreign imports. It’s the right kind of noise, but a little late. The green economy is not only about sustainability; it’s also about the protection of future jobs. South Africa is not the only country in the world banking on the green economy to increase jobs and uplift the...

Adding Insult to Injury: The Impacts of Coal Extraction

Picture: www.freefoto.com Glenn Ashton - Significant developments in the energy sector are underway in western Limpopo because of the extensive coal resources in that region. Besides Eskom’s massive Medupi power station, near the existing Matimba power station, there are several other mega-projects in the pipeline. The question is whether these are sustainable or in some cases, even viable. Other developments in the area include expanding the massive Exxaro Grootgeluk mine, which supplies Matimba and Medupi, as well...