Address by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the Special Session of the Presidential Climate Commission

Source: President of South Africa –

Ministers,
Deputy Chairperson of the Commission, Mr Dipak Patel,
Members of the Presidential Climate Commission,
Executive Director, Ms Dorah Modise,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
 
Climate change is an existential threat to the future of humanity and the planet. 
 
We must act with others across the globe to ensure that we do not breach the 1.5 degree warming above pre-industrial levels.
 
We must reduce carbon emissions at a pace and scale that is appropriate to our national circumstances. We must simultaneously climate-proof our development and infrastructure while strengthening resilience and disaster management capabilities. 
 
Climate action and development must be aligned and support our growth and prosperity.
 
South Africa is already experiencing the effects of climate change, and these are predicted to increase rapidly as we approach the end of this decade and beyond.
 
This could significantly impede our growth and our collective prosperity.
 
It is likely to undermine our efforts to address inequality, poverty and unemployment.
 
Addressing climate change must therefore go hand in hand with improving living conditions for all.
 
Those most vulnerable to climate change – including women, children, people with disabilities, the poor and the unemployed – need to be protected.
 
We also need to protect workers’ jobs and livelihoods.
 
South Africa has set ambitious goals for climate action, aiming to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to the impacts of climate change.
 
As the Commission, our work is to ensure a just transition to a low-carbon economy while helping South Africa become more resilient, strengthening our global competitiveness, and reducing poverty, inequality and unemployment. 
 
To do this, we need to build consensus through social dialogue.
 
The birth of the Presidential Climate Commission in December 2020 marked a turning point in South Africa’s climate agenda.
 
For the first time, the country created a permanent, independent, multi-stakeholder body to advise on its response to climate change.
 
South Africa needed an independent, credible body that could convene diverse voices, provide sound evidence and help the country navigate one of the most complex policy challenges in its democratic history.
 
The Presidential Climate Commission was established to ensure that South Africa’s climate transition is just, inclusive and responsive to the needs of vulnerable communities – and that it is based on the best available scientific evidence.
 
At the last session of this Commission’s first term, in December last year, I received a report outlining what the Commission had done in its first five years.
 
That report lays a basis for a broad scope of what our priorities should be for the next five years until 2030.
 
Since its inception, the PCC has played a central role in South Africa’s climate policy landscape.
 
Most importantly, the PCC has emerged as an important platform for consensus-building in South Africa’s just transition journey.
 
By bringing together government, business, labour, civil society, youth and academia, the PCC has fostered inclusive dialogue and solutions to some of the country’s most complex and contested climate and development challenges.
 
It has helped to align diverse interests around common goals such as the phase-down of coal, investment in renewables and the protection of livelihoods.
 
It has sought to ensure that policy decisions are both evidence-based and also socially legitimate and widely supported.
 
The just transition is an opportunity to rebuild trust with communities and to deal with practical issues relating to jobs, local economies, skills, social support and governance, among others.
 
We gather at a pivotal moment in South Africa’s energy transition.
 
Energy security and climate action must be mutually reinforcing.
 
A stable, diversified electricity system is the foundation of growth, investment and job creation, especially as we propel the country towards green industrialisation.
 
The Just Energy Transition Partnership must now move from commitment to delivery.
 
We must translate pledges into visible progress on the ground.
 
Among other things, we need to accelerate renewable energy deployment, strengthen and expand transmission infrastructure, enable storage solutions and create space for greater private sector participation.
 
We look to this Commission for guidance on how to ensure that our energy transition advances energy security, while reducing emissions and maximising the opportunities for our economy from a low carbon transition.
 
At the same time, we look to this commission for guidance on how our communities can adapt and be more resilient to the ever-increasing effects of climate change.
 
Our pathway to the targets set out in our Nationally Determined Contribution must reinforce growth, inclusion and job creation.
 
As we continue to seek sufficient financial investment to reduce our carbon emissions, we must increase the share of funding for adaptation.
 
This is essential to secure the development gains the country has achieved.
 
As the country works to reduce its carbon footprint, we must ensure that this shift does not disproportionately affect the most vulnerable, such as those who depend on industries like coal mining for their livelihoods.
 
This will require inclusive social dialogue and unprecedented levels of cooperation between government, business, labour and communities.
 
By bringing together voices from all sectors of society, the PCC will promote consensus on the implementation of economic, social and environmental policies needed to achieve our decarbonisation targets.
 
As this new Commission begins its work, we should not leave important tasks unfinished.
 
For example, we need to attend to the redevelopment of the community of Komati in Mpumalanga who, in the aftermath of the decommissioning of the power station, were left with no economic recovery plan.
 
We expect all government departments at all levels to continue to be cooperative, supportive and receptive to the views of the Commission.
 
We expect all parts of government to take the PCC’s recommendations forward and work collaboratively on awareness and social dialogue, enabling local action and adjusting policy measures where necessary.
 
For the transition to be just, it must be redistributive, restorative and procedurally just.
 
All citizens should be empowered to participate in this transition, not as passive beneficiaries of government services and corporate social responsibility grants, but as economic actors.
 
This must be a transition to a transformed, inclusive and more equal economy.
 
I call on you as Commissioners to work in close partnership with our key Ministers and their departments to ensure that climate action is fully integrated into our national priorities, from energy and finance to trade, labour and cooperative governance.
 
Through coordinated leadership and shared accountability, we can undertake climate action in a manner that advances development, protects livelihoods and unlocks new opportunities for our people.
 
Thank you for taking on this responsibility and for your commitment to this work.
 
I look forward to our continued efforts to contribute meaningfully to global climate action and build a sustainable and prosperous future for all South Africans.
 
I thank you.

Compulsory gender-based analysis training for public servants

Source: Government of South Africa

Compulsory gender-based analysis training for public servants

The Department of Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities (DWYPD) has introduced a compulsory Gender-Based Analysis Plus (GBA+) online training course aimed at strengthening gender-responsive, youth-responsive, and disability-inclusive planning, budgeting and service delivery across government.

The GBA+ online course is designed to support the development of inclusive and responsive policies, programmes and other government initiatives by equipping public servants with practical analytical tools.

Encouraging officials to enrol, the department said the training will enhance the capacity of public servants to apply an intersectional lens in policy development, programme design, and monitoring and evaluation processes.

Department spokesperson Cassius Selala said the course will assist officials in understanding how factors such as gender, age, disability, race, class and geographic location influence access to opportunities and resources.

“The GBA+ training will equip public officials with practical tools to ensure that government interventions actively reduce inequality rather than entrench it,” Selala said.

He said gender mainstreaming remains critical to achieving equality and addressing persistent gaps in awareness and implementation across departments.

The training forms part of a coordinated and institutionalised approach to integrating gender, youth, and disability considerations into all areas of public service work.

Public servants may register for the course through the department’s online learning platform, using this link https://learning.dwypd.gov.za/. – SAnews.gov.za

GabiK

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Teen arrested for possession of explosives

Source: Government of South Africa

Teen arrested for possession of explosives

Members of the National Intervention Unit (NIU) and Gauteng Crime Intelligence have arrested a 16-year-old in Roodepoort this week for possession and distribution of explosives.

The team operationalised intelligence-led information on suspects selling explosives in and around Motlhakeng.

Information reportedly led the team to an identified address in Roodepoort, where they arrested the teenager and seized 50 blasting cartridges, 25 safety fuse connectors and detonating cords.

“Investigations remain ongoing to identify the criminal networks behind the illegal possession and distribution of explosives.

“Explosives are often used in the commission of serious crimes such as cash-in-transit (CIT) robberies and illegal mining,” the police said. 

The teenager is expected to appear in court soon. – SAnews.gov.za

Edwin

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SAPS to welcome new members of the Special Task Force

Source: Government of South Africa

SAPS to welcome new members of the Special Task Force

The South African Police Service (SAPS) will today welcome 13 Special Task Force (STF) Operators to join the organisation’s elite tactical unit. 

The STF unit deals with high-risk operations that fall beyond the scope of general policing, which requires specialised skills.

The National Commissioner of the SAPS, General Fannie Masemola, will officiate at the parade of the newly highly trained members of the Special Task Force at SAPS Academy Tshwane.

“The 13 STF Operators have undergone and successfully completed the basic Special Task Force Training Programme, qualifying for the prestigious STF Wings,” the police said in a statement. 

According to SAPS, they will add to existing capacity of STF Operators that attend to high risk and hostage situations, kidnappings, cash-in-transit robberies and illicit mining operations.

“The other cohort of 16 members will also stand on the parade to receive their Operator Badges after completing all compulsory outstanding courses and one year of operational experience,” the police said. – SAnews.gov.za

Edwin

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Africa’s Next Wave of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Investment Set to Converge at Paris Energy Forum

Source: APO – Report:

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With governments and operators from across Africa’s gas frontier confirmed to participate, the Invest in African Energy Forum (Paris, April 22–23, 2026) arrives as the continent’s LNG sector enters a new phase of growth. Major export projects are moving into expansion, emerging producers are scaling floating liquefaction capacity and several large undeveloped gas discoveries are advancing toward commercialization. Together, these developments are shaping where capital, partnerships, and infrastructure investment will flow across Africa’s next wave of LNG and gas opportunities.

Grand Tortue Ahmeyim Expansion – Mauritania & Senegal

With first LNG already achieved, the strategic focus has shifted to Phase 2 expansion of the Grand Tortue Ahmeyim development. Partners are advancing plans for a low-cost scale-up that could roughly double liquefaction capacity before the end of the decade, leveraging existing floating LNG infrastructure and proven offshore reserves. Because core infrastructure and export routes are already in place, Phase 2 represents one of the clearest near-term LNG growth opportunities in Africa, offering comparatively lower development risk alongside meaningful production upside.

Yakaar-Teranga – Senegal’s Pre-FID Gas Anchor

Senegal’s Yakaar‑Teranga discovery remains one of the world’s largest undeveloped gas resources, with commercialization structure and domestic-versus-export allocation still under negotiation. This positioning places Yakaar-Teranga among the continent’s most consequential pre-FID gas opportunities, capable of underpinning future LNG trains, long-term gas-to-power supply or industrial feedstock development – making it a focal point for upstream financiers and infrastructure developers evaluating scalable, long-life reserves.

Nigeria’s Domestic LNG & Gas-to-Power Build-Out

Nigeria is accelerating gas monetization through supply growth, LNG expansion and downstream utilization. A 2026 gas master plan targets an additional 1.8 billion cubic feet per day (bcf/d) of supply, forming part of ambitions to reach 10 bcf/d by 2027 and 12 bcf/d by 2030, alongside more than $60 billion in sector investment. Parallel rollout of mini-LNG and small-scale liquefaction projects is expanding gas access for off-grid industry, transport and distributed power – creating multiple entry points for midstream investors, technology providers and infrastructure financiers across the value chain. For capital markets, Nigeria’s strategy signals a shift from export-only LNG toward integrated domestic gas ecosystems with diversified revenue streams.

Libya’s Gas Redevelopment Potential

Libya is working to raise gas production to nearly one billion cubic feet per day in the second half of 2026 through offshore redevelopment and the rehabilitation of legacy infrastructure, with the dual aim of stabilizing domestic electricity supply and rebuilding export capacity. If financing conditions and political alignment continue to improve, the country could re-emerge as a major Mediterranean gas supplier later this decade – representing one of North Africa’s most significant, yet still undercapitalized, gas investment opportunities.

Congo LNG – Fast-Track Floating Liquefaction Growth

The Congo LNG development has rapidly positioned the Republic of Congo as a new LNG exporter. Phase 2 began operations in December 2025, adding 2.4 million tons per year of capacity and lifting total output to about 3 million tons annually. Built around floating LNG units and modular upstream tie-ins, the project demonstrates a replicable, lower-cost commercialization model – reducing timelines compared with traditional onshore terminals. For investors, the modular structure and expansion-ready design create opportunities across upstream supply, LNG shipping, processing services and regional gas infrastructure partnerships, offering a clear pathway to participate in a fast-growing and relatively lower-risk African LNG market.

– on behalf of Energy Capital & Power.

SAPS destroys over 13 000 firearms

Source: Government of South Africa

SAPS destroys over 13 000 firearms

In an effort to remove illegal firearms from circulation, the South African Police Service (SAPS) destroyed a total of 13 859 firearms during its second firearm destruction process for the 2025/26 financial year. 

This brings the total number of firearms destroyed over the past seven years to 305 934.

The District Commissioner of Sedibeng in Gauteng, Major General Adelaide Mukhwevho, presided over the official firearm destruction process that took place in Vanderbijlpark.

The majority of the destroyed firearms were confiscated during various policing operations, including Operation Shanela, and were forfeited to the State. 

“Some of the firearms are linked to finalised criminal cases such as farm attacks, cash-in-transit (CIT) robberies, and crimes against women and children. Others were voluntarily surrendered or handed in during firearm amnesty periods,” the police said in a statement.

By destroying forfeited firearms, the SAPS prevents them from re-entering circulation. 

The provincial breakdown of firearms destroyed is as follows: 

  • Gauteng: 5 193
  • KwaZulu-Natal: 2 752
  • Western Cape: 2 155
  • Eastern Cape: 1 300
  • Mpumalanga: 605
  • Limpopo: 535
  • Free State: 499
  • Northern Cape: 411
  • North West: 354
  • Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation: 55

Type of firearms destroyed:

  • Handguns: 11 183
  • Rifles: 1302
  • Shotguns: 1004
  • Combination: 34
  • Firearm parts: 336

“Also amongst the destroyed firearms is a total of 7 708 blank guns, airguns and homemade firearms, which were also destroyed during the destruction process.  

“Although these weapons are often perceived as less lethal than conventional firearms, they are often used in the commission of crimes,” the police said. – SAnews.gov.za

Edwin

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Manamela appoints administrator to stabilise College of Cape Town

Source: Government of South Africa

Manamela appoints administrator to stabilise College of Cape Town

Higher Education and Training Minister Buti Manamela has appointed Dr Robert Nkuna as Administrator of the College of Cape Town following findings of serious governance and financial failures at the institution.

The appointment, made in terms of Section 46 of the Continuing Education and Training Act, 2006, takes effect from the date of publication in the Government Gazette. It is timebound for a period not exceeding two years, or until a duly constituted council is established.

Nkuna will assume the governance functions of the College Council and is tasked with stabilising the institution, safeguarding students, protecting teaching and learning, and restoring lawful governance.

Nkuna’s appointment follows the Minister’s consideration of the final report of the Stabilisation and Governance Support Team (SGST), which was appointed to assess the affairs of the college.

After affording the College Council an opportunity to review the report and submit written representations, the Minister accepted the findings and recommendations of the SGST.

The SGST report identified serious and sustained governance failures, weaknesses in oversight, compromised human resource practices, and risks to teaching and learning.

“It further identifies evidence of financial and other forms of maladministration of a serious nature, resulting in the effective undermining of the College’s governance structures. These findings require decisive corrective action,” the department said in a statement.

According to the department, the intervention is necessary to stabilise governance and management; ensure compliance with court orders and statutory prescripts; implement key recommendations arising from oversight and audit processes; and safeguard teaching, learning, and student wellbeing.

The Minister described the move as corrective and restorative in nature, undertaken in the best interests of students, staff, and the broader public.

“The Minister emphasises that this intervention is corrective and restorative in nature, undertaken in the best interests of students, staff, and the broader public. The Minister thanks the members of the Stabilisation and Governance Support Team for the professional, participatory, and evidence-based manner in which they conducted their work,” the department said.

The department will continue to monitor the implementation of the intervention as the stabilisation process unfolds. – SAnews.gov.za

GabiK

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President Ramaphosa to deliver eulogy at funeral of Hosi Phylia Tinyiko Lwandlamuni N'wamitwa II

Source: President of South Africa –

President Ramaphosa will on Sunday, 22 February 2026 deliver the eulogy at the funeral of late Hosi Phylia Tinyiko Lwandlamuni N’Wamitwa II, who passed away on Monday, 09 February 2026.

President Cyril Ramaphosa has designated that the Queen be honoured with a Category Two Official Provincial Funeral in Limpopo.

Hosi N’Wamitwa II has been described as a towering figure whose life was defined by courage, leadership and service to the people.

The official funeral service will take place as follows:
Date: Sunday, 22 February 2026
Time: 09h00am
Venue: Valoyi Va-Tsonga Cultural Village – N’Wamitwa Village, Mopani District, Limpopo

In line with Official Funeral protocol, the national flag will be flown at half-mast across Limpopo Province in honour of the late Hosi N’Wamitwa II.

Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – media@presidency.gov.za

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria
 

Rand Water granted temporary boost to stabilise Gauteng supply

Source: Government of South Africa

Rand Water granted temporary boost to stabilise Gauteng supply

Water and Sanitation Minister Pemmy Majodina has authorised Rand Water to abstract additional water from the Integrated Vaal River System (IVRS) as part of urgent interventions to stabilise Gauteng’s strained water supply network.

The decision follows a series of disruptions between 27 January and 1 February 2026, when several electro-mechanical failures at Rand Water’s Palmiet and Zuikerbosch pump stations, coupled with a major pipe burst at the Klipfontein reservoir, significantly reduced the supply of treated water to municipalities across the province.

Although Rand Water restored operations and resumed its full supply capacity of 5 000 million litres per day by 4 February, the reduced supply of treated water from Rand Water during 27 January and 3 February resulted in the depletion of many municipal reservoirs, particularly in high-lying areas, leaving many communities without water. Other areas, particularly low-lying areas, were unaffected by supply disruptions.

According to the Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS), recovery efforts were further hampered by a heatwave in the province since early February, which resulted in increased water consumption in areas still receiving supply and delayed the replenishment of municipal storage systems.

Coordinated national intervention

In response, President Cyril Ramaphosa mandated intensified intervention in Gauteng. Majodina — together with Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (CoGTA) Minister Velenkosini Hlabisa, DWS Deputy Minister David Mahlobo and CoGTA Deputy Minister Dr Namane Dickson Masemola, Gauteng Premier Panyaza Lesufi and Infrastructure Development and CoGTA MEC Jacob Mamabolo — agreed on a range of emergency stabilisation measures.

“The implementation of these measures is being coordinated by technical teams from DWS, Rand Water and municipalities, led by the Directors-General of DWS and COGTA,” DWS spokesperson, Wisane Mavasa, said.

Key interventions include:

•    Accelerated repair of leaks in municipal distribution systems, including the replacement of old leaking pipes, by municipalities;
•    Removal of illegal connections by municipalities;
•    Acceleration of municipal water and sanitation capital works programmes, particularly the construction of additional reservoir storage capacity and pumping capacity;
•    Load shifting (moving water volumes between stable and critical systems) to balance the system. This results in reduced pressure in stable areas, but does not result in supply disruptions in stable areas;
•    Controlled throttling (managing reservoir outlets to build storage levels overnight);
•    Approval of level 2 water use restrictions by municipal councils, and enforcement of the restrictions, particularly in high-use areas, and
•    Improved communication between municipalities and the public.

“Rand Water has also offered to assist municipalities to implement these measures and has been assisting the City of Tshwane to refurbish two of their water treatment works and to reduce leaks in municipal distribution system in priority areas in the city,” Mavasa said.

Temporary abstraction from IVRS

To accelerate reservoir recovery, Majodina has approved an urgent water use licence application allowing Rand Water to abstract an additional 200 million cubic metres per annum (million m³/a) from the Integrated Vaal River System (IVRS) for a four-month period, from February to June 2026.

This temporarily increases Rand Water’s allocation from 1 803 million m³/a to 2 003 million m³/a.

“In considering Rand Water’s application, DWS undertook a comprehensive hydrological yield assessment, considering the prevailing water supply constraints in Gauteng and the fact that the IVRS is already constrained and unable to accommodate permanent additional allocations,” Mavasa said.

However, Mavasa stressed that the measure is strictly temporary and not a long-term solution to Gauteng’s structural water challenges.

The department has set a limit to the amount of water that Rand Water can abstract from IVRS, which consists of 14 interlinked dams.

Long-term reforms and accountability

The department has underscored that lasting stability depends on municipalities implementing structural reforms, including ring-fencing water revenue to reduce non-revenue water and upgrade distribution infrastructure.

“They should also be entering into partnerships with the private sector to mobilise private sector funding for water infrastructure.”

Broader policy reforms are under way through the Water Services Amendment Bill currently before Parliament and the Reform of Metropolitan Trading Services Programme being implemented by National Treasury.

“These reforms are aimed at ensuring that revenue from the sale of water is ring-fenced for the water function and that the providers of water services at municipal level become professionally managed entities with single-point accountability,” Mavasa said.

Additional policy directives include insourcing water tankering services and increasing sustainable groundwater use, where appropriate. National government has also committed to mobilising further technical support to assist municipalities in Gauteng, where necessary.

Majodina was scheduled to meet Gauteng municipalities on Thursday to reinforce the urgency of implementing these measures.

The department has called on residents and civil society to conserve water and comply with restrictions to support system recovery.

Water users in those areas, who have still been receiving water, are also called upon to comply with municipal water use restrictions. – SAnews.gov.za

GabiK

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United Nations Office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS) SRSG Meets with the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Permanent Observer and the Chair of the ECOWAS Group at the United Nations on the Renewal of the UNOWAS Mandate

Source: APO


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The Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS), H.E. Mr. Leonardo Santos Simão, met on Friday 13th February 2026, with the ECOWAS Permanent Observer to the United Nations, H.E. Ambassador Kinza Jawara-Njai, and the Chair of the ECOWAS Group at the United Nations, represented by the Deputy Permanent Representative of the Republic of Sierra Leone to the UN, Mr. Kalilu Totangi.

The discussions focused primarily on the renewal of the mandate of UNOWAS, which expired on 31 January 2026 and is currently under consideration by the United Nations Security Council.

During the meeting, the SRSG briefed on the ongoing negotiations within the Security Council, outlining key issues under discussion and the procedural steps toward the conclusion of the renewal process. The discussions also touched on the prevailing socio-political and security situation in West Africa, including evolving regional dynamics and the importance of sustained preventive diplomacy and coordinated engagement.

Ambassador Kinza Jawara-Njai reaffirmed the unalloyed support of ECOWAS for the renewal of the UNOWAS mandate, underscoring the importance of maintaining a strong and flexible mandate that advances preventive diplomacy and strengthens regional partnership.

Mr. Kalilu Totangi, representing the Chair of the ECOWAS Group at the United Nations, reiterated support on behalf of the Group and emphasized the continued relevance of UNOWAS as the principal United Nations political mission in West Africa.

Looking ahead, the meeting reaffirmed the shared determination of ECOWAS and the United Nations to further consolidate their strategic partnership in advancing peace, security, governance, and sustainable development in West Africa. Both sides underscored the importance of sustained coordination, mutual complementarity, and strengthened institutional collaboration to effectively respond to emerging regional challenges and support Member States in building resilience.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).