national framework for sustainable development dorah nteo department of environmental affairs
TRANSCRIPT
National Framework for Sustainable Development
Dorah NteoDepartment of Environmental Affairs
Outline
• Background• Mandate• Rationale• Sustainable Development defined in SA context• Priority Areas for Strategic Intervention• Key Elements of a National SD Strategy• Recommendations for a Green Economy
Plan
Background• National Framework for Sustainable Development was
approved by Cabinet in July 2008
• The 2009 -2014 MTSF identifies the implantation of the NFSD as one of the priorities for the mandate period
• NFSD implementation starts with the translation of a “framework” into a “strategy” with a clear action plan & targets
• Draft Strategy was published for public comment on 14 May 2010, Gazette number: 33184
NFSD/NSSD mandate
Constitutional:“…secure ecologically sustainable
development and use of natural resources while promoting justifiable economic and
social development.” Section 24 (b) of the Constitution
WSSD outcome:
Para 162 of JPOI : “…take steps to make progress in the formulation and elaboration of national strategies for sustainable development…..”
Rationale
A need for a single coherent framework that articulates our development context, and sets out our common vision and priorities for sustainable development
NFSD identifies key, short, medium and long–term challenges
in sustainable development efforts
Sets a framework for a common understanding and vision of sustainable development;
identifies strategic focus areas for intervention
Sustainable Development defined in SA context
• SA’s approach to SD asserts that social, economic and ecosystem factors are embedded within each other, and are underpinned by governance systems
GovernanceGovernance
Ecosystem servicesEcosystem services
SocioSocio -- political political
systemssystems
EconomyEconomy
Governance
Ecosystem services
Socio-Political system
--
Economy
Priority Areas for Strategic Intervention
Key Elements of a National SD Strategy
Towards a green economy: Key Concerns
– The economy is highly energy intensive
– There is a strong emphasis on GDP growth which tends to promote unsustainable patterns of production and consumption;
– The natural resource base is under severe pressure;
– Our electricity demand exceeds the available supply capacity
– There is widespread poverty, unemployment and inequality.
Recommendations for a Green Economy Plan
• Strategic goals from an SD perspective should include:
– Increasing the contribution of the Environmental Goods and Services Sector to employment and the GDP;
– Reducing the resource intensity of the economy (including energy and carbon);
– Promoting cleaner technologies and investing in sustainable infrastructure; and
– Promoting sustainable livelihoods and building local economies
“Our biggest challenge in this new century is to take an idea that seems abstract
-- sustainable development -- and turn it into a reality for all the world's people.”
Kofi Annan, Secretary General of the United Nations March 2001.
THANK YOU