Browsing by Author "Sebele, Temperance"
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Item From Coal to Renewable Energy: Perspectives on South Africa's Energy Transition for a Sustainable Future.(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2024) Sebele, Temperance; Simatele, Mulala DannySouth Africa has been experiencing an unstable electricity supply for years, leading to periods of load shedding from 2007 up to the present date. The electricity shortages have been attributed to distinct reasons, ranging from inefficient coal supply, skills shortages, sabotage by employees and lack of maintenance for nearly sixteen years. In addition to the electricity supply shortages, coal-fired electricity generation is responsible for roughly 80 per cent of South Africa’s total greenhouse gas emissions due to fossil fuel dependence, leading to many health, climate, and environmental challenges. To address the challenges related to fossil fuel dependency, moving to Renewable Energy sources that are climate and environmentally friendly is a necessity. The aim of this study was to investigate the optimal approaches that South Africa can embark on for a successful transition from coal to renewables. The institutional, policy, and strategic frameworks that exist within which South Africa can embark on for a successful transition were explored. Furthermore, the study sought to identify the challenges, and opportunities that exist or hinder the transition in South Africa. Lastly, the study explored how developments in the international policy frameworks influence South Africa’s ambitions to transition to renewables. The study is best suited to the pragmatism approach, and data were collected through the reviewing of literature, key-informant interviews, and questionnaires. A mixed-methods strategy that involved gathering both qualitative and quantitative data was employed and primary and secondary sources of data were used. The primary data sources used included key informants from various private and public institutions with an interest in South Africa’s energy matters such as ESKOM, SANEDI, SANEA, SAREC, SAPVIA, SAWEA, SAIPPA and NECSA. The non-probability sampling method was used in the participants’ selection from the sampled study institutions, with a combination of judgmental, snowballing and convenience sampling procedures employed at distinct phases of the research. Data collected was analysed both quantitatively and qualitatively, with interviews text data transcribed and analysed through manual tabulation and thematic analysis, and presented in graphs generated from Microsoft Excel, and the data from questionnaires analysed through the IBM Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) software. The study revealed that the government played mainly four leading roles in the energy transition, which were providing financial support, legislative direction, institutional direction, and project oversight. Financial support is provided through financing projects and setting up financing policies that promote renewable energy investment, and legislative direction is provided through policy development and ensuring efficient implementation. Providing institutional direction is ensured through ensuring coordination across all spheres of government and capacitating institutions involved in the transition, and project oversight is provided through setting out renewable energy capacity determinations. The study further identified key energy transition elements, namely infrastructure, governance, legislation, stakeholders’ perceptions, and skills and strategies for a successful transition, which included channelling adequate financial resources to the renewable energy sector, privatisation of the electricity utility, diversification, rolling out bid windows, improving the legislative framework, improving grid access and integration, skills development, localisation of RE components manufacturing, providing incentives, and increasing consumer awareness about renewables. Several barriers to the transition were also identified, which included political interference and corruption, lack of financial investment, policies/legislation inadequacy, inconsistency in rolling out bidding windows, ESKOM’s monopoly, high cost of renewables, deficiency of incentives, skills and technology, labour unions, and deficiency of awareness on alternatives. The study recommends multisector reskilling of employees, since not all employees in the coal value chain may be interested in or able to be absorbed in the Renewable Energy sector. Furthermore, the government should fund and support progressive technologies and business models, improve the quality of institutions through merit-based appointments and uprooting corruption, privatisation of ESKOM to create opportunities for new entrants in the electricity market and improve stakeholder engagement and community support programmes. The UNFCCC must develop and ensure the implementation of enforcement strategies for holding countries accountable for their climate commitments for the transition to be realisedItem An investigation into the efficiency of the reporting protocol of environmental incidents in South Africa(2019) Sebele, TemperanceEnvironmental reporting has received the attention of many authors both nationally and abroad, however scientific research specifically on environmental incident reporting has been deficient both nationally and globally. This study evaluated the efficiency of the environmental incident reporting protocol of South Africa through identifying challenges and avenues through which effective environmental incident reporting can be pursued to create a baseline for improved environmental management. This study employed interviews, and questionnaires to solicit the research participants’ views on environmental incident reporting in South Africa. The National Environmental Compliance and Enforcement Reports were also analysed to understand the institutional framework within which effective environmental incident reporting can be pursued. Judgemental and chain referral sampling techniques were used to identify respondents and content analysis was used for data analysis. The results showed that the percentage of research participants that said improvement was required in the current incident reporting protocol was 23% higher than those who said it was adequate and that of those dissatisfied with the way incident reporting is handled by relevant authorities was 30% higher than those that were satisfied. It was evident from the findings that improvement is required on the current environmental incident reporting protocol to enable efficient monitoring and enforcement. Legislation amendments, awareness programs, establishment of a forum and an Environmental Management Inspectors’ support unit was recommended to address the identified challenges on the current environmental incident reporting protocol