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Date
: 21/06/2004
Source: Ministry of Environmental Affairs and Tourism
Title: M van Schalkwyk: Environmental Affairs & Tourism Dept
Budget Vote 2004/2005
SPEECH DURING NATIONAL ASSEMBLY DEBATE ON BUDGET VOTE 28:
ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS & TOURISM, BY MARTHINUS VAN SCHALKWYK,
MINISTER OF ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS & TOURISM, Parliament, 21
June 2004
Introduction
In 1939, more than a decade after he became the first man to fly
solo across the Atlantic Ocean, Charles Lindbergh posed the
following question: "How long can men thrive between walls of
brick, walking on asphalt pavements, breathing the fumes of coal
and oil, growing, working, dying, with hardly a thought of wind,
and sky, and fields of grain, seeing only machine-made
beauty?"
Speaker, it is a question that South Africans must answer without
hesitation or indecision in our Second Decade of Freedom. As we
develop our industries, as we expand our communities, as we live
our lives, we have a duty to prove that growth and prosperity for
people need not be at the expense of our environment.
I would like today to propose to this House a vision for our
people.
It is a vision that will drive our Department in every action, and
every decision, every day. It is a vision of balance - that sees
development and conservation as complementary sides of the same
coin. It is a vision of equity - that sees the benefits of growth
and success more widely shared in every community. It is a vision
of sustainability - that sees our needs balanced with the Earth's
capacity to renew its resources. And it is a vision of partnership
with all South Africans of goodwill - tempered by swift and
decisive action against those who wilfully damage our shared
environment. Ultimately it is the vision of sustainable development
developed by the world at the WSSD, and encapsulated in the
Johannesburg Plan of Implementation.
In the NCOP Budget Policy Debate on Thursday we spoke at some
length about Marine and Coastal Management - especially with regard
to our fishing industry, as well as our new Domestic Tourism
Strategy and transformation in tourism. Although my address today
focuses on issues of environmental protection, waste regulation,
biodiversity management, poverty alleviation, and upcoming tourism
developments, I encourage members to raise any other issues of
concern in the debate, to which I shall reply later this
afternoon.
I would also like to encourage Members to make use of the
opportunity after this debate to visit our exhibition outside the
chamber - and to experience and enjoy the rich diversity of our
portfolio.
A Breath of Fresh Air - Air Quality Bill
Speaker, winter is upon us. Depending on which part of South Africa
we call home, this means biting winds, driving rain, bare trees,
dry veld, and for many of our poorer families, great hardship.
These difficulties are made even worse for people living in dense
settlements or downwind of polluting factories, for whom winter is
also a time of burning eyes, lungs, and hacking coughs.
It is not acceptable for children and families to suffer serious
health problems simply because they cannot afford homes in less
polluted areas. We have a duty to act, and we have acted. Since
implementing the Multi-Point Plan in Durban South, for instance, we
have already achieved a 40% reduction in the emission of Sulphur
Dioxide - but this is not nearly good enough.
There is also a long-term breath of fresh air on its way. I would
like to thank and congratulate Parliament on the decision to revive
the Air Quality Bill. Our Department has carefully studied all of
the public comment, and will, in consultation with Parliament, be
proposing amendments to strengthen it even further. The Bill will
pave the way for establishing a comprehensive Air Quality
Management System in South Africa. It will establish a scientific
basis for identifying our most polluted air, and our most guilty
polluters. It will create air quality standards and regulate
emissions. Most importantly - it will provide teeth for
environmental protection, empowering all spheres of Government to
act against those whose greed and carelessness attacks the very air
we breathe.
Once passed, the Air Quality Act will aim to reduce emissions and
to rapidly bring air quality in all identified pollution hot-spots
under control. Provincial and local air quality officers will also
be appointed, and our sons and daughters will no longer need to
grow up under the impression that brown and grey is the natural
colour of our South African skyline.
Streamlining Environmental Impact Assessments
Speaker, another cornerstone of our approach to guaranteeing the
health of our environment is our Environmental Impact Assessment
(EIA) process. Vir die afgelope sewe jaar het Suid-Afrika aan die
voorpunt gestaan van internasionale omgewings-impak bestuur, en dit
illustreer ons verbintenis om ontwikkeling en volhoubaarheid te
balanseer. Ons sewe jaar van ondervinding het ook leemtes en ruimte
vir verbetering geidentifiseer in die proses.
To this end, an amendment to the National Environmental Management
Act has been approved by Parliament. This week we will publish for
public comment a new set of EIA regulations to allow for the smooth
roll-out of a more flexible and streamlined EIA process. These
regulations will speed up decision-making, with the aim to reduce
the time it takes to process an EIA by 20% over the next three
years.
The regulations will also target the implementation of service fees
for EIA's from 2005, and will amend the list of activities that
require authorisation - allowing us to direct resources towards
major impact studies. The result may be a reduction of as much as
30% in the number of authorisations that will be required - without
reducing the critical role that the EIA process plays in our
environmental management.
Waste Minimisation - Targeting New Waste Streams
Another important focal point for our Department over the past year
Speaker, has been a concerted effort to put into place the building
blocks of a waste minimisation strategy for our country. The most
visible and well-known of our pilot projects to deal with specific
waste streams has been the joint efforts of Government, industry
and organised labour to address plastic bag pollution, which has
resulted in the consumption of such bags dropping to an average of
about 40% of the levels before the agreement was reached. Our
Section 21 Company was registered this month to continue this
partnership.
This approach has led the way in tackling other types of waste. It
is anticipated that before the end of this financial year we will
sign agreements with the glass industry and the waste-tyre industry
to regulate the environmentally responsible management of their
waste. This will also be accomplished through cooperative
mechanisms to ensure that the producers and the industry bear the
costs - not the South African consumer.
In the case of the glass industry, we are on the brink of launching
a new initiative that will lead to noticeable improvements in the
recovery and use of waste glass - currently stagnating at about 20%
per year. This is low in comparison with countries like Australia
at 50%, Brazil 40% and the UK at 35%. We believe that our new
initiative will increase South African glass recovery to at least
50%.
To draw together the different strands of waste minimisation and
management, and to comprehensively address reuse and recycling, I
have instructed our Department to start work on new waste
management legislation, which I shall table in Parliament next
year.
Impending Ban on Asbestos Products
We will also need to turn our attention to hazardous waste. During
2004 particular attention will be paid by our Department to
addressing the lethal impact of asbestos on human health. Although
no asbestos is currently mined in South Africa, and 65 of our major
mines have been rehabilitated, much still remains to be done. In
terms of the amendments to the Environmental Conservation Act (ECA)
recently signed into law by the President, we are now empowered to
control products even before they become waste. We will therefore
be publishing regulations this year to prohibit the use of
asbestos. For certain products, where no current alternatives are
available, we will allow for a three to five year phasing-out
period.
We also know that it is because of old roads, old buildings, old
mines, and cheap construction - especially in our poorest
communities, that this airborne threat hangs like a cloud over our
families. As we meet here today our Department is in the process of
evaluating tenders for a comprehensive study, to start in August,
which will determine the levels of secondary asbestos pollution in
our worst-affected provinces. We will also be working closely with
our colleagues in other departments to coordinate the further
rehabilitation and clean-up of old asbestos mines and dumps, as
well as existing structures that were built with asbestos, to
reduce secondary pollution.
New Parks, New Approach
Speaker, regulation and enforcement is clearly important - driving
the so-called 'brown' aspects of our long-term vision for the
environment. Equally important for the balance of this vision
however are our 'green' commitments. As a signatory to the
Convention on Biological Diversity, South Africa is committed to
the goal of ensuring that at least 10% of all land is protected -
which will in turn help us to ensure the long-term future of our
natural resources.
Over the next three years we have budgeted R123 million, or R41
million annually, for land acquisition for our national parks. We
expect a further R160 million per year over the same period to be
added to our efforts by the local and international donor
community.
The Department of Water Affairs and Forestry will also be
contributing more than 33300 hectares of indigenous forests for the
realisation of the Garden Route Mega Reserve initiative and the
Blyde Canyon National Park. We will also finalise the amalgamation
of the Qwaqwa Protected Area in the Free State with the Golden Gate
National Park - establishing the single largest grassland National
Park in South Africa thus far.
The Protected Areas Act passed by Parliament last year, and the
Protected Areas Amendment Bill that will come before the House this
year, will be our driving force in this process - addressing issues
of cooperative governance with provincial and local authorities,
and empowering our Department to conclude fair negotiations with
communities and private land owners for the inclusion of some of
their land in our protected areas.
For the first time, the management framework will be in place to
make sure that protected areas function as an economic engine for
the area in which they are situated. This is a key part of our
vision to reconcile communities with their environment, and to meet
the challenges laid down by the President to grow the First Economy
and to make specific interventions in the Second.
Another key tool in this process is the new Biodiversity Act that
was signed into law on 31 May. It aims to protect our valuable
species, ecosystems, and biological wealth. It also facilitates the
transformation of the National Botanical Institute (NBI) into the
SA National Biodiversity Institute, which will become a powerful
centre for science, knowledge and biodiversity research. I would
like to thank the Members of this House for their valuable inputs
and support in this regard.
Job Creation and Poverty Relief - Growth Through the
Environment
Speaker, as it was phrased at the WSSD - "Fighting poverty and
saving the environment is in fact the same battle". Ons Departement
het as deel van ons intervensies, 200 000 hektaar indringer
plantegroei verwyder, 40 vleilande gerehabiliteer, 700 km kuslyn
skoongemaak en 32 arbeidsintensiewe afval bestuursprogramme en 150
historiese en gemeenskapstoerisme projekte gevestig.
For the 2004/5 to 2006/7 MTEF cycle our Department plans to
contribute to the Expanded Public Works Programme (EPWP) and
support delivery in the rural and urban development nodes, with
targets to create more than 67 300 job opportunities and more than
740 300 training days - of which at least 50% will be for women and
30% for our youth.
In short, we are proving that the economic and social priorities of
our people are supported not opposed by the needs of a healthy
environment and sustainable tourism.
National Tourism Conference, African Action Plan &
Grading
Speaker, since the implementation of our International Tourism
Growth Strategy we have experienced significant tourism growth
acceleration. In the NCOP debate on Thursday we spoke at length
about our new Domestic Tourism Growth strategy and transformation
in the industry. I am also pleased to announce that we will later
this year be hosting the Third National Tourism Conference, in
Gauteng - the themes of which will be gearing up for 2010, and
taking forward our BEE Scorecard process. Other important tourism
developments in the near future include the impending completion of
our Competitiveness Study and the likely adoption by the African
Union Heads of States Summit next month of the Action Plan for
Tourism in Africa.
I am also pleased to report to this House that by the end of March
this year, 2017 accommodation establishments had joined our
tourism-grading scheme. Although this is out of an estimated 12 500
establishments, it represents about 70% of the rooms in the sector.
If we are to improve our tourism competitiveness, we must take
steps to ensure that even more establishments join the grading
scheme. In this financial year it is planned to expand the grading
to include other sectors like conference centres, food and beverage
services, golf courses, tourism transport services and tourist
attractions. I shall also be promoting the suggestion to Cabinet
that Government in future makes use only of graded
establishments.
Conclusion
Speaker, the Environmental Affairs and Tourism portfolio embodies
the best of the New South Africa. It reflects our move, as a
people, beyond the elitist and exclusionary approaches of our past.
It embraces the understanding that poverty alleviation, job
creation and real growth requires the long-term protection and
appreciation of our natural resources. It reaches out to all South
Africans, in all communities, as equally important co-owners of our
future.
Speaker, both personally and on behalf of our Department, I would
like to take this opportunity to warmly congratulate Honourable
Rita Ndzanga, one of the members of our Ad Hoc Committee, on her
presentation by the President last Wednesday of the Order of
Luthuli. I would also like to thank the Chairperson, Honourable
Elizabeth Thabete, and all of the other members of our committee
for their hard work during this Budget Vote process.
My sincere thanks also to our Department, under the leadership of
our Director General, Dr Olver, the Ministry, and our Statutory
Bodies.
We must realise that children born in 1994 may find, by the time
they turn 21 in 2015, that they have inherited freedom without
beauty, equality without a sustainable environment, and
reconciliation without resources. It is our task to avoid that
future. Let us answer the question posed by Charles Lindbergh by
greening the walls of brick, removing the fumes of coal and oil,
and offering real, natural beauty as our legacy to the future. This
is our vision - and it is one deserving of, and requiring your
partnership.
Enquiries:
Phindile Makwakwa
Cell: (082) 850 9559
Riaan Aucamp
Cell: 083 778 9923
Issued by: Ministry of Environmental Affairs and Tourism
21 June 2004