Skip to Content

  • Credit: © Greenpeace Africa / Mujahid Safodien

  • Credit: © Greenpeace Africa / Mujahid Safodien

  • Credit: © Greenpeace Africa / Mujahid Safodien

  • Credit: © Greenpeace Africa / Mujahid Safodien

EnglishorZulu

Presidential Climate Commission’s first community consultation in eMalahleni

08 March 2022 at 10:02 am

Community Member Jabulani Mkwanazi at PCC Consultations Emalahleni. Source: Chris Louw
Community Member Jabulani Mkwanazi at PCC Consultations Emalahleni. Source: Chris Louw

Community activists from coal affected communities in Emalahleni and surrounding areas gathered in Emalahleni for the

first community consultation organised by the Presidential Climate Commission on 7 March 2022, today.

Community people living next to coal mines and power stations expressed their daily suffering from the impacts of air pollution. Many of them suffer from poor health and are concerned for the future of their children.

Communities expressed their unhappiness about the process of consultation so far. For a transition to be just, communities, who form the majority of people in the country, need to be included in all decision making about the transition, and have their voices heard. However, this process has moved for more than a year – since December 2020 – and they have not been consulted.

They made it clear that consultation should be more than a once off meeting. Communities need to be consulted throughout the remaining four years of the commission’s work, and beyond that for the three decades to 2050 when the commission is saying that coal and other fossil fuel use will be phased out. Consultation must not be a tick box exercise. The community’s voices need to heard, and their concerns and proposals need to be reflected in the commission’s plans and documents. The community must have the opportunity to see how their inputs are used, and whether they agree. They also want to be involved in plans for the transition.

Community members expressed their alarm at the absence of plans to replace the coal economy in their areas. They are not aware of any planning to create alternative economies, and have not been consulted about them. These plans must be made and shared, for example how the Renewable Energy economy will work and how it will provide jobs to people losing their jobs in the local coal economy. However, there are a large number of people who are already without jobs. How will the Just Transition provide jobs for them?

They are also concerned about the low level of understanding in their communities of climate change and how climate change creates the need for a Just Transition. The commission must provide resources and a process for communities to be better informed about climate change and the just transition, so that community members can fully participate in determining their own future.

[Ends]

 

For more information, please contact:

Promise Mabilo – Vukani Environmental Movement
+27 79 748 9115
[email protected]

 

Thomas Mnguni – groundWork, Friends of the Earth South Africa
+27 72 449 5655
[email protected]

 

Share