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.

From Cancun to Durban: Climate Change Negotiations COP 'Out'

Picture: Oxfam International Michelle Pressend - South Africa is no stranger to hosting major United Nations (UN) events. In 2001 the World Conference Against Racism was hosted in Durban and in 2002, the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) took place in Johannesburg. In late 2011 the contentious climate change negotiations will continue at the UN 17th Conference of the Party (COP 17) in Durban where the South African government is hoping they could clinch the deal for a “fair, balanced and ambitious outcome,” on...

South Africa's Twenty-Year Plan for Electricity Generation and What It Means

Picture: pgegreenenrgy Saliem Fakir - The draft twenty-year plan for electricity generation, also called the Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) 2010, was released a few weeks ago for public comment. The IRP process is all but a fait accompli. But what goes into the plan will determine the future of South Africa’s energy mix for the next two decades. The energy choices available to us are between coal, nuclear, gas, hydro and other renewables. With a projected GDP growth rate of 4.6% over the next 20 years, South Africa will...

Our Water Crisis: Seizing Opportunity From Danger

Picture: KonradC Glenn Ashton - Water management in South Africa is in serious crisis. Consumers were recently told to wash their fruit and vegetables as they could be infected by disease causing E. coli  microbes because the crops were irrigated with water contaminated by sewage.  Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) is killing not just crocodiles but entire riverine eco-systems. Our dams, rivers and streams are becoming ever more stressed due to the low flows of water that remain in them because of illegal over-abstraction...

Ailing Climate Negotiations and the Future of Coal

Picture: Jono Brennan Saliem Fakir - What is uncertain for one is also not certain for the other. Following last year’s Copenhagen Climate Summit, the five days of negotiations in Bonn last week in preparation for the big climate change meeting in Cancun, Mexico, at the end of the year, has been met by a profound display of disinterest.  Every step forward has been replied with a two-steps backward intervention by countries that hold the key to global action on climate. It looks like Copenhagen’s indistinct...

BPing the Arctic?

Picture: Nasa Goddard Photo and Video Subhankar Banerjee - Will the Obama Administration Allow Shell Oil to Do to Arctic Waters What BP Did to the Gulf? Bear with me. I’ll get to the oil. But first you have to understand where I’ve been and where you undoubtedly won’t go, but Shell’s drilling rigs surely will -- unless someone stops them. Over the last decade, I’ve come to know Arctic Alaska about as intimately as a photographer can. I’ve been there many times, starting with the 14 months I spent back in...

Righting the Wrongs of the Copenhagen Fraud: Bolivia Charts a New Climate Course

Picture: Chucksta420 Michelle Pressend - “Climate change cannot be addressed by half measures,” argues Pablo Solón Romero, Bolivia’s Ambassador to the United Nations (UN), in a recent article published by the UK’s Guardian Newspaper. The crucial point he tries to get across is, “we can't make compromises with nature.” Romero made the statement in the run up to Bolivia’s forthcoming ‘Peoples' Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth’, scheduled to take...