Independent Electoral Commission on results of municipal by-election

Results of the Municipal By-election held on 2 November 2022

During the by-election contested yesterday in KwaZulu-Natal, the Democratic Alliance (DA) retained its seat.

The new councillor for the DA is:

Caelee Jane Laing in Ward 10, in eThekwini Municipality – ETH: The party retained the seat won in the 2021 Municipal Elections with 94.80% of the votes cast, compared to 80.01% during the 2021 Municipal Elections.

Voter turnout yesterday was 31.15%

For more detailed election results please visit the Electoral Commission’s website at www.elections.org.za

Source: Government of South Africa

Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment celebrates International Day for Biosphere Reserves

South Africa joins international community to celebrate International Day for Biosphere Reserves

South Africa today joins the international community to celebrate the first International Day for Biosphere Reserves.

The UNESCO general conference declared at its 41st conference that 3 November to be set aside annually to showcase the contribution of biosphere reserves to sustainable development and the balance biosphere reserves create between human activity and the conservation of natural resources.

“Today signifies the urgency and importance of the continuous need to raise awareness about the importance of a healthy environment.  It is now more necessary than ever to address the urgent conservation needs and the sustainable use of natural resources so that we do not destroy the Planet for future generations,” said the Deputy Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, Ms Makhotso Sotyu.

The International Day for Biosphere Reserves aims to highlight actions, practices and systems of production and consumption that balance human activities with the conservation of natural resources, in order to contribute to addressing global challenges as well as climate, health and environmental objectives.

The aim of a Biosphere Reserve is to achieve integrated management of terrestrial land, fresh and marine waters and living organisms, by putting in place bioregional planning schemes, based on integrating conservation of biological diversity into sustainable development through the appropriate zonation. Such zonation includes strictly protected areas as core, typically surrounded by buffer zones where conservation is emphasized, but where people also live and work, and the whole is surrounded by a transition area, or area of co-operation, which promotes sustainable development.

There are 738 reserves in the World Network of Biosphere Reserves in 134 countries. This includes 22 transboundary sites.

South Africa also has 10 UNESCO Biosphere Reserves. These are the:

  • Kogelberg Biosphere Reserve (Western Cape Province, designated 1998).
  • Cape West Coast Biosphere Reserve (Western Cape Province, designated 2000).
  • Waterberg Biosphere Reserve (Limpopo Province, designated 2001).
  • Kruger-to-Canyons Biosphere Reserve (Limpopo Province and Mpumalanga Provinces, designated 2001).
  • Cape Winelands Biosphere Reserve (Western Cape Province, designated 2007).
  • Vhembe Biosphere Reserve (Limpopo Province, designated May 2009).
  • Gouritz Cluster Biosphere Reserve (Western Cape and Eastern Cape Provinces, designated June 2015).
  • Magaliesberg Biosphere Reserve (Gauteng and North West Province designated 2015.)
  • Garden Route Biosphere Reserve (Western Cape and Eastern Provinces designated 2017).
  • Marico Biosphere Reserve (North West Province designated 2018).
     

Biosphere reserves are voluntarily nominated by national governments and remain under the sovereign jurisdiction of the states where they are located. Their status is internationally recognised.  

South Africa embraces the role that the UNESCO Man and Biosphere Programme plays in reconciling development and conservation of natural resources using the local efforts. 

For media enquiries contact Albi Modise on 083 490 2871

Source: Government of South Africa

Governor Lesetja Kganyago: Public lecture at Wits School of Governance

Public lecture by Lesetja Kganyago, Governor of the South African Reserve Bank, at the Wits School of Governance Johannesburg

Keeping it simple: monetary policy, growth and jobs in South Africa

Introduction

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.

Central banks are important, long-standing expressions of a universal need for stability in social and economic affairs. Their goals centre on achieving some definition of price stability, and in more recent decades, their methods have fixed primarily on inflation targeting.

Where they directly target inflation, central banks’ primary tool is the policy rate, normally defined as a very short-term or overnight borrowing rate. At this rate, banks can borrow from the central bank to address overnight needs for liquidity and this marginal borrowing rate sets the basis for all other lending rates in the economy. A secondary policy tool is a blend of communications about current economic conditions and the policy rate level.  A third encompasses the requirements and flexibility of the policy framework – the target itself and how it is measured.

In more recent years, and under the impact of deflationary conditions, a few advanced economy central banks have adapted their approaches with secondary targets, such as inflation averages over time and unemployment rates.

Today, I want to spend some time unpacking why it is useful for the South African Reserve Bank (SARB), and most emerging economies generally, to target inflation, and why achieving that goal ensures that monetary policy includes economic growth and job creation.

I will look at recent changes in policy targets for the moment, before returning to current conditions and the relevance of jobs and growth targets for monetary policy.

Financial distress, deflation and policy exceptionalism

It is useful to start with the global economic shocks of the past 15 years and their monetary policy implications.

While the global financial crisis (GFC) and the COVID-19 pandemic had different origins, the economic policy responses to them were similar.  Advanced economies reacted to both by dropping interest rates as far as possible and using quantitative easing (QE).  During the GFC, QE programmes kept asset prices of various kinds higher than they would otherwise have been, preventing asset price deflation from causing even worse economic outcomes. During the pandemic, QE additionally supported spending, as mobility and many face-to-face economic transactions were curtailed, while also protecting financial institutions.

Job protection was also a major focus for major central banks and job creation became a measure of their policy effectiveness. More liquidity would help keep interest rates low, enabling firms to keep paying wages and to restart the economy.

What impact have these efforts made on policy frameworks? Certainly, where countries faced collapsing growth and weaker inflation together, they could all move policy in the same direction. However, when the GFC ended and the pandemic ended, not all faced the same policy trade-offs.  The GFC ushered in an extended period of ongoing QE and low rates, but this was not true for most emerging market economies. The end of the pandemic has been different. It has thrown us all back into a pre-Great Moderation world in which inflation is super-sensitive to supply and demand shocks.

In particular, and with the benefit of hindsight, the current global inflation finds much of its origin in a too aggressive use of QE and in negative real rates as the pandemic started to wind down and economic activity rose.  As in emerging economies post- GFC, many countries now, post-pandemic, find their output gaps to be badly measured and giving off incorrect signals about their policy stance.

As, and if, the current surge in global inflation wanes, some advanced economies may very well return to lower inflation for structural and demographic reasons.  These central banks may retain other metrics in their policy frameworks – such as economic growth rates or the prices of specific assets (e.g. house prices in New Zealand), or in the case of the United States (US), employment levels.

But it is highly unlikely that emerging market economies will decide to change their policy frameworks. Many had reverted to much higher inflation even before the pandemic eased, while others, like South Africa, are now caught up in broader inflation.  In that more normal context, the standard monetary policy approaches make as much of a positive impact on economic growth and jobs as they can. However, the real solutions to faster growth and job creation lie in other policy domains.

Why the difference between advanced and emerging economies?   Why might the rules governing  objectives differ  somewhat? The answer has to do with  pure economic theory, actual experience, and with the different economic conditions − cyclical and structural − faced by different central banks.

To begin, it should be clear that for quite some time, essentially since the early 2000s, central banks of advanced economies have faced stubbornly low inflation, despite low interest rates, for a range of structural reasons related primarily to demographics and high savings. So, when they took an accommodative stance to raise growth and employment levels during the Great Moderation of the 2000s and the period into the pandemic, inflation still remained modest.

As the pandemic hit, because inflation remained low, there was as yet no contradiction between the inflation targets and boosting growth.  Policy expansion could help get people who had dropped out of the labour market back in.  Job creation was efficient. Expansionary stances worked well with strategies that lowered the cost to firms of retaining people in jobs.

In South Africa’s case, the pandemic also facilitated expansionary policy, precisely because inflation had trended lower from 2017.  This allowed us to lower policy rates sharply in 2020 to confront the shorter-term damage done to the economy. The repurchase (repo) rate averaged 6.7% between 2017 and early 2020, before dropping to 3.5% in March/April of that year.

A deeper dive into jobs and growth targets

As in advanced economies, our expansion did little to immediately bring back jobs. Many were lost as lockdowns were extended, while some new ones were created in various services linked to the shift in consumption patterns.  Expansion did support the recovery of both pre-pandemic spending patterns and many of the jobs associated with them.  Of course, there is also much further to go, as some sectors remain constrained.

The open question is whether sustained expansion in an environment of high debt levels and rising inflation could live up to the hopes of those that argue for a ‘jobs’ mandate for monetary policy.  The short answer is ‘no’, but let me explain why.

Our basic problem is that while growth creates job, inflation does not.  Not only does this fatally challenge the belief many hold in the existence of usable Phillips curves, but it also limits what macroeconomic policy can achieve in terms of job creation.  As we have noted many times in the past, the solutions to our unemployment problem lie well outside the realm of monetary policy, and in fact the failure to employ those solutions directly limits the positive contribution monetary policy can play.

Let’s look at what the historical data tell us about Phillips curves.  We see two correlations.   One is that as inflation rises, unemployment rates rise.   This characterises the late 1990s and into the latter half of 2003.  In 2002/03, for example, inflation reached double digits even while employment was falling – when unemployment breached 30%.

From about 2003 to 2007, however, we see another correlation, where inflation falls and employment rises.  After the GFC, from about 2011 to 2019, we see something different. Inflation first came off the highs of the GFC and then accelerated back up to around 6%.  There was some initial recovery in jobs, but as time went on, the acceleration was increasingly located in the public sector rather than the private sector.  Economic growth weakened quite sharply from 2013 to 2015 and then more gradually slowed through to the pandemic. From 2017 onwards, inflation decelerated and so did job creation.

The GFC and the pandemic were relatively clear instances when policy could respond in textbook ways to support the economy and see-through inflation shocks.  Before and after these crises, we see more transparently the longer-term relationships between inflation and job creation.  First, inflation does not create jobs. And second, on balance, expansionary policy prompts more inflation than growth or job creation.

This tells us that South Africa’s Phillips curve is near-vertical at a low rate of positive economic growth.

This is strong evidence that the basic job creation mechanism is being impeded by things other than aggregate demand.

This adverse relationship between policy expansion and inflation kicks in when employment levels rise above what is called the non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment, or NAIRU.  Evidence for South Africa shows that this happens when our unemployment rate is still very high.  This is exacerbated by level changes in the NAIRU caused by structural impediments to job creation. For instance, load-shedding or higher transport costs indirectly increase the cost of creating jobs and push up the NAIRU.

A range of long-standing factors contribute to our very high NAIRU. Perhaps the most important of these is where people live and the cost of supplying their labour, and the skills they have compared to their cost.8  Regulatory costs of our economy also feature in various ways, including housing, where businesses can ply their trade, and compliance − which is a much larger burden for small and medium-sized businesses compared to that of larger firms.

Part of the difficulty is that we have done little to make it easier for less-skilled workers to find jobs, or to make it less costly to employ them.

Another part of the failing job creation machine is simply weaker real economic growth compared to the 2000s, when job creation was quite strong.

This should not, however, lead us down the path of grasping at another seemingly ‘easy’ answer. Higher inflation will not give us higher sustainable growth.

Instead, higher inflation undermines short-run growth by increasing interest rates on borrowing, affecting consumers’ buying on credit and business owners who want to use credit to invest. Higher interest costs reduce short-run cash flow, reducing all future consumption spending.

While surprise inflation reduces the real value of the existing stock of debt owed, the trade-off is lower economic growth in subsequent years.  The short-run benefit of a surprise lower interest rate is transformed by higher inflation into a long-run cost to growth.

When inflation is higher than that of our trading partners, we suffer a continuous loss of competitiveness.  High inflation overall also generally means higher inflation for poorer and less-skilled South Africans than for the wealthy. This increases inequality further and worsens the already low standard of living for those households, making them costlier to employ.

For a few years before the GFC in 2008, the relationship between growth and employment was better – if economic activity grew by 1%, employment grew by around 0.62%. But since then, up to 2018, each percentage point improvement in growth only gives us 0.37% more jobs. Our low employment problem overlaps entirely with our low growth problem.

In this context, the best a central bank can do is stabilise unemployment at the rate consistent with price stability. If a central bank attempts to get unemployment below the NAIRU, the result will be larger quantities of inflation but only small and temporary quantities of jobs as the supply curve becomes more vertical. The same is true for economic growth.

Assuming that most of our unemployment problem is structural, are we at least sure that the residual cyclical unemployment is being reduced by monetary policy?  Is a dual mandate better at addressing these cyclical drivers?

At the SARB, we use an alternative measure of economic activity to the NAIRU for understanding where the economy is relative to its tipping point into more inflation or into deflation. This is the output gap, or the distance between the possible, or potential, growth rate of the economy and the actual or realised rate of growth.

Similar to the US Federal Reserve (Fed), we use a Taylor rule to help tell us what the interest rate level should be, given the output gap and the distance between the inflation rate we want (the target) and where it currently is. 13   The Taylor rule tells us that we should set an interest rate that includes how quickly or slowly the economy is growing, compared to the speed at which it could be growing.

If the output gap is a good representative measure of the cyclical unemployment rate, then we are fully covered – the monetary policy equation we use to get to the interest rate includes, as best we can, the relationship between those rates and employment. If we look at how the Fed operates, we can take further comfort in our own framework. The Fed has an inflation target of 2%, averaged over time. This averaging introduces some flexibility to not respond to inflation shocks that are temporary, just as in our flexible inflation-targeting framework. But the Fed framework does not say that when unemployment rises it will aim for a higher inflation rate.  In other words, the dual mandate recognises that in the long run, the highest cyclical employment rate is consistent with low inflation.  In the policy debate at present in the US, there may be a rise in cyclical unemployment to get inflation back down and to achieve a lower sustainable unemployment rate.

We need also to be cautious in our current circumstances.  With surging inflation in advanced economies, it is likely that the adjusted policy frameworks of recent times will shift back to simpler and clearer formulations.

Three takeaways from this discussion stand out. One is that inflation-targeting central banks also consider real variables such as growth and unemployment when they make monetary policy decisions.  Second, that central banks don’t drop targeting inflation, even if they have an employment mandate.  It simply means they respect the NAIRU and discuss more directly its level and what can happen to inflation when the speed limit implied by it is exceeded. And third, that despite some policy innovation in recent times in some advanced economies, these may very well be scaled back to simpler frameworks.

Finally, we need to recognise, for the sake of solving our low employment problem and to keep monetary policy focused on the right things, that many issues sharply limit the transmission from policy to job creation outcomes. One is the job intensity of growth which we discussed. Another is the supply of skills that are coming into the market, and their cost.

Some might argue that in that case, it means that monetary policy should be pushed much further and harder to get the expected growth or jobs. Unfortunately, when inefficiencies and constraints exist, pushing harder on monetary policy is like pushing the accelerator to the floor on a curvy, icy road over a mountain pass.  At present, many central banks are skidding on that ice, with global inflation sharply higher and persistent.  Even our own relatively benign recent inflation experience has become much more challenging very quickly.

Keeping it simple

We have seen now that having two targets certainly does not mean double the benefit. Instead, it means that there are times and certain conditions when one policy tool helps to achieve both.  It also means that under other conditions, one tool cannot achieve both, and much of the world has now entered this territory.

When policy becomes overloaded with too many and contradictory objectives, then negative outcomes are more likely.

As inflation rises and growth slows, a central bank that fails to respond to rising prices will face the prospect of compounding inflationary shocks. Currencies depreciate and investment falls. 14

So where, in all of this, does South Africa find itself? We have not reached the ‘end’ of our policy rate space. We do not have stubbornly low or close to zero inflation.  We are experiencing rising inflation rates. Inflation expectations, for the most part, are proving to be more responsive to current inflation outcomes than we would like, and less anchored around the midpoint of our target.

If the expectations that firms and households hold for future inflation stray from the inflation target, then higher nominal wages and consumer prices are likely to emerge. In other words, once inflation expectations rise, they become a self-fulfilling prophecy, and the central bank has a more difficult and longer-term problem on its hands. A more expansionary policy stance runs that risk by enabling first-round inflation to embed into second-round inflation.

This implies that we need to continue the normalisation of interest rates, moving them closer to the level that is consistent with more stable inflation rates and sustainable economic growth.  At present, our repo rate is at 6.25%, still below long-term levels, but  rising  to  a more sustainable  long-term  level  that is  consistent  with inflation stabilising at 4.5%.

Conclusion

As we have discussed today, neither growth nor high inflation lead directly to job creation in our economy. Much of our employment challenge lies in encouraging the return of economic activity in sectors that have been hardest hit by the pandemic. And we will also need to recognise that some jobs may be permanently lost as firms do things differently and as consumption patterns shift.  Other jobs will be gained, however, and permanently impacting on employment levels requires approaches that have nothing to do with monetary policy. Just adding jobs targets will not get us there, and indeed part of our inflation problem stems from efforts to achieve such targets at a global level.

We should be careful not to add to our policy objectives in a way that surely would push us into sharply higher inflation.

If these are the primary constraints to job creation defined by the literature, and monetary policy has no impact on them, then the claim that more expansionary policies will solve the unemployment problem is simply an empty promise, backed up by little more than ideology and wishful thinking.

We have an unemployment problem that needs more credible solutions.

Employment and growth are both limited by factors that are beyond the reach of the central bank’s toolset.

The best chance we have with monetary policy to get faster, more job-rich growth is to maintain our focus on price stability with flexible inflation targeting − a proven framework. This enables the SARB to help maintain a stable environment that is conducive to economic growth, and because credibility is high, for it to create the necessary flexibility to ignore short-term inflation shocks.

A credible monetary policy will also keep borrowing costs lower than they would otherwise be. This is a central benefit to long-term economic growth and job creation. When inflation rises and stays high, investment decisions are distorted towards short- term investments that carry with them short-term jobs. For this reason, low inflation is a sound developmental policy.  It encourages firms across the private and public sector to make long-term investment decisions that imply productivity growth over time. This is critical, indeed a prerequisite, for sustainable jobs and income growth.

Consumption based on rising debt levels cannot be a sustainable growth and development strategy.

Having faced the unique threat of the COVID-19 crisis, we confronted that challenge with relatively low stable inflation and policy rate space. We were able to soften the damage of the crisis with the policy rate, while still protecting the value of the rand, and in so doing, were able to play our part in maintaining macroeconomic stability.

Now that the global economy is recovering and inflation in many countries, including our own, is rising, we have learned from experience that we must not be tempted to loosen our grip on inflation, or to fall behind our peers as rates are normalised – the consequences would be too costly.

Source: Government of South Africa

Reserve Bank on adoption of International Organization for Standardization in South Africa

Modernising South Africa’s payment ecosystem with the adoption of ISO 20022

South Africa’s financial sector has taken another huge step towards modernising the country’s payment ecosystem with the adoption of a new global messaging standard by its domestic real-time gross settlement (RTGS) system, participant banks and other financial market infrastructures (FMIs).

South Africa is one of the first countries on the continent to adopt the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) financial messaging standard ISO 20022, which is expected to underpin all high-value payments in reserve currencies by 2025.

The move to ISO 20022 – being driven through the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) – will introduce a harmonised message exchange mechanism for payments across the globe, allowing for richer, better-quality data in payment processing and settlements. SWIFT has set a 2025 deadline by which all users in its network must have transitioned to this messaging standard.

The move has been necessitated by the rapid development of disruptive technology, evolving cyberthreats, increased regulation and demands from customers for faster, more cost-effective payments.

The adoption of the ISO 20022 standard is expected to improve compliance and transparency, increase efficiency and interoperability, enhance customer experience, and speed up payment systems harmonisation.

At the heart of this change is the switch from the legacy proprietary messaging format known as Swift Message Type (SWIFT MT) to the ISO 20022 Extensible Markup Language (XML)

The adoption of XML – a language and file format for storing, transmitting and reconstructing information – will allow for the exchange of richer, more granular data, including the details of the remittance, the purpose of the payment, the original source and ultimate beneficiary along with any relevant supplementary data.

Though the ISO 20022 migration represents a step change in the global payments landscape, its adoption in South Africa is a pivotal marker in the country’s efforts to renew and modernise its domestic payments infrastructure, including our RTGS system – the South African Multiple Option Settlement (SAMOS) system.

Having guided the domestic ISO 20022 adoption, the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) will be supporting this change through the Southern African Development Community (SADC), as the operator of the SADC-RTGS. The switchover for participants in the SADC-RTGS is expected to be completed by October 2023.

These various modernisation efforts are rooted in the National Payment System Framework and Strategy or NPS Vision 2025. 

NPS Vision 2025 aims to improve the safety, efficiency and accessibility of the national payment system (NPS) and outlines nine goals that will advance and future-proof the domestic ecosystem. These goals include promoting competition and innovation, financial inclusion, regional integration, cost effectiveness, interoperability and financial stability and security.

The SARB, which owns and operates SAMOS, participating banks and other FMIs went live with the ISO 20022 adoption over the weekend of 17–19 September.

The move to the ISO 20022 format is critical to reforming various pillars of our payment system, including the electronic funds transfer (EFT) debit system, the EFT credit system as well as SAMOS.

The EFT debit system has already embedded the ISO 20022 format with the introduction of the DebiCheck service that enables consumers to authenticate early debit orders attached to their accounts.

The migration will also pave the way for faster payments through the introduction of the Rapid Payments Programme (RPP), which is expected to be launched in 2023. The RPP, to be launched under the brand Payshap, is an industry-led initiative under the leadership of BankservAfrica and the Payments Association of South Africa (PASA). When rolled out, the RPP will offer a cost-effective instant payment service across banks, a proxy service to embed user banking details, a request to pay service as well as support for several known retail payment use cases.

In the retail payments space in the SADC region, the Transactions Cleared on an Immediate Basis (TCIB) system operated by BankservAfrica was implemented in August 2021, using the ISO 20022 message standard. The TCIB is a cross-border, low-value payment scheme that enables the immediate clearing of single credit ‘push’ transactions, settled on a deferred basis. 

The scheme is open to all banks and authorised non-banks across the SADC, with integration points into other African regions, including the East African Community (EAC) and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa and East African Community (COMESA).

Source: Government of South Africa

Public Service and Administration hosts Government Capacity and Performance Review Conference, 7 to 9 Nov  

The Department of Public Service and Administration (DPSA), in partnership with the University of KwaZulu-Natal, the National Planning Commission, and the KwaZulu-Natal Office of the Premier, will host a 3-day Government Capacity and Performance Review Conference. 

The conference is informed by the 10-year anniversary of the adoption of the National Development Plan (NDP) developed in 2012. Chapter 13 of the NDP commits the government to build its own capacity for the efficient and effective delivery of services, and to close the trust deficit between the government and citizens. The conference is centred on this commitment by the government over the last 10 years through the NDP. It seeks to ascertain the extent to which the government has manifested this commitment ten years later.

The DPSA Director-General, Ms Yoliswa Makhasi, says: “The conference is very important in that it will assist the government to ascertain its capacity status, key areas of intervention, and how to proceed in the implementation of key aspects of the NDP”.

The conference brings together a variety of stakeholders working in the field of state capacity and government performance. This includes academics from across South African universities; researchers; public servants; and cabinet leaders. The president is expected to open the conference, but this is still subject to confirmation by the presidency.

The conference will take place from the 7th to the 9th of November at the University of KwaZulu-Natal.

Source: Government of South Africa

Employment and Labour hosts Knowledge Sharing webinar, 4 Nov

Government offers support to business

Government has made an exalting call for struggling businesses in South Africa to make use of  facilities offered by the government to assist businesses in improving productivity and competitiveness. The Department of Employment and Labour (DEL) entity tasked with improving productivity and enabling job creation, Productivity SA, will host a Knowledge Sharing webinar on Friday 4th November 2022 to highlight business support opportunities offered by its  Business and Turnaround Solutions programme.

The Business Turnaround and Recovery Programme will host the webinar this Friday to support initiatives aimed at preventing job losses and enabling companies and employees to be more vigilant about issues relating to job retention and to mitigate against poor performance or productivity decline that increases the likelihood of job losses.   The Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) and the Unemployment Insurance Fund (UIF) will also make presentations at the webinar. Members of the media are invited to attend the webinar as follows:

Source: Government of South Africa

Minister Barbara Creecy: Handover of Bat Hawk Aircraft to Sanparks by Anglo Platinum

Speech by the Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, Ms Barbara Creecy at the handover of Bat Hawk Aircraft to Sanparks by Anglo Platinum

Thank You Programme Director 
Prakashim Moodliar, Executive head:  Projects at Anglo American Platinum 
American Platinum and your team 
Members of the SANParks Board present 
SANParks Executive Management 
Kruger National Park Management Committee members
SANParks Honorary Rangers present  
Members of the Media 
Ladies and Gentlemen

Today is a day of celebration and a historic one at that. Anglo Platinum are donating Ultra-Light aircraft called the Bat Hawk, to assist Sanparks with our conservation efforts. 

This is a much-appreciated gesture, that allows us to add another weapon to our arsenal to prevent poaching and to monitor our ecosystem. 

Anglo Platinum joins a number of international and local companies and individuals who work with SANParks to protect our natural world and our threatened species.

These Ultra-Light aircraft, will assist us in carrying out aerial patrols as well as monitoring and effectively managing the environment. 

As custodians of our fauna and flora, SANParks has limited resources at its disposal. It is therefore important to form partnerships to look after our country’s rich and varied biodiversity. We therefore work with the private sector, other branches of government, research institutions, universities and NGO’s to identify and fund best conservation practice. 

The Kruger National Park remains an iconic and unique place for millions of visitors who come here to not only enjoy the solitude, but also to rejuvenate themselves before returning to the hustle and bustle of their daily lives.  

Unfortunately our iconic Park, has also faced the brunt of rhino poaching over the last fifteen years. 

Consequently, multiple biological and law enforcement interventions continue to be employed to fight the scourge of poaching, and wildlife crime in general. This is a war of boots on the ground,  as well a much more sophisticated operation to disrupt global trade networks.

Our Department in cooperation with the provincial conservation authorities, SANParks, private rhino owners and the SAPS, has been focusing on a more proactive and integrated approach, which emphasises increasing situational awareness and sharing of information. 

Joint teams work on focused investigations with the support of the Environmental Enforcement Fusion Centre, ensuring consolidation of information nationally and the ability to provide analysis support, not only at a tactical level but also to investigating teams. 

The aim is to strengthen our capability, not only at a tactical level to prevent and combat poaching, but also our ability to disrupt the activities along the value chain with a focus on integrated, intelligence-led investigations, inclusive of the financial aspects.

As a result of these efforts, in the first six months of the year,  69 people were arrested in connection with rhino poaching and rhino horn trafficking in the first half of this year. Additionally, 4 alleged rhino horn traffickers were arrested in the first half of this year for trying to smuggle 56 pieces of rhino horn out of the country. 

A number of search and seizure operations have taken place countrywide, leading to the  confiscation of 29 rhino horn. 

Fifty one  people have been  convicted this year for offences related to rhino poaching. The heaviest sentence handed down was 34 years imprisonment, while two Mpumalanga men were sentenced to 28 years behind bars for killing rhino and being in possession of illegal firearms and ammunition.

Ladies and gentlemen, it is internationally recognised that effective conservation strategies must always be paired with effective community beneficiation for those living near protected areas. In this regard,  SANParks and its concessionaires, employ over 6 100 people, eighty percent of whom are recruited from neighbouring communities. 

Through our expanded public works programme, a further 13 650 work opportunities were created  last year. We were also to buy goods and services from over eight hundred small enterprises.

Earlier this year in an effort to further expand the economic opportunities in our national parks, SANParks hosted an investment conference where over 100 projects were launched for public-private partnerships for, amongst others, accommodation, retail activities and restaurants in our national parks.  

This model also includes the setting aside a minimum of ten percent share equity  for land claimants, as well as creating preferential procurement opportunities for local communities and provision of the much needed jobs.  We understand local community beneficiation as the only long term sustainable approach to conservation. 

I want today to end by paying tribute once again to the courage and dedication of our ranger service. These men and women are in the frontline of the battle against organised wildlife criminal syndicates and have on occasion paid the supreme price for their dedication.

Today’s donation by Anglo Platinum is a powerful incentive to our rangers to continue the fight. It provides significant back up for patrols and combat operations.  We thank you once again.

We have no doubt your contribution enables us to fulfil our constitutional mandate to protect our environment for the benefit of present and future generations.

Thank You.

Source: Government of South Africa