Stage 2 load shedding expected tonight

Power utility Eskom is expected to implement load shedding from 5pm this evening until 10pm.

The embattled electricity supplier has been facing severe constraints to the system since last week when several generation units tripped and others failed to return to service.

Consumers were given a small respite over the weekend when load shedding was suspended from Saturday afternoon but it was promptly reinstated on Monday evening also between 5pm and 10pm.

“Since [Monday] evening, a unit each at Arnot, Grootvlei and Matla power stations either tripped or were taken offline for repairs. At the same time two units were returned to service; one each at Kriel and Grootvlei power stations.

“The onset of winter has seen increased demand and this will lead to severe capacity constraints throughout this period, particularly during the evening and morning peaks. Unfortunately, this would generally require the implementation of load shedding during the evening peaks. Tonight Stage 2 load shedding will be implemented…with the possibility of higher stages should any further generation unit breakdowns occur before then,” Eskom said.

Currently, the power utility has capacity losses amounting to 15 762MW with an additional 3 049MW out on planned maintenance.

“A generation unit each at the Kusile and Arnot power stations are expected to return to service this afternoon.

“Eskom would like to remind the public that load shedding is implemented only as a last resort to protect the national grid. We therefore urge all South Africans to continue using electricity sparingly especially between 5am and 9am in the mornings and 4pm and 10pm in the evenings,” the power utility said.

 

 

Source: South African Government News Agency

General Masemola thanks, encourages KZN floods rescue teams

National Police Commissioner, General Fannie Masemola, has expressed his appreciation to search and rescue teams attempting to retrieve bodies lost in floods that swept KwaZulu-Natal in April.

The South African Police Service (SAPS) on Twitter said General Masemola on Monday visited the team’s base at the Virginia Airport in Durban.

In April, 435 were confirmed to have died when floods swept the province. Beyond this, thousands of people were displaced when 4 000 house were damaged in the disaster. Dozens of people were reported missing and remain unfound.

In the post, the police said teams continue to search for missing people who had been swept away during the floods.

“General Masemola further thanked members for the seamless integrated cooperation and coordination of expertise. SAPS deployed front line officers, diving teams, K9 units and various vessels, helicopters and fixed air wing planes following floods in KZN,” reads the post.

 

 

Source: South African Government News Agency

Deputy Minister brings relief to flood victims

Deputy Minister of Social Development, Hendrietta Bogopane-Zulu, will today continue with her mission to bring much-needed relief to flood victims in KwaZulu-Natal.

Accompanied by social partners, the Deputy Minister has been visiting various shelters and homes to bring comfort to bereaved families and food to those affected by the devastating floods that caused havoc across that province.

On Tuesday, the Deputy Minister will visit shelters and hand over much-needed food, water and clothes from the private sector and private donors to families.

The programme includes visits to the Jabulani Centre, Mahlasini Centre and the Canelands Training Centre in Verulam.

Last week, the Deputy Minister was in Burlington Hall, Challwoth; Bayside; Umgababa and Chatsworth. They handed over blankets, food, water and clothing.

They Deputy Minister concluded the week by visiting displaced families in Cliffdale, Mpumalanga and KwaMoya in Hammarsdale in partnership with South African Breweries. The breweries handed over food parcels to the families.

 

 

 

Source: South African Government News Agency

NPA, State Capture Commission solidify collaboration

The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) and State Capture Commission say the two entities are committed to working together to ensure a “seamless transition” from the work of the commission to possible prosecutions arising from it.

Already, the majority of cases and investigations by the NPA’s Investigating Directorate (ID) have come as a result of the commission’s work.

NPA ID spokesperson, Sindisiwe Seboka, said while the NPA and commission will work together, engagements continue in areas of engagement and the strengthening of ties.

“The two entities are committed to ensuring a seamless transition phase of the commission’s work, to the extent that they may translate into criminal cases, asset forfeiture recoveries, or other sanctions that the courts will deem fit.

“Ending impunity for high-level corruption and State capture cases is a priority for the country. This requires enhanced collaboration between a number of stakeholders, while respecting their respective roles and mandates,” Seboka said.

Seboka emphasised that discussions are expected on the “ID’s need for better access to the commission’s information”.

“The commission will continue to do what it can to assist the NPA and Investigating Directorate to carry out their mandates as the commission approaches the end of its term.

“The commission will continue to grant the NPA access to evidence gathered by the commission, in accordance with the law, to ensure successful investigations and prosecutions of matters arising out of the commission’s work,” Seboka said.

 

 

Source: South African Government News Agency

Citizens and government must work together to tackle climate change

The recent devastating floods in KwaZulu-Natal, Eastern Cape and the North West have shown that severe weather patterns have become a significant threat to lives, the economy and the environment itself.

Climate Change has become a topical issue globally with severe weather patterns – the cost of which developing countries can least afford. Local government plays a pivotal role in addressing the effects of climate change.

These were some of the remarks made by panellists during a webinar on the impact of climate change and changing weather patterns in society.

Tuesday’s webinar was hosted by the Government Communication and Information System (GCIS) in partnership with the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment as well as the South African Local Government Association (SALGA).

Speaking on the impact of climate change on the vulnerability of people, Sandile Maphumulo from SALGA said that the government adopted the National Infrastructure Plan (NIP) with the aim to transform the country’s economic landscape.

The plan stipulates billions invested towards upgrading infrastructure and improving access to healthcare facilities, schools, water and sanitation, housing and electrification.

She said that the key questions to ponder on is how much of the investment is targeted at mitigating climate change and how much is allocated to building climate resilient infrastructure.

Maphumulo explained that  the impact of climate change on South African human settlements arises from a number of climate change-related causes, notably sea level changes, impacts on water resources, extreme weather events, food security and increased health risks.

“It is argued that drainage systems and poor infrastructure development contribute to the vulnerability of human settlement to climate change,” she said.

She emphasised that it takes citizens and government to come together and respond to climate change.

Spaking about some of the lessons learnt from the recent floods, she said that the infrastructure and facilities that still exist today were designed decades ago without the future climate in mind.

Inequality is still a major concern, and within communities, some groups are more vulnerable than others.

“Newer infrastructure is too vulnerable to climate change due to poor tender systems and appointment of incompetent service providers, for example corruption, BEE systems, engineers with lack of extensive experience.

“Local communities and municipalities are just not yet prepared to face climate-related threats,” she said.

To mitigate climate change the country should build better energy efficient buildings and also transform the energy grid.

“We should be using renewable energy sources, converting waste to energy, recycling instead of polluting and filling landfill sites.

“We should stop building houses in environmentally sensitive areas, fight against illegal land occupation, illegal immigration and infiltration of foreign nationals in our cities, towns and economic areas,” she said.

Climate Change Policy

Tlou Ramaru, Chief Director at the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment said that the challenges being experienced are extreme events, which include flooding, heat waves and drought.

Ramaru said that the department has developed a Climate Change Policy response of which its vision is to transition to a lower carbon and climate resilient society.

The objectives of the policy among others is to manage the climate change impact through interventions that build and sustain South Africa’s social economic and environmental resilience and emergency response capacity.

He said that the structure of the policy was around risk reduction and management to see how to reduce the risks associated with climate change while prioritising the adaptation to address all the observed threats.

In terms of the ongoing activities, Ramaru said that climate change sectoral adaptation plans have been developed by the following sectors at national level: Water, Agriculture, Forestry, Fisheries, Health, Biodiversity and a Climate Change Policy Framework for State Owned Companies and Rural Human Settlements.

“All nine provinces have developed climate change response plans. All 44 district municipalities and metros have been capacitated to mainstream climate change into Integrated Development Plan (IDPs),” he said.

He added that the National Climate Change Adaptation Strategy has been approved by Cabinet for implementation.

 

 

Source: South African Government News Agency

Vaccination remains best defense against COVID-19

Health Minister, Dr Joe Phaahla, says while 70% of the population has come into contact with COVID-19 – and have some form of immunity – the best form of defense against the disease remains vaccination.

Phaahla said this when he tabled the department’s budget vote before a mini-plenary of the National Assembly on Tuesday.

“Whilst it is the time that over 70% of the population have had contact with the virus, and therefore we have some natural immunity, the truth is this immunity wares with time and it cannot be boosted. So, while the virus is amongst us, the best defense is vaccination,” he said.

Phaahla said from where government was compared to a year ago, it has made progress with its vaccination programme.

As of Monday, we have administered 35 182 million vaccine doses to just over 19 717 million adult individuals which is 49.5% of all adults.

“We have been allocated R2 billion for vaccines in the 2022/23 financial year,” he said.

Minister explains the need for health regulations

Phaahla said, meanwhile, that government derives no joy in implementing lockdown restrictions, and that they are done to solely protect citizens from the severe impact of COVID-19.

“We wish to assure all South Africans, that as government we get no joy in inconveniencing you from time to time with restrictions.

“We say sorry where we have wronged you but please be assured that all interventions were meant and are still meant for all of us to avoid the severe impact of COVID-19.

“We completely disagree with armchair critics who argue that we should drop all public health measures and just let the virus spread at will and only worry about whether hospitals are full or not,” he said.

The Minister said while the pandemic has derailed some of government’s programmes – as departments had to redirect all resources to aid in the fight against the pandemic – it has also had positive experiences and lessons during this period.

“We have learned to work as government from local to national, and bring in skills and expertise from our entities.

“We have learnt on how to work together with private sector, from securing of commodities such as [personal protective equipment] PPEs, diagnostics, therapeutics and even more securing and administering vaccines.

“We have learned how to work with our scientists to guide our intervention, not always easy because scientists themselves do not always agree as is the case in other aspects of life,” he said.

 

 

Source: South African Government News Agency

Huawei OceanStor Distributed Storage Is Named as a 2022 Gartner Peer Insights Customers’ Choice for Distributed File Systems and Object Storage

SHENZHEN, China, May 10, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Gartner Peer Insights recognized Huawei OceanStor distributed storage as a Customers’ Choice in the 2022 Gartner Peer Insights ‘Voice of the Customer’: Distributed File Systems and Object Storage report. Scoring 4.9 out of 5 points on the annual Gartner Peer Insights platform, Huawei OceanStor distributed storage ranked first among all global vendors.

Gartner Peer Insights is an online ratings and reviews platform for IT software and services. The reviews are written and read by IT professionals and technology decision-makers worldwide. It includes more than 380,000 verified reviews from end-users who have experience purchasing, implementing, or using products or services in over 360 markets. Each year, vendors with high customer ratings are named a Gartner Peer Insights Customers’ Choice, helping IT leaders make more informed purchasing decisions.

As of January 31, 2022, Huawei OceanStor distributed storage products and solutions had received many positive reviews from customers around the world and in various industries, such as finance, carrier, manufacturing, energy, media, healthcare, and education. These reviews cover everything from system architecture, product functionality, and deployment to O&M, service, and support. All of these highlight how global customers think of Huawei OceanStor distributed storage in terms of industry position, deployment scale, and commercial use maturity.

“We are very grateful for our customers sharing their opinions on Gartner Peer Insights. Our only goal is to provide solutions and products that make our customers happy,” Mr. Wang Yidong, President of Huawei Distributed Storage Domain, said, “We will continue to focus on our customers’ needs and keep providing efficient and reliable distributed storage products and solutions to safeguard innovative services in each and every industry.”

Confirming this customer focus, one industry architect commented, “We are deeply impressed by the customer-centric working attitude of Huawei engineers. The product itself is very responsive, easy to use for unstructured data, and highly scalable.”

“We need a new type of storage to replace the traditional centralized storage. After POC test, we found that the reliability and scalability of Huawei distributed storage can be realized. The storage capacity can be expanded quickly and the management interface functions are complete,” wrote one IT technical director in the finance industry.

A review from a CTO in the manufacturing sector stated, “Huawei is experienced on distributed storage product. The storage is stable with different networks. And I do like the unified platform idea.”

Specially designed to accommodate mass data, Huawei OceanStor distributed storage provides diversified storage services for high-performance computing (HPC), big data analytics, video, content repository/backup and archiving, virtualization, and cloud resource pools. It helps enterprises fully unleash the value of mass data.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1814234/image_1.jpg