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Date
: 16/02/2006
Source: Ministry of Environmental Affairs and Tourism
Title: van Schalkwyk: 14th Session of Commission for Atmospheric
Sciences of WMO
Keynote speech by Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism, Marthinus van Schalkwyk, at the opening of the 14th
Session of the Commission for Atmospheric Sciences (CAS) of the
World Meteorological Organisation (WMO), Somerset West, Cape
Town
Weather, air quality and climate change: cutting-edge Science to
benefit all South Africans
Introduction
Speaking in 1965, the founding Director of the United States (US)
National Centre for Atmospheric Research, Dr Walter Orr Roberts,
made the observation that: “for the benefit of mankind we
need to attain the maximum possible mastery of our atmospheric
environment the enemy is hail, blizzards, floods, droughts and
hurricanes. The enemy is the innate intransigence and
inscrutability of nature.”
In December 1998 an elderly gentleman was quietly shopping in a
local pharmacy in Umtata, in the Eastern Cape Province. In
less time than it takes to turn around, his peace of mind was
shattered when the plate-glass window of the shop exploded inwards
as a tornado struck the town. Killing 17 people and damaging more
than R90 million worth of property, this single extreme weather
event came close to claiming an even greater cost, the elderly
gentleman who had no warning of the tornado, was also the President
of South Africa – Nelson Mandela. Clearly weather
itself does not discriminate. It affects all people with
seemingly equal randomness and apparent disregard for nationality,
stature or status but the reality is that natural disasters make
the greatest impact on those nations least able to afford the
damage. According to the World Bank more than 95% of
disaster-related deaths occur in developing countries and as we
celebrate today the first anniversary of the coming into force of
the Kyoto Protocol, we all know that it is Africa, your RA1 region
- that stands amongst the most vulnerable to the effects of climate
change. It is my great privilege therefore to formally
welcome you all to Cape Town, to South Africa and for the first
time in the history of the CAS, to the African continent. On behalf
of the people of our country, I would like to thank you for
choosing this place, also known as the Cape of Storms, for this
event.
Recent South African Weather Service Achievements
Chairperson, although South Africa was only readmitted to the WMO
in 1994, making us one of the ‘younger’ member states,
we have already built a proud track record of regional and
international collaboration. From active service in the committees
of the CAS, to the work done on the WMO’s African Joint
Procurement Project and to radar collaboration work in Botswana and
Mozambique, further linking our regional radar networks within the
Southern African Development Community (SADC).
In the context of the New Partnership for Africa’s
Development (NEPAD) we are determined to work with our regional
neighbours to improve the accuracy of our weather data, forecasts
and analysis. This is of particular importance in improving
regional responses to extreme weather events like the severe
flooding in Mozambique in 2000, which saw the South African
National Defence Force (SANDF) assisting the rescue missions in
partnership with Mozambican authorities. Better radar integration
and more effective regional weather forecasting will allow more
timeous warnings, more appropriate preparations and more rapid
disaster management in Southern Africa.
I would like to take a brief moment to acknowledge and pay tribute
to some of the more recent achievements of our South African
Weather Service, under the leadership of the Chairperson of the
Board, Sizeka Rensburg and her team. These include the national
lightning detection network that has now been established –
which will allow us to detect lightning, conduct research and issue
timeous warnings to both the public and commercial clients; the
acquisition of a new and faster supercomputer for weather modelling
and more accurate forecasting and the replacement of 13 manual
weather stations with semi-automatic ones since early 2005 –
including five such stations in the poorly observed, vulnerable
rural areas of the Eastern Cape to help avoid situations such as
the one in which our former President found himself in 1998.
It is also my pleasure to ask that you join me in recognising a
truly prestigious award that has been earned by our South African
Weather Service and our Water Research Commission – the
Excellence Award from the United Arab Emirates for work done in
advancing the science and practice of weather modification. The
South African research effort into rainfall enhancement started in
1971 and has made a unique contribution to this field through the
development of hygroscopic seeding technology. I believe that the
formal award will be made later in the conference, but would ask
that you join me now in congratulating our team on this significant
achievement.
New Air Quality Responsibility for SAWS and New SA Capacity
Chairperson, one of the most pressing environmental health
challenges facing both the developed and developing world is the
issue of air quality. Unacceptable concentrations of
cancer-causing pollutants have been measured in and around our own
industrial centres. Every winter our people cough and choke from
breathing a vile cocktail of airborne pollution that remains
trapped under temperature inversion layers. Every year South Africa
spends more than R4 billion on respiratory health problems related
to air pollution.
We have acted to make a change, our new Air Quality Act, passed by
Parliament in 2004, provides for the setting of standards, both for
the quality of air that we breathe and for what may be released
into that air. We will also be announcing for public comment,
before the end of March, the first set of ambient air quality
standards for South Africa and the first “controlled
emitter” in terms of our new law.
To provide the backbone of our new Air Quality management, South
Africa is also developing an Air Quality Information System to
provide us with accurate, current, relevant and complete
information for informed air quality decision-making. I am pleased
to announce that we have taken an in-principle decision to locate
this function within our South African Weather Service as the
institution best placed to assume this key new environmental
monitoring role and are conducting a feasibility study to determine
the modalities that this will entail.
A new era for combating global climate change
Chairperson, it has been said that “Climate is what we
expect…weather is what we get”. With the fundamental
changes that human-induced climate change is bringing to our world
however, that distinction may soon become less humorous, as our
expectations become less and less optimistic.
2006 is the International Year of Deserts and
Desertification. In the words of the UN Secretary-General, Kofi
Annan, this “is one of the world’s most alarming
processes of environmental degradation”, affecting one third
of the earth’s surface, more than 4 billion hectares and over
a billion people. Moreover, it has potentially devastating social
and economic costs. Like other water-scarce,
agriculturally-dependent, developing countries, South Africa is
exceptionally vulnerable to these changes and this is why our
government has placed the national response to climate change at
the forefront of our governance priorities.
It is my hope that, as CAS participants, many here today will have
the opportunity to visit our spectacular Cape Point Nature Reserve
and the Cape Point Global Atmosphere Watch Station. As one of only
24 WMO global stations, it has collected ample evidence of the
challenges of climate change. Ambient background concentrations of
Carbon Dioxide measured at the Cape Point laboratory have recently
reached the level of 370 parts per million. This amounts to an
increase of about 5.4% during the past 10 years alone.
As we celebrate the first anniversary of the coming into
force of the Kyoto Protocol, I think we should also be celebrating
a new era in combating global climate change. With the
operationalisation of the Kyoto Protocol following the Montreal
meetings last December, Kyoto has become the only multi-lateral
environmental agreement with legally binding consequences for those
parties who do not comply. Kyoto alone however is not enough and
with the first commitment period ending in 2012 work must start now
on two tracks – the first, on deeper emission cuts by
developed countries under Kyoto and the second, broadening and
strengthening long-term co-operative action to address climate
change and enhancing implementation of the UN Framework Convention
on Climate Change and its instruments.
As a developing country we believe in the importance of a future
framework for action on climate change that is marked by a balance
between adaptation and mitigation. It is also our view that
existing commitments under the Convention should be given further
content in support of sustainable development imperatives, as well
as emission reductions. We are very aware of the need to deal with
the unintended consequences of climate change mitigation measures
taken by developed countries on the economies of some developing
countries. This will require concerted international support for
the diversification of the economies of those countries affected,
to ensure that climate change action is aligned with sustainable
development objectives.
Conclusion
Chairperson, to find patterns in what would otherwise be chaos; to
predict, with increasing accuracy, the behaviour of nature itself -
these are the Herculean tasks which fall to the members of the WMO
and its associated commissions and institutions. Oscar Wilde once
wrote that “Conversation about the weather is the last refuge
of the unimaginative”, yet for the next eight days this 14th
Session of the CAS will occupy some of the most creative and
skilled scientific minds from around the world.
It is work that is critical, not only to the developed and
industrialised nations but increasingly to developing countries as
well. To have truly global value, meteorology must make a real
difference to the everyday lives of people across the globe. It is
not enough to only invest in monitoring and research capacity, on
climate change for instance, what is more important is to project
these climate change impacts for different sectors and support the
development of robust climate change adaptation strategies. The
challenge is, for example, to integrate forecast changes into local
development planning, to inform wise infrastructure investments, or
to support research on the impacts of changed weather patterns on
specific crops, allowing farmers to switch to more suitable or more
resilient varieties. Although much progress has been made
internationally in this regard, this applied science has not
significantly penetrated Africa and other developing nations, in
particular the small island states and the least developed
countries of the world. This then is our shared
challenge.
I wish you every success in the remainder of your
deliberations, as well as a truly enjoyable experience of our South
African hospitality – which is as much about the warmth of
our people as it is about our weather.
Issued by: Ministry of Environmental Affairs and Tourism
16 February 2006