What we do to stop climate change

Climate change impacts are being felt across the globe as sea levels rise, tropical storms smash into coastlines, once-fertile lands battle with floods or drought and permafrost in the polar regions melts. Although Africa contributes relatively little to global warming, the region is suffering from its effects.

Unpredictable rainfall patterns are causing lower crop yields, soaring food prices and dwindling resources.

Although Africa contributes very little to climate change, the region is suffering from its effects. Unpredictable rainfall patterns are causing lower crop yields, soaring food prices and dwindling resources. While developed countries debate what climate change could mean for their future, it is already threatening the survival of the world's most vulnerable people.

Over 180 million people in sub-Saharan Africa alone could die as a result of climate change by the end of the century. Unpredictable rainfall patterns, lower crop yields, soaring food prices and dwindling natural resources are already causing increased human migration, tension and conflict.

Click for the solutions to climate change

Warmer temperatures and altered rainfall patterns could also create new habitats for disease-carrying organisms such as mosquitoes, opening up new areas to dengue, yellow fever and malaria.

South Africa - in a position to lead

South Africa can influence the battle against climate change, being an active member of the African Union, a vocal member of the G77, and one of the four developing countries poised to become a southern engine of global economic growth.

Its powerful combination of strong international leadership, progressive thinking and forward-looking policies are reflected in its calls for dramatic cuts in global greenhouse gas emissions and for mechanisms to help vulnerable countries adapt to the impacts of climate change.

Despite this, South Africa is the 14th highest emitter of CO2 in the world with emissions likely to rise sharply as energy demands increase. Most of its carbon emissions, around 80 percent of its primary energy needs, come from coal. The government plans to re-commission several retired coal power stations, and build more in the coming decade, with the remaining increase in capacity expected to come from new nuclear power plants.

As countless examples around the world show, nuclear power is not clean, cheap or safe. South Africa planned new reactors include the untested Pebble Bed Modular Reactor, which will cost an estimated 14 billion Rand (US$1.58 billion). A move from highly polluting coal energy to expensive, risky nuclear energy is not a viable solution.

Enormous renewable energy potential

South Africa is not only coal dependent at home, but it exports 60 percent of its coal, contributing to growing carbon emissions beyond its borders. It has set a target for renewable energy of four per cent of its total electricity requirements by 2013, and announced strong policies on energy and transport efficiency and carbon emission cuts. Despite this, the government has no effective energy efficiency measures in place and almost no implimentation of renewable energy production.

South Africa has immense potential for developing renewable energy, especially solar and wind. Greenpeace is campaigning for a global energy revolution using renewable energy, greater efficiency in energy production plus more efficient energy use. Based on existing technologies, we can halve global carbon emissions by 2050 while providing affordable energy, jobs and economic growth.

There is no time to delay. Instead of making the same costly mistakes that the climate-changing economies of the developed world have made, South Africa can leapfrog 'dirty development' and lead the African energy revolution.

Solutions

It is not too late to stop dangerous climate change. Greenpeace is calling for:

  • A peak in global emissions by 2015 and a steady decline thereafter;
  • Significant reduction in our dependency on fossil fuels, particularly coal, through the adoption of an energy revolution to move us from a world powered by fossil fuels and nuclear to one running on renewable energy;
  • Zero deforestation in the world's intact tropical forests by 2015;
  • Ambitious government targets and timelines on energy efficiency in vehicles and appliances.

The latest updates

 

Children at the Climate Change banner competition

Image | October 21, 2009 at 17:20

Children at the Climate Change banner competition

Image | October 21, 2009 at 17:16

Climate Change Banner Competition

Image gallery | October 20, 2009

Finalists at the Climate Change banner Competition

Image | October 20, 2009 at 22:00

Brad Smith

Image | October 14, 2009 at 11:59

South Africa could save billions and climate by switching to renewables

Feature story | October 12, 2009 at 22:00

Aggressive investment in renewable power generation and energy efficiency could provide three quarters of South Africa’s electricity by 2050, slashing over 200 million tons of CO2 emissions annually, the equivalent of 10 coal-fired power stations...

Clean Energy Now

Feature story | September 1, 2009 at 11:36

This weekend over 60 supporters of Greenpeace Africa created a human banner, which reads “Clean Energy Now” to mark the start of the final countdown to the Copenhagen climate talks in December.

Clean Energy Now: 60 staff and volunteers

Image | August 30, 2009 at 22:00

Greenpeace Africa staff members and volunteers display a banner reading "Clean Energy" and compose a human banner with the word "Now" as part of the global call to action on the run up to the United Nations Climate Change Summit in Copenhagen...

Greenpeace paints South African coal ship

Feature story | July 9, 2009 at 22:00

As the G8 meeting in Italy ended with little progress on saving the climate, Greenpeace called for public pressure to demand that the world's wealthiest governments take decisive action on climate change.

More Tips for Trevor - let's start a real energy revolution

Feature story | February 15, 2009 at 23:00

Like other South Africans, Saul Margolis of Johannesburg must be happy that Trevor Manual included his "Tips to Trevor" proposal to impose taxes on incandescent light bulbs in his budget speech.

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