the heat is on: local government and climate resilient development in south africa
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The Heat is On:Local Government and Climate Resilient
Development in South Africa
Prof. Anél du PlessisNMMU – November 2012
Faculty of Law North-West University, Potchefstroom anel.duplessis@nwu.ac.za
Outline• Climate change – does it matter whether it matters?• Meaning of climate change concepts from a law, policy and
governance perspective• Where is South African policy heading?• “Local” government and climate change as a “global”
agenda item– Some of the links– Some of the complexities
• Applicable SA law framework• Status quo in local government• Conclusion
Does it matter whether climate change matters?
• Environmental change visible world-wide• Some scepticism and questions about its causes across
scientific disciplines and sectors• Questions about the scientific methodologies used to
generate knowledge about climate change• Mixed messages from slow-to-react governments (e.g.
Australia, Canada, USA) • Yet, visible signs in many parts of the world of climatic
related change and resultant impacts on ecosystem services, resource availability etc and, as a result, on people
Calls in literature that the world stops questioning as a matter of principle the
“existence” and “causes” of climate change but instead invests energy and money in the
visible occurring changes in our environments and in scientifically sound modelling and
projections on the changes to come.
The world needs to look forward: whether or not “climate change” exists – we need to deal
with unsustainable life on earth. Attempts to address “climate change” must be
seen as attempts to fast-track the journey towards sustainable development.
Meaning of the concepts
Mitigation
Adaptation
Requisite threshold: “limiting the human
causes of climate change as much and as soon as possible” (Erens S et al
2009)
Monitoring and assessment of measures
to reduce GHG emissions (ICLEI CCPP)
Adjustments and reactions in natural or human
systems in response to actual or expected climatic
stimuli and their effects
(Lin, J 2009)
National policy direction in SA• SA is Non-Annex 1 country; non-binding obligations• Part of BASIC / G4 countries – emerging geopolitical alliance• White Paper on Climate Change, 2011• Focuses on “climate resilient development”:
Effective management of inevitable climate change impacts through interventions that build and sustain SA’s social, economic and environmental resilience and capacity to respond
• Categorising responses as ‘adaptation’ or ‘mitigation’ obscures real and potential combined impact of responses – “integrated strategic approach” (integration & alignment)
Why is responding to climate change relevant for local government in SA?
Localised impacts of climate change
“Developmental local government” vis-a-vis “service delivery arm
of government”
Role of LG in responding to climate change widely recognised internationally (UN, UNFCCC, COP 1 +
etc) – but not well-defined!
2011 White Paper: CC
considerations to be integrated in IDPs and service
delivery programmes
Schedule 4B and 5B of the Constitution – items relevant for
CC – speak to ‘subsidiarity’
International directions: ICLEI
CCCP Programme etc.
Municipalities have legislative and
executive powers – enable localised
responses
Development opportunities for LG• Addressing climate change need not stifle economic
growth; several opportunities for municipalities:– Building a green economy locally• Couple imperatives of economic development with low
carbon pathways• Financial benefits from improved energy efficiency• More business opportunities • Creating more jobs etc.
– Attract more investment as environmentally responsible ‘leaders’
– Overall economic benefits e.g. urban projects for CDM credits
BUT ...
The “Complexity” factor• One thing to acknowledge and call for role of LG in
addressing climate change; another to define it and make it operational
• Known complexities:– Many municipalities find themselves vulnerable and unstable in
relation to governance difficulties rather than resilient– Several pockets of good practice and successful progress – yet
several municipalities cannot fulfil constitutionally entrenched targets
– Rural / urban divide within “local government” complicates consolidated approaches
The “Complexity” factor
–Growing number of (often unfunded) LG mandates, functions and duties–Costs & funding–Politics in local government – vision “4” and
vision “voters”–Legislative and structural fragmentation and
inefficiency within individual municipalities – working in silos
The “Complexity” factor
• Complexities may easily degenerate vision and drive with respect to CC and LG:– As governor– As governed– As responsible for internal governance
• Mentioned and other complexities are “real” in SA and must be seen in perspective and to have impact
• Yet, focus of this presentation is not to be side-tracked by these complexities (for the moment), but to ask in a very specific way and considering the meaning of “climate resilient development” ....
To what extent is it (normatively speaking), possible for municipalities
to contribute to ‘climate resilient development’ through the existing
legal framework?
Status Quo in law
Environmental Law Local Government Law
ConstitutionSs 24, 27
NEMA
Sectoral & other e-laws
ConstitutionCh 7
Systems Act
Other LG laws
Environmental law in summary• ‘Framework’ law:– Constitutional mandate to respond b.m.o positive
action to impacts and change affecting human health and well-being – s 24 read with rights to life, human dignity, equality etc.
– S 24 echoed in s 153(c) – municipalities must respond to basic needs of people while promoting social and economic development
– Environmentally relevant powers of municipalities: air pollution, building regulations, municipal planning, storm-water management, water and sanitation, control of public nuisances etc.
Environmental law in summary• ‘Framework’ law:– NEMA
• National environmental management principles applicable to all ‘organs of state’– Precautionary principle– Preventive principle– BPEO– Environmental justice– Discharge of global and international environmental responsibilities
in national interest
• EMCAs e.g. energy efficiency, recycling and reuse of waste, green building etc.• Cooperative environmental government structures• Etc.
Environmental law in summary• Specific and sector environmental laws:– No ‘climate change law’– SEMAs etc on biodiversity, protected areas, waste
management, coastal zone management, air quality & disaster management
• Powers inherent to natural resources in ‘public trust’• Municipalities have licensing powers e.g air
quality (“implement SA’s obligations in respect of international agreements”)
Environmental law in summary
• Municipalities may devise / participate in:
– strategic plans e.g. biodiversity management plan, water services development plan, protected area management plan etc.– spatial plans and schemes– programmes e.g. coastal management programmes– frameworks e.g. disaster management frameworks– intergovernmental structures e.g. national disaster
management advisory forum
Local government law in summary• Constitutional objectives and powers aimed at
‘development’ vis-a-vis mere service delivery• Mandate to provide ‘environmentally sustainable
services’ defined as to mean inter alia that risk of harm to environment and to human health and safety must be minimised to the extent reasonably possible (Systems Act, s 1)
• Short, medium and long term strategic ‘development oriented planning’ – IDPs with SDFs and sector plans– SALGA aims at mainstreaming climate change in LG
via IDPs – new sector plan coming?
Provisions and instruments in law and relevant for climate resilient
development:
Mandatory & voluntary planning
(strategic, spatial and other types of planning)
Strategic frameworks
Discretionary / compulsory institutional set-up in & involving
municipalities
Programmes allowing for innovation
What has thus far developed with what we’ve got in SA law?
Case: eThekwini
- Several climate change policies, projects, plans and programmes since 2000 wrt mitigation and adaptation
-First GHG inventory completed in 2006
- Municipal Climate Protection Programme established in 2004 to integrate CC issues into all aspects of the municipality’s work
eThekwini - Headline Adaptation Strategy - highlighting some key interventions required for adaptation in areas of human health, water, sanitation, biodiversity, coastal zone, infrastructure, food security and agriculture, strategic planning, LED and disaster management
- Carbon Storage and Sequestration Analysis
- Adoption of three sectoral municipal adaptation plans for water, health and disaster management
- Computer based GIS Urban Integrated Assessment Tool to simulate, evaluate and compare strategic plans and policies to inform future planning
eThekwini
- Establishment of “Climate Protection”-Branch in municipality to mainstream climate change into city’s planning and development
- GIS Computer Model “Sea-level Rise Viewer” to project sea-level rise along the city’s coastline to assist with “Shoreline Management Plans” and “Municipal Adaptation Plans”
-2011 – first “South Durban Shoreline Management Plan” – a guiding framework to respond to the potential effects of seawater inundation
-First on African continent: Clean Development Project (CDM project): “Durban Landfill-gas-to-electricity”-project – collection of gas, use of recovered gas to produce electricity for municipal grid
-
Several climate change related developments also in the cities of Johannesburg , Cape
Town etc!
< Mostly programmatic developments>
Conclusion• Climate change / change in the environment at unprecedented
rate has international arena devising new policies and legal instruments
• It is happening with SA on board
• Implications for municipalities arise from:– Climate / environmental change per se– State authorities’ response b.m.o, inter alia, international law and
policy– Fact that municipalities may / must respond and ensure compliance
through the use of its own executive and legislative powers
Conclusion• View: getting ‘sustainability’-thinking and action • and ‘developmental local government’• right at local level may go long way towards ‘climate
resilient development’• SA’s national law and policy makers should avoid further
‘strangulation of local government’• Entire government must work towards integration and
alignment• Existing laws do provide an enabling framework &
adequate flexibility for addressing CC – several municipalities serve as example!
Thank you….
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