Meinergy signe un accord avec Huawei sur un projet de 1 GW et 500 MWh pour faciliter le développement écologique du Ghana

BARCELONE, Espagne, 8 mars 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Huawei Digital Power Technologies Co., Ltd. (ci-après dénommée Huawei Digital Power) a signé un accord de coopération stratégique avec Meinergy Technology Co., Ltd (ci-après dénommée Meinergy), le premier développeur photovoltaïque (PV) en Afrique de l’Ouest. Dans le cadre de cet accord, Huawei Digital Power fournira une solution complète de système PV et de stockage d’énergie (ESS) intelligent pour la centrale PV de 1 GW et le projet ESS de 500 MWh développé par Meinergy au Ghana.

Wu Guangwen (PDG – Meinergy), Zhou Wei (directeur général – Bureau de représentation de Huawei au Ghana), et Fang Liangzhou (vice-président et directeur du marketing – Huawei Digital Power), ont assisté à la cérémonie de signature.

Pour répondre à la demande croissante d’électricité, diversifier le mix énergétique et accélérer le développement économique, le gouvernement du Ghana a fixé son objectif stratégique en matière d’énergie renouvelable : Augmenter à 10 % la proportion d’énergie renouvelable dans le bouquet énergétique, promouvoir l’énergie verte et rendre l’énergie accessible à l’échelle nationale d’ici 2030.

Meinergy est au Ghana depuis de nombreuses années, et ses activités couvrent les secteurs de l’exploitation minière, de l’énergie électrique et du photovoltaïque. Dans le contexte de la transformation du mix énergétique mondial, Meinergy a développé énergiquement ses activités dans le domaine des énergies renouvelables au Ghana et dans d’autres pays d’Afrique pour fournir une énergie verte stable aux communautés locales et combler le fossé lié à l’électricité.

Les deux parties ont collaboré étroitement dans le domaine des centrales PV à l’échelle des services publics, de l’intégration du photovoltaïque et de l’hydroélectricité, du stockage d’énergie et du photovoltaïque résidentiel au Ghana, et ont obtenu des résultats commerciaux exceptionnels. Les deux parties espèrent continuer à coopérer dans le développement d’usines PV et ESS, de centres de données, de solutions LTE pour entreprise et de cloud public pour construire une Afrique plus verte.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1760287/Meinergy_Signs_Agreement_with_Huawei_Executives.jpg

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1760288/Meinergy_Signs_Agreement_with_Huawei_Solar_Panels.jpg

 

Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities commemorates International Women’s Day

International Women’s day calls for equality for a sustainable future

The Department of Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities joins the rest of the world in observing International Women’s Day 2022 (IWD).

IWD which falls on 08 March is observed under the United Nations theme “Gender equality today for a sustainable tomorrow” in recognition and celebration of the women and girls who are leading the charge on climate change adaptation and to honour their leadership and contribution towards a sustainable future.

International Women’s Day is an occasion to celebrate the progress made towards achieving gender equality and women’s empowerment but also to critically reflect on those accomplishments and strive for a greater momentum towards gender equality worldwide. It is a day to recognize the extraordinary acts of women and to stand together, as a united force, to advance gender equality around the world.

As part of leading activities of this day the Minister will be in Polokwane, Limpopo leading consultations on the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women (UNCSW66) where she will engage with women farmers in the province. CSCW66 takes place from the 14th to the 25th of March 2022.

The United Nations’ Commission on the Status of Women (UNCSW) serves as a functional commission of the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) and is exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality and the empowerment of women.

The Department of Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities (DWYPD) as the custodian of Government’s women empowerment and gender equality mandate, is charged with coordinating South Africa’s participation at the UNCSW session.

International Women’s Day is an important day for South Africa, as we remain a gender unequal society. Most often seen in the media is violent expression of this inequality in the form of gender-based violence, assault, abuse, harassment, and femicide, however, gender inequality persists in all spaces, and permeates even the most progressive sectors of society.

Women face discrimination and abuse in the world of work, in places of worship, in places of education, as well as in their own homes.

Inequality is unsustainable, therefore this year’s theme looking at building social compacts that can eradicate backward thinking, all forms of prejudice, and norms that seek to subjugate women in any way or form.

Equally, to achieve transformation, we must address the different structural, social and economic barriers women, youth and persons with disabilities experience. The low levels of financial and technical skills affect access to funding and how projects are managed.

We must enhance access to information, capability development, mentorship, training and networks that support women.

Source: Government of South Africa

Commission for Gender Equality on possible decriminalisation of sex work

Commission for Gender Equality welcomes progress towards the decriminalisation of sex-work and sex-workers in South Africa

The Commission for Gender Equality (CGE) welcomes the decision by the Deputy-Minister of the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development to hold consultative meetings on the issue of the decriminalisation of sex-work in South Africa. This step marks a significant progress towards exploring the possibility of the decriminalization of sex work and sex workers in South Africa.

The continued criminalisation and prohibitionist legal framework which has sanctioned sex-workers and sex-work as criminal goes against the human rights of sex-workers in South Africa. In a study done by the Institute for Security Studies(link is external) (ISS), sex-work was found to be a decision driven primarily by financial insecurity rather than coercion and exploitation. In the opinion of the Commission, sex-work is an issue that must be dealt with through economic and social interventions rather than criminal law.

As noted in the Commission’s existing standing position on the issue of decriminalisation, the continued criminalisation of sex-workers exposes them to various abuses from the public and the police services.

Sex workers continue to be marginalized and relegated to second-class citizens as a result of the continued criminalization of their profession. It is clear that the existing legal regime violates the human rights of sex workers who are entitled to all the human rights as contained in the South African constitution.

As a result of the overwhelming evidence, the Commission reiterates its position that the current regulatory regime criminalizing sex work in South Africa has failed to protect the rights of sex-workers exposing them to various abuses from the public, law enforcement and prevents them from accessing effective healthcare and healthcare facilities.

The current criminalisation of sex work denies them their rights to human dignity, freedom and security of the person, freedom of trade and the right not to be discriminated against or treated unequally.

As per the Commission’s standing position any regulation of sex-work and sex-workers in South Africa must follow a human rights approach that will deliver i) freedom and right of choice of work; ii) freedom for sex workers to form unions and enable sex workers to challenge unfair labour practices; ii) freedom from discrimination; iv) the right to the highest attainable standard of health; v) freedom and security of the person including the rights to be free from arbitrary arrest and detention, right to be free from violence and the right to bodily and psychological integrity.

Source: Government of South Africa

Minister Blade Nzimande: Ministerial Community Education and Training Summit

Address by the Minister of Higher Education, Science and Innovation, Dr Blade Nzimande on the occasion of the Ministerial Community Education and Training Summit held at The Cape Town International Convertion Centre

Honourable Deputy Minister, Mr Buti Manamela;

Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee, Ms Nompendulo Mkhatshwa and Members of the Portfolio Committee present;

Directors-General, Dr Nkosinathi Sishi and Dr Phil Mjwara;

Deputy Directors- General from DHET and other Departments;

Esteemed national and international speakers on the programme;

Chairpersons of CET College Councils;

Principals of CET Colleges;

Chairpersons of SETA Boards and CEOs;

Representatives from SACPO;

Representatives from Usaf;

Chief Executive Officers of Quality Councils;

General Secretaries and other officials of Trade Unions/ Labour;

Representatives of social partners at NEDLAC

Representatives of the Catholic Institute of Education;

Representative of the South African Council for the Blind;

Officials from the DHET and other Government Departments;

Student representatives from CET College SRCs;

Members of the media;

Virtual and delegates present here;

Ladies and Gentlemen

Good morning

I am pleased to be hosting this first ever two-day hybrid (physical and virtual) Community Education and Training Summit, under the theme “Mass Skills Programme Provision”.

This is an important Summit that brings the Post School Education and Training sector, other government departments, non-governmental organisations, labour and business, under one roof to discuss issues relating to this important sector of our PSET. This is potentially the largest component of our post-school sector as it caters for many South Africans who need to improve their educational levels and/or acquire a skill. Hence the theme of this Summit on mass skills provision.

This Summit aims to take forward, consolidate and further dynamise the CET sector to achieve its mandate as contained in the 2013 White Paper for Post-School Education and Training.

This Summit also takes place following the hosting of our highly successful three (3) Regional Skills Summits, which served as a precursor to this Ministerial Summit.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank all those who participated in these regional summits.

I am also happy that this Summit is taking place after a fairly stable opening of the 2022 academic year.

It must be noted that there are some pockets of challenges in some of our institutions. However, I am encouraged by the level of commitment to institutional engagements between the management and student leadership to resolve the concerns raised by students on registrations, which includes unblocking of returning students results, payment of NSFAS allowances, historic debt and vaccinations in the PSET.

I am happy that most of these challenges have been addressed and the 2022 academic year is now proceeding with less disruptions.

My Department of Higher Education and Training will continue to monitor the developments on the commencement of the academic year to ensure that no one is left behind and that all the concerns are fully addressed.

Having said that, I am delighted to note that in this Summit we have representatives of students for CET Colleges. Once properly organised, I will engage with them on issues relating to CET colleges.

On skills development challenges

Ladies and gentlemen

Expanding access and diversifying a highly articulated education and training provision, as well as improving its quality and responsiveness to the world of work, are the main policy objectives of the Post-School Education and Training system.

The attainment of these objectives remains a challenge as South Africa continues to face an ever-increasing number of people who are not in employment, education or training (NEET).

The upsurge in the number of NEET suggests the need to expand access to post-school education and training opportunities in the system beyond current provisioning.

This requires PSET institutions to offer a diversity of programmes not only to take account of the needs of the youth who completed schooling, but also for those who did not complete their schooling, in an integrated and articulated manner.

It should remain as a concern for all of us that over 3.4 million young South Africans, aged 15-24 are disengaged from education and work.

The youth unemployment rate, measuring job-seekers between 15 and 24 years old, hit a new record high of 66.5%.

Two million of them have not finished Grade 12, while some of them are working in the extensive informal economy.

However, our CET sector caters for all youth and adults, irrespective of age!

Our unemployment rate as a country rose to 34.9% in the third quarter of 2021, up from 34.4% in the previous period.

It was the highest jobless rate since comparable data began in 2008 on the back of the July unrests and the lockdowns.

This are amongst the reasons that we ought to reposition the CET sector to play its unique role in the provision of the necessary skills required for our economic development, and to take the majority of our people out of poverty and indignity.

Currently our government is seized with using its own resources and internal capabilities to deal with the school-to-work transition, by investing a significant portion of its budget to support our youth with learnerships and internships and other government funded programmes that help to create mass employment.

We all know that our failure to integrate many people into the labour market threatens social cohesion and in the South Africa context this remains of particular concern because of the over-representation of black South Africans in the NEET population.

Establishment of the CET sector

Our White Paper for Post School Education and Training called for the establishment of CET Colleges as the third tier of institutions in the PSET system.

The CET College System was then established in 2015 as part of the Post School Education and Training system. The sector if well organised, has the potential to address some of these challenges experienced by the people who are not in employment, education or training (NEET).

CET Colleges were established to target out-of-school youth and adults who require various forms of skilling, including upgrading of their education and basic qualifications, second chance learning, non- formal programmes and the provision of skills programmes to contribute to different forms of livelihoods.

CET Colleges mark an important shift in government strategy on adult education. It marks an expansion and transformation of the traditional adult education system to go beyond just improving one’s own basic education, but to provide a variety of skills that are much needed in our communities.

Ladies and gentlemen

The youth employment challenge requires various decisive actions across a range of fronts, including measures to promote economic development, and active measures to encourage labour market insertion.

But a very wide range of evidence shows that effective vocational programmes are an important part of the answer.

Providing practical training linked to the prospect of a job, smoothing the transition from school to work is the most fundamental and urgent preoccupation that we all must be seized with.

Linked to the Summit theme, I want to urge delegates to also focus on the issues of the Critical Skills List, and the National List of Occupations in High Demand (OIHD) in South Africa.

This list tells us which occupations are likely to have such vacancies and which occupations are likely to grow due to new investments, especially by government.

The National List of Occupations in High Demand (OIHD) list identified 345 occupations that are in high demand out of a total of 1 500 registered in our Organising Framework for Occupations.

Many of the occupations on the list can be associated with key areas and sectors identified as crucial for the Reconstruction and Recovery Plan as announced by President Ramaphosa, such as the digital economy, energy, infrastructure development, manufacturing, tourism and agriculture, data scientists, web developer, computer network, technician, electrical engineer, concentrated solar power process controller, mechatronic technician, toolmaker, gaming worker, crop produce analyst, agricultural scientist, just to name a few.

For this summit, it remains critical that the issues of the selection of our programme offerings, resource allocations, as well as the identification and development of new programmes in line with the needs of our economy and society at a local level should be discussed to ensure that CET colleges respond to the socio-economic needs of localities.

However, in order for the CET sector to effectively play its role, its programmes need to be linked to and be articulated with the rest of the post-school education and training institutional landscape, so that there can be seamless progression (where required and necessary) from CETprogrammes into TVET colleges and universities. We must work to remove all cul-de-sacs or dead ends in our post school education and training system!

The implications of the 2009 and 2019 landscape to the CET sector

Ladies and gentlemen

The creation of DHET in 2009 represented a major step forward in integrating vocational education and training policy of South Africa.

Prior to 2009 responsibility for education and training was divided between the Departments of Education and of Labour and often very weakly coordinated.

In 2009 the DHET was established, and given responsibility for one of the twelve objectives of the South African government, namely ‘to develop the human resources of the workforce in an inclusive way’.

The Department brought together responsibility for the university and college sector, adult learning centres (now CETs), the private institutions, the Sector Education and Training Authorities (SETAs) the National Skills Fund (NSF) and the regulatory bodies responsible for qualifications and quality assurance.

The creation of the DHET was also meant to focus on the post-school education sector as a whole, and not just universities, important as they are. In fact, our own statistics tell us that only 6 of our 100 grade one learners end up graduating out of universities. The question is where do the 94 go to or end up doing? The answer must be the rapid expansion of the college sector to absorb these, both the TVET and CET college sectors!

Another milestone came in 2019, when President Ramaphosa decided to combine the Departments of Higher Education and Training together with Science and Technology under one Ministry.

This strategic realignment further opened huge opportunities in the production of both knowledge and skills and with an enormous potential to contribute towards innovation in our country.

This integration under a single Ministry offers the country with a unique set of strategic opportunities to realign, reposition and project their joint capabilities in new ways.

The integration of DST and DHET under a single Ministry is not simply to ensure greater administrative efficiency or bureaucratic streamlining, but to drive the post-school knowledge and skills development imperative more decisively, more effectively and with greater transformational impact in society.

It offers the country with a unique opportunity to realign, reposition and project the joint capabilities of the entire post-school knowledge and production system at the core of the national development agenda.

I would like to summit to practicalise and dynamise the vision of the CET sector as contained in our 2013 White Paper on PSET, especially also through sharing of knowledge, skills and infrastructure by all role players in the PSET (universities, TVET Colleges, SETAs, CETs).

Together, these form an integrated (and potentially articulated) “post-school” system, a clear strength we must seek to exploit.

Strengthening the CET sector

As the CET Colleges are an emerging system which currently is very weak and parts of it are very unstable and generally underfunded, strides have been made to build the sector through a number of interventions.

This includes the establishment of CET Colleges and the appointment of College Councils; the establishment of the necessary legislative and policy framework; the development of a CET sector plan and partnerships with SETAs and other stakeholders for programme diversification.

CET Colleges cannot continue to offer academic programmes only, but must be capacitated and positioned to provide skills.

This is the reason we have this Summit today to discuss strategies for ensuring that the CET Colleges plays a meaningful role in the provision of skills, which includes artisanal skills such as boiler making, refrigeration, welding, bricklaying, painting, carpentry, plumbing, electrical, electronics, etc.

I am therefore calling on the summit to find practical and implementable interventions for the youth and adults who continue to face poverty and unemployment.

I envisage an expanded CET College system that is able to address the challenges in communities through a variety of education and skills intervention.

CET Colleges must be dynamically linked to the communities they serve, understand their needs and respond accordingly.

The current partnerships between my Departments of Higher Education and Training and Science and Innovation on the piloting of the implementation of digital skills through the Living Lab project is amongst the projects that is currently in implementation.

I am delighted to report that the first pilot project through funding from the Technology Innovation Agency (an agency of the DSI) has been completed and I can report that a number of pilot projects are taking place with various partners and stakeholders.

The CET branch today will share information on these projects so that they become part of the implementation plans emanating from the Summit.

It is in this spirit that I am making a call to our partners in the private sector, faith-based organisations, non-governmental organisations, our PSET institutions and community structures to engage with our CET Colleges to find potential areas of co-operation.

For an example, within the PSET sector, the TVET Colleges are strategically placed to assist CET Colleges in the delivery of skills programmes.

This includes possible collaboration with the Centres of specialisation which are located within our TVET colleges.

In this regard, I have directed that our DDG for TVET and the DDG for CET urgently work in finalising partnerships between TVET and CET Colleges.

Furthermore, our TVET College principals should reach out and work with CET College principals in assisting them deliver of their mandate of mass skills provisioning.

I have met the Chairpersons of the CET College Councils recently to discuss ways in which the CET Colleges can be strengthened and capacitated.

I must say that a number of proposals were tabled in the meeting. I had made an undertaking that the proposal made by the Chairpersons find expression in this Summit.

I therefore call on the Summit to engage with some of the proposals as presented to me which includes:

1. The utilisation of TVET College infrastructure in the short to medium term to enable the expanded provision of short skills programmes. The utilisation of TVET College facilities, through Memorandum of Agreements with CET Colleges will enable CET Colleges to be accredited for short skills programmes as part of an innovative Quality Assurance model developed by the QCTO.

The Chairpersons further raised the need to establish an additional fifty-four (54) colleges as envisaged in the White Paper, one College per district municipality and metros. This will be in line with our commitment to have a post-school institutions or site in every local district. Most importantly, the securing of dedicated CET College infrastructure that will enable the CET Colleges to have a clear institutional identity.

The establishment of these additional Colleges will assist in the implementation of mass skills programme intervention as envisaged in the objectives of this Summit. SETAs and the National Skills Fund must assist in this regard.

2. To accelerate the expansion of skills programme provision, the Chairpersons of the CET College Councils called for the establishment of a dedicated Information and Communications Technology fund to assist Colleges to develop and make use of ICT facilities for both administrative purposes and for teaching and learning.

3. There was a call for a percentage of SETA funding to be dedicated to CET Colleges similar to a commitment currently in place for the QCTO. This will assist the Colleges with consistent and predictable funding whilst dedicated fiscus funding is being sought.

Much as this will require legislative changes, there is however nothing stopping the SETAs in the meantime from offering some of their training programmes from their discretionary grants through the platform of CET learning sites. Indeed, I am pleased that some of the SETAs are already doing so. In other words, we need a very strong partnership between SETAs and CET Colleges and am calling for an increase in the scope of these partnerships, and for the SETAs who have not yet come onboard to do so.

4. Additionally, the Chairpersons called for resource mobilisation through partnerships with government departments and their programmes such as National Rural Youth Service Corps (NARYSEC), Expanded Public Works Programme (EPWP), Learning Assistant Programme (LAP), the Department of Social Development, COGTA and Correctional Services. Protocols must be entered into with the relevant departments for this to be possible.

I have also made an undertaking that I will go to Cabinet to create a framework for these proposed partnerships with relevant government departments, once the Summit has considered and concretised on the proposals.

On the other hand, there is an undertaking by the SETAs and the National Skills Fund (NSF) that CET Colleges should be supported. I hope that the Summit will firm-up on these commitments. I am pleased that we have allocated about R200m from the NSF for CET colleges to drive the massification of skills provision through offerings in our CET sector!

Regional summit resolutions

Additional, I wish to congratulate DDG Futshane, together with the sector, for having convened three Regional CET summits, in part preparation and as a build up towards this national Summit.

Some of the challenges and recommendations emanating from the Regional Summits include:

• Infrastructure challenges and the need to move CET Colleges away from schools; [I strongly support this]

• Lack of capacity of CET College lecturers to deliver on skills and occupational programmes, beyond formal adult schooling;

• Inadequate funding for CET Colleges; and

• Lack of diversified programme offerings at CET Colleges.

It is therefore important that deliberations at this Summit must consider these recommendations from the Regional Summits.

In addition to all these proposals, it is my view that CET Colleges must play a significant role in offering civic education to our communities which is critical to entrench an understanding of our country, its values, our democratic and developmental ideals, and our Constitution.

This is important because inherent in civic education should also be about promoting moral values that seek to build responsible citizens which the country needs in the face of the escalating scourge of gender-based violence and many other social ills.

On standardisation

Ladies and gentlemen

As we are working hard to ensure that we refocus the CET colleges to be at the centre of our skills development system, I am also aware of the standardisation challenges experienced by some of the CET college lecturers.

While good progress has been made in the processing of standardisation commitments, there remains pockets of concern which the Director-General and the DHET team are working with the sector to resolve.

Just to explain what the standardisation process is all about. Following the transfer of ABET Educators from Provincial Education Departments (PEDs) to DHET in 2015, 9 CET colleges were established during which staff were transferred with no changes to their conditions of service as protected by Section 197 of the Labour Relations Act (LRA).

Since then, it became clear to the Department that the academic staff within the CET colleges were under different pay regimes in different provinces, with some staff being paid notches that were not aligned to the Public Service Act (PSA) or Employment of Educators Act salary scales.

In addition, some staff were receiving benefits while others received 37% cash in lieu of benefits, and hours of work were different depending on which provincial department of education the staff had previously worked for.

The above became a matter of a national dispute and was raised by recognized unions in the GPSSBC, resulting eventually in being addressed by the Department and unions as stated in a Settlement Agreement signed by parties of the GPSSBC in Feb 2019 as “Provision of standardised benefits for CET Colleges”.

As indicated, I am happy of the process to standardise benefits for the CET Colleges.

Director General Sishi and the Deputy Director General Futshane are keeping me informed of the developments. I urge all involved in deliberations to support the process so that outstanding issues can be concluded without any further delays.

Skills strategy

This summit also takes place after negotiations have been concluded in NEDLAC on our PSET Skills Strategy. I now expect that the Strategy will be finalised and approved for implementation.

One of the key pillars of the strategy is on the expansion of short skills programmes – accredited and unaccredited. I know this has been one of the debates in NEDLAC and I am happy that parties seem to be finding each other on this matter. The Skills Strategy will surely assist our sector to respond adequately to the skills demands of our economy.

Conclusion

In conclusion, I am committed to ensuring that the Department and the Ministry work in collaboration with all partners and stakeholders to achieve the outcomes of this Summit. I remain steadfast and committed to the growth, development, consolidation and transformation of the CET Sector! I privilege no single subsector of the PSET system, but I seek to equally strengthen and grow all of them, with particular emphasis on more rapid growth for the college sector!

To ensure that we waste no further time in ensuring provision of further education and mass skilling that our economy so desperately needs, I will expect to receive a full report and set of recommendations within a month of the conclusion of this Summit.

There must also be an implementation plan must have clearly defined responsibilities and time frames.

I want to end by challenging especially the CET College Councils and the principals by saying that you have to be innovative, creative and reach out to all the stakeholders and to your communities to make all what we have spoken about here does become a reality! Please disabuse yourself of the idea that all you are leading are adult schools! CETs are a completely different reality; whose task is that of mass skilling of out of school youth and adults. For this to succeed you must be out there forging and driving partnerships.

College councils must supervise college principals to ensure that they forge dynamic partnerships, including for creatively raising the much-needed resources by the sector. Any CET College principal without such partnerships does not deserve to be in this sector. I say to the principals, please strengthen and closely supervise your various learning sites so that they offer the variety of the skills and learning programmes we need. Start by piloting through your stronger learning sites!

I also urge the DG, the DDG, working together with the trade unions in the sector, to work towards resolving all outstanding labour relations and conditions of service matters without any delay, so we stabilise the sector. No labour relations issue must be impossible to resolve.

I am proud we have absorbed the overwhelming majority of educators and staff in the CET sector and now have permanent jobs, and we have taken them out of the uncertainties of precarious contract and part time employment. This is the achievement of one of my most important goals since I became Minister in this sector!

I eagerly await the outcomes and resolutions of this all -important Summit.

With these words, I wish you all a fruitful, engaging and successful Summit.

Thank you

Source: Government of South Africa

Water and Sanitation briefs media on water resource management

DWS Western Cape media briefing

Today, 8 March our Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS) in the Western Cape is briefing the media on several aspects of water resource management. The media briefing coincides with the beginning of the National Water Month, an annual flagship campaign of the DWS. The campaign aims to raise awareness of the central role of water in socio-economic development.

The Western Cape Dam storages are better off than previous years. The latest hydrological report released on 07 March 2022 suggest that the dam combined average dam levels in the Western Cape Water Supply System which consists of six (6) dams is currently at 77% a slight increase compared to 73,83% same time last year. The Theewaterskloof Dam, largest dam in the Western Cape is at 79,18% compared to 83,80% and this is a satisfactory capacity at this time of the year.

As DWS Western Cape we happy with the way the Gouritz River Catchment has recovered after many years of lower-than normal rainfall. The average combined dam levels for the Gouritz River Catchment are above 50% a notable increase compared to 24,38% same time last year. The Gamka Dam has shown a remarkable turnaround following years of below rainfall in Central Karoo.

The Olifants/Doorn River Catchment on the West Coast is in a healthy state at 56,62 % with Clanwilliam Dam standing at 56,44%. Even though most dam storage systems across the Western Cape are satisfactory, water users should continue to use water sparingly as most parts of the Western Cape receive rain in winter.

The raising of Clanwilliam Dam Wall project and the Brandvlei Water Scheme are the 2 Western Cape Ministerial Priority Projects. The Raising of Clanwilliam Dam is aimed to provide additional water to improve the assurance of supply for agriculture, provide for water allocations to resource-poor farmers and to address dam safety aspects. The scope of the work includes the raising of the existing dam wall by 13 metres, the relocation of a section of the N7 directly affected by the raised dam wall and the raising of the secondary provincial roads affected by the Full Supply Level (FSL) in the dam basin. 143 of the envisaged 262 properties have been expropriated.

The raising of the wall of the four-kilometre feeder canal into Brandvlei Dam near Worcester has commenced. This is a noble project that is set to augment water supply for Agri-economy of that region. The department is acutely aware that the implementation of some of the infrastructure projects has suffered undesired delays and is pulling all the stops in ensuring that the project is brought on schedule without compromising the integrity of the projects.

In terms of regulation, DWS Western Cape will continue to enforce compliance to water users who ignore/disregard the National Water Act 36 of 1998. In November 2021, the Enforcement Blitz was held in Klein Karoo together with the Breede-Gouritz Catchment Management Agency (BGCMA) and the following transgressions were established.

• Several boreholes have not been registered according to the National Water Act 36 of 1998

• Water measurements in properties are not in compliance with regulations

• Several historic dams are preventing rivers from flowing

BGCMA and DWS are currently working on ensuring maximum compliance and remedial measures. As DWS we have zero tolerance for water and other environmental crimes.

We are committed to effectively implement the recently re-launched Blue and Green Drop Certification Programmes which call for excellent drinking water and wastewater quality management in the country.

DWS Western Cape is deeply concerned about persistent attacks on officials who work on operations and maintenance of water infrastructure. The department condemns these attacks in the strongest terms possible, as such conduct affects delivery of services and the compliance by municipalities to fulfil their mandate of providing basic services. At times the municipalities incur unnecessary water losses thus affecting the entire water value chain

The month of March is designated as Water Month. Themed “Ground Water, making invisible visible” the National Water Month will feature several awareness activities about the socio-economic role of water in development. Western has earmarked outreach activities including infrastructure project visits, visit to schools and other communal areas. All the activities will be implemented within the parameters of COVID-19 safety protocols.

Source: Government of South Africa

Give More African Women Voice in Policymaking, UN Official Urges

Women account for most of Africa’s agricultural workforce and acutely feel the burdens of climate change, but too often their voices go unheard in farming- and climate-related policymaking and programs.

That’s just one of the assessments a United Nations official shared in light of Tuesday’s U.N. observance of International Women’s Day.

“Women make up 80% of the people displaced because of natural disasters, and 14% more are likely to die in the event of a natural disaster,” said Mehjabeen Alarakhia, the U.N. Women regional adviser for women’s economic empowerment for East and Southern Africa. U.N. Women is an agency dedicated to gender equality and the empowerment of women.

“Similarly, women’s disproportionate burden of unpaid care and domestic work implies that they are commonly responsible for fetching water or collecting cooking fuel. With the increased climate incidences, women need to invest more time to meet their family’s needs.”

Alarakhia spoke with VOA about climate challenges, agriculture, education and women’s leadership as part of this year’s theme: “gender equality today for a sustainable tomorrow.”

The interview has been edited for clarity and concision.

VOA: How far have African women in particular come in terms of calls for their rights and equalities?

Alarakhia: I think African women were instrumental in advocacy and activism leading up to the Beijing conference in 1995 (the U.N.’s Fourth World Conference on Women), creating the landmark global agreement on women’s equality and empowerment. African women are starting to take leadership in political arenas. We also see it in women’s participation in education and research, various public and economic spheres. I do believe there’s still quite some work to do, but there has been progress.

What is the relevance to Africa of the theme “gender equality today for a sustainable tomorrow”?

The high dependence on agriculture also means that women are highly exposed and vulnerable to the effects of climate change and disasters. Women represent 90% of agricultural employment in many African countries.

With women and men having different access to productive resources, other inequalities can follow, such as access to improved seeds, fertilizers, pesticides, tools and equipment, labor, credit, and other production factors.

Women are disproportionately affected by climate change, environmental degradation and natural disasters. Women may need to walk farther to fetch water, exposing them to increased time poverty but also to further risks of gender-based violence.

What role does U.N. Women play in empowering African women to participate in key decision-making corridors for the continent’s sustainability?

U.N. Women is advocating for increased space for women’s rights activists and women themselves to be part of negotiations and discussions with policymakers and decision-makers to be able to have their voices heard directly.

We also collect data and analyze trends so decision-makers can base policy on reliable data and research.

What policies and programs should Africa’s local governments pursue in light of climate concerns?

The key aspect is including women in the planning and decision-making processes. Women generally are aware of their own needs and know how to articulate them.

We have recently completed a study that looked at government spending on agriculture.

Governments in Africa had committed to allocate 10% of their national budgets toward agriculture. We found that where women were not included in planning, they were not able to benefit. But in countries where the allocation did not reach the 10% target and yet women were part of planning, they were more likely to benefit from the allocations — and the interventions were more sustainable.

In most parts of the continent, the percentage of women in political offices where key decisions are made continues to be low. Is this stalling efforts to promote gender equality?

It is very important for women to be at the table as decision-makers. We have some countries where the proportion of women in parliament, for example, is among the highest in the world. (In Rwanda, women hold 61% of the lower house’s seats.) Then elsewhere, we have relatively low participation rates. It is pertinent for women to be in that space, to be role models and champions for the next generation.

Experts advocate for more STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) education for women and girls. Is this critical for sustainability?

In terms of the fourth industrial revolution and the agricultural transformation necessary to mitigate effects of climate change, it’s absolutely important for girls and women to be part of this change.

We did a recent study that found an estimated 24 million jobs will be created in the green economy over the next decade.

Most will be in STEM fields. We need to ensure that women, and particularly young women, are given the skills to take these jobs.

In another study on opportunities for rural youth, we found that even in agriculture, the future is in digital technology. We have looked at bringing in programs such as our ”African girls can code” initiative, teaching them how to code and make apps. Some have gone on to become entrepreneurs. This is truly the space that will be growing in employability and profitability.

Source: Voice of America