Gas tanker explosion death toll rises

Gauteng Premier Panyaza Lesufi says the number of those that have died as a result of the tragic gas tanker explosion in Boksburg in December has increased to 40.

This includes at least 12 health-care workers who were based at the Tambo Memorial Hospital near the location of the blast.

Others are still in hospital while a further 23 have been discharged.

“There are no words to adequately convey our condolence to the affected families that are now having to deal with 2023 on matters that they didn’t foresee.

“It will take time for the wounds to heal but we are ready as the Gauteng Provincial Government, together with all components of local government, to walk this painful journey with all the affected families and further assist in whichever way we can.

“This has not been an easy period, particularly for those who have lost their loved ones. We implore our health professionals to provide the best care to those that are still on their road to recovery,” he said on Thursday.

Lesufi added that some families will be pursuing legal action against the company that owns the gas tanker.

“We really believe this is within their rights to pursue whatever means of recourse available to them within the legal system. This, however, does not mean that government must not pursue the matter to its logical conclusion.

“As government we have not abandoned our mission to protect, care and give them the necessary support. We will be the last ones on the scene and until each and every family is supported, until each and every institution is supported, I want to commit the GPG to be there until the last moment,” he said.

The Premier said trauma, debriefing services and psycho-social work continues to be offered to the families and those affected.

Infrastructure damage

Turning to the damage caused by the explosion at the Tambo Memorial Hospital, Lesufi said Gauteng’s Department of Infrastructure Development (DID) has already completed some of the work.

“The construction work for the replacement of broken windows at the hospital, including the nurses’ residence, has been completed. Some of the [other] work is almost complete following delays because of the festive season break,” he said.

Work to restore the hospital’s casualty unit, however, is expected to take longer.

“Due to the extent of the damage, the casualty unit at the hospital remains closed. The [DID] maintenance team has developed specifications and costing for this remedial work and they’ve given [this] to the Department of Health for approval and…the Department of Health has approved. The DID have subsequently appointed a contractor.

“We now anticipate the conclusion of this work in four weeks’ time so that that hospital can go back and function again,” he said.

Source: South African Government News Agency

Water and Sanitation on improved national dam levels

Intermittent rainfall continues to improve national dam levels as DWS fast-track water infrastructure projects to ensure water security

The Department of Water and Sanitation’s weekly state of water reservoirs report demonstrates a minor enhancement in storage. This week, the overall national storage capacity of the country’s reservoirs is at 94.7%, a tiny improvement from last week’s 94.1%, and still a significant improvement from last year’s 92.8%.

The country’s largest Water Supply System, the Integrated Vaal River System (IVRS), which is comprised of 14 dams across four provinces increased marginally from 100.5% last week to 100.8% this week.

Some of the Water Supply Systems that have expanded are Bloemfontein from 99.7.% last week to 100.2% this week, Amathole from 101.7% to 103.3%, Butterworth from 100.1% to 100.4%, Klipplaat moved up from 100.2% to 100.5%, Luvuvhu gained from 100.6% to 100.9%, both Crocodile East and West experienced increments from 101.3% to 101.6% and 95.3% to 98.7% respectively.

Cape Town Water Supply System has recorded a decline in water levels from 68.9% to 67.1%, this drop can be attributed to the fact that some parts experience rainfall during winter season. Other Water Supply Systems that have dipped in water levels are Umhlathuze decreasing slightly from 100.5% to 100.4%, Polokwane from 106.6% to 105.3%, Orange from 101.2% to 101.0% and Umgeni is steady and unchanged at 104.4%.

Algoa Water Supply System in the Eastern Cape with dams supplying water to Nelson Mandela Bay Metro continues to be a cause for concern, this is after it recorded yet another decrease from 15.1% to 14.9%.

Six (6) out of nine provinces have experienced improvements in water levels namely, KwaZulu-Natal from 87.6% to 91.4%, Eastern Cape from 77.3% to 78.5%, Limpopo from 87.0% to 87.2%, Mpumalanga from 97.0% to 97.4%, Northern Cape from 99.0% to 100.0%, and North West from 84.8% to 86.9%.

Provinces that have recorded downward movements are Western Cape which decreased marginally from 60.9% to 59.6%, Gauteng from 101.8% to 101.5% and Free State slightly down from 101.2% to 101.1%.

The Gariep, which is South Africa’s largest dam decreased marginally from 99.5% last week and is sitting at 99.4% this week. While Sterkfontein Dam, a reserve dam within IVRS, is at 101.0%, showing a tiny reduction from last week’s water level of 101.1%. Vaal Dam has improved from 102.5% to 102.6%.

Meanwhile, the Department is continuously making inroads in its efforts to provide adequate and potable water supply to communities where there are water supply challenges, through implementation of various bulk water supply projects, refurbishment of existing bulk water infrastructure and other interventions to respond to water demand in various parts of the country.

Source: Government of South Africa

Simultaneous Militant Attacks Kill 14 Malian Soldiers

Mali’s army says 14 troops were killed and 11 wounded Tuesday in central Mali when their vehicles struck explosives planted by Islamist militants.

In a press release Wednesday, the army said there were two explosives that detonated simultaneously.

The attacks were in central Mali, a region that has seen increasing violence in recent years from Islamist militants.

The army statement says Mali’s airborne special forces engaged what it called “terrorists,” killing 31 of them, including 14 as they were burying their dead.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for Tuesday’s attacks.

Mali has been battling an Islamist insurgency since 2012. It started in the north of the country before spreading.

The militants took control of northern Mali in 2012, until the French army intervened in 2013 to drive them out.

French President Emmanuel Macron announced last year that French troops would withdraw from Mali after months of tensions between Paris and Bamako.

France deplored Mali’s military government’s working with Russian Wagner mercenaries, who have been accused of committing atrocities in the Central African Republic, Libya, Mali, Syria, and Ukraine.

Mali’s military government denies working with mercenaries and says there are only official Russian military instructors in the country.

Mali has been under military rule since an August 2020 coup that ousted former President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita.

Violence has continued to move south ever since, with ongoing attacks in central Mali and increasing attacks in southern Mali.

Militants on January 2 attacked a civil defense post about 80 kilometers from the capital, killing five people.

In July, militants killed six people in an attack on a checkpoint 70 kilometers from Bamako followed by another attack one week later on Mali’s main military camp, just 15 kilometers from the capital.

Source: Voice of America

2022 Was Among Hottest Years on Record, US Says

Last year was one of the the warmest on record, according to data released Thursday by two U.S. government agencies, and was marked by numerous instances of severe weather around the globe, many of which are exacerbated by global warming.

The Earth’s average global surface temperature was 0.86 degrees Celsius above the 20th century average in 2022, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). This made it the sixth-warmest year on record by NOAA’s reckoning, and the fifth-warmest by NASA’s. (The discrepancy between the two is the result of a measurement difference of a tiny fraction of a degree.)

The high temperatures in 2022 were particularly remarkable because of the presence of a major weather phenomenon over the Pacific Ocean called La Niña, which drove global temperatures down by approximately 0.06 degrees, Gavin A. Schmidt, chief of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, said in a conference call with journalists.

Russell Vose, chief of the analysis and synthesis branch at NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information, said the individual rankings of specific years are less important than the overall trend of a warming planet. Each of the past eight years has been among the eight hottest years on record.

“It’s clear that each of the past four decades has been warmer than the decade that preceded it,” said Vose. “There’s really been a steady rise in temperature since at least the 1960s.”

He added, “It’s certainly warmer now than at any time in at least the past 2,000 years, and probably much longer.”

Regional differences

Differences in global surface temperature were not evenly distributed, with some regions experiencing much higher-than-average temperatures, while others had lower temperatures. While Central Europe experienced significantly higher temperatures than normal, for example, the temperatures of the U.S. Midwest were lower than average. The Northern Hemisphere, for example, was 1.1 degrees Celsius above average last year, while the Southern Hemisphere was up only 0.61 degrees.

Asia experienced its second-hottest year on record, as did Europe. In Africa, though, 2022 was only the tenth-hottest year on record. It was the 12th-hottest year recorded in South America, the 15th-hottest in North America and in the top 20 for Oceania.

Much of the increased heat was focused on the polar regions, which led to significant loss of sea ice. In 2022, average sea ice cover in the Antarctic was near record lows, at 10.5 square kilometers. In the Arctic, sea ice covered 10.6 square kilometers, the 11th-lowest total on record.

In addition, average ocean surface temperatures, which are measured up to a depth of 2,000 meters, were the highest on record. The four highest average global ocean temperatures ever recorded have all occurred in the four years since 2019.

Major weather events

Last year also saw a large number of extreme weather events, including crippling droughts in the western U.S., East Africa and much of Europe, while Pakistan, China and Australia all battled devastating floods.

While major storm systems were not more common than average in 2022, North America suffered a series of extremely damaging hurricanes, while East Asia was battered by several destructive typhoons.

The scientists presenting the NOAA/NASA data declined to blame severe weather events specifically on climate change, but they noted that warmer temperatures create conditions that allow storms to become more damaging than they might otherwise be.

‘Flirting’ with 1.5 degrees Celsius

Countries around the world have reached a number of agreements meant to try to keep average global temperature increases limited to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels (a different, lower baseline than the 20th century average cited above).

Vose said the Earth is already “flirting” with a 1.5-degree increase now, adding that it would not be surprising for a single year in the 2020s to top that number. That would not be the same as reaching a multiyear average increase of 1.5 degrees, though.

Schmidt said the Earth’s average temperature currently stands at between 1.1 and 1.2 degrees above the preindustrial average, and is climbing.

He said the current rate of warming is just over 0.2 degrees Celsius per decade. If that rate remains unchanged, within 20 years, the global average will hit 1.5 degrees.

However, he added, continued increases are not inevitable.

“Future warming is a function of future emissions of carbon dioxide. So, we as a society, collectively, we still have agency,” Schmidt said. “So, what we are going to do in the future is going to determine what happens in the future. And so, if we continue to emit at the rate that we are emitting right now, then we are going to continue to warm, and we would be pretty much rushing past 1.5. If we collectively reduce emissions quite quickly, then we can avoid the higher temperatures.”

Climate activists frustrated

Climate activists saw Thursday’s report as further confirmation of the dire effects of global warming and the insufficiency of past efforts to slow it.

“It’s a lot of what we already know — just more confirmation,” said Cherelle Blazer, senior director of the International Climate and Policy Campaign at the Sierra Club. “We’re already at 1.1 degrees warming. All the world’s scientists say that we need to stick to 1.5 in order to not see the worst of the climate catastrophe happen. And no one seems to be willing to do what’s necessary to achieve that. I find it very disheartening.”

Blazer said she hopes the NOAA/NASA report will spur the new Congress into action, particularly in efforts to fully implement the many carbon-reduction efforts included in the recently passed Inflation Reduction Act, to finance the Green Climate Fund, and to take steps to compensate low-income countries for the disproportionate damage they face from global warming.

“I’m hoping that the Biden administration, our new Senate and our new House — our newly elected officials — are ready to roll up their sleeves and stop playing around with people’s lives,” she said.

Source: Voice of America

2022 confirmed as one of warmest years on record: WMO

The UN weather agency, WMO, said on Thursday that 2022 was the fifth or sixth warmest year on record, adding to deep concerns that the likelihood of breaching the 1.5 degree Celsius limit of the Paris Agreement “is increasing with time”.

In an alert, the agency also explained that 2022 was the eighth consecutive year that global temperatures rose at least 1C above pre-industrial levels, fuelled by ever-rising greenhouse gas concentrations and accumulated heat.

La Niña impact

The cooling effect of the La Niña phenomenon – now in its third year – prevented 2022 from being the warmest ever.

“This cooling impact will be short-lived and will not reverse the long-term warming trend caused by record levels of heat-trapping greenhouse gases in our atmosphere,” the WMO warned, adding that there is a 60 per cent chance that La Niña will continue until March 2023, followed by “ENSO-neutral” conditions (neither El Niño nor La Niña).

Regardless of La Niña, 2022 was still marked by dramatic weather disasters linked to climate change, from catastrophic flooding in Pakistan, deadly heatwaves in China, Europe, North and South America, and relentless drought and misery for millions in the Horn of Africa.

In late December, severe storms also began ripping across large areas of North America, bringing high winds, heavy snow, flooding and low temperatures.

WMO chief: invest in preparedness

These emergencies have “claimed far too many lives and livelihoods and undermined health, food, energy and water security and infrastructure”, said WMO Secretary-General, Professor Petteri Taalas, who called for all nations to step up preparedness for extreme weather events.

“Today only half of 193 (UN) Members have proper early warning services, which leads to much higher economic and human losses,” the WMO chief explained. “There are also big gaps in basic weather observations in Africa and island states, which has a major negative impact on the quality of weather forecasts.”

Data analysis by the UN agency showed that the average global temperature in 2022 was about 1.15C (34.07F) above pre-industrial (1850-1900) levels. This compares with 1.09C (33.96F) from 2011 to 2020 and indicates that long-term warming shows no signs of stopping.

Scientific approach

“Since the 1980s, each decade has been warmer than the previous one. This is expected to continue,” the UN agency said, adding that the warmest eight years have all been since 2015, with 2016, 2019 and 2020 constituting the top three. “An exceptionally strong El Niño event occurred in 2016, which contributed to record global temperatures,” WMO explained.

To reach its findings, the UN agency collated and compared weather datasets from the United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (NASA GISS); the United Kingdom’s Met Office Hadley Centre, and the University of East Anglia’s Climatic Research Unit (HadCRUT); the Berkeley Earth group, the European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasts and its Copernicus Climate Change Service; and the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA).

Millions of meteorological and marine observations were used, including from satellites, said WMO, adding that combining observations with modelled values made it possible to estimate temperatures “at any time and in any place across the globe, even in data-sparse areas such as the polar regions”.

WMO also cautioned against placing too much importance on individual year rankings, as the “differences in temperature between the fourth and eighth warmest year are relatively small”.

Source: United Nations

South Africa President Ramaphosa offers condolences to Senegal

PRETORIA–President Cyril Ramaphosa has conveyed a message of condolence to the government and people of the Republic of Senegal following a bus accident, which resulted in the death of about 40 passengers and injuries to 80 travellers.

The accident is reported to have happened in the early hours of Sunday morning, Jan 8, when two buses collided in Senegal’s central Kaffrine region.

“On behalf of the people of South Africa, the government and myself, I wish to extend our condolences to my dear brother, President Macky Sall, his government, the bereaved families and the people of Senegal for their tragic loss.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with them during this difficult time of mourning their loved ones,” President Ramaphosa said.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

UN report calls for re-thinking social protection as the world ages

With the number of people aged 65 and over projected to more than double by the middle of the century, the rights and well-being of older persons must be prioritized in efforts to achieve a sustainable future, the UN said in a new report launched on Thursday.

The World Social Report 2023 calls for concrete measures to support the greying global population, amidst escalating pension and healthcare costs.

Population ageing is a defining global trend of our time, according to the study, published by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA).

Countries can reap the benefits by giving everyone the chance to grow older in good health by promoting equal opportunities from birth.

“Together, we can address today’s inequalities for the benefit of tomorrow’s generations, managing the challenges and capitalizing on the opportunities that population ageing brings,” said Li Junhua, UN Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs.

Longer lifespans globally

In 2021, 761 million people worldwide were aged 65 and older, which will rise to 1.6 billion by 2050. The number of people aged 80 years or older is growing even faster.

People are living longer thanks to improvements in health and medical therapies, greater access to education and reductions in fertility.

Globally, a child born in 2021 can expect to live, on average, to age 71, with women living longer than men. This is nearly 25 years more than a baby born in 1950.

Northern Africa, Western Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, are on track to experience the fastest growth in the number of older people over the next 30 years. Today, Europe and Northern America combined, have the highest share of this population.

Inequality in ageing

Increased global life expectancy reflects better health overall.

However, the report points to inequalities in our ageing world, because not everyone has benefited equally from the improvements in health and education that are driving this transformation.

While many older people are in excellent health or “economically active”, others live with ailments or in poverty.

In more developed regions, pensions and other public transfer systems, provide over two thirds of the consumption by older persons. Their counterparts in less developed regions tend to work longer and rely more on accumulated assets or family assistance.

Furthermore, an ageing global population also means a rise in the need for long-term care, a weakness exposed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Unfortunately, public spending in most countries has not been sufficient to cover the growing demand.

A lifetime of disadvantage

Life expectancy is strongly influenced by factors such as income, education, gender, ethnicity and place of residence.

“Some combinations of these factors have too often led to systemic disadvantage that begins early in life,” the authors noted.

They warned that without policies to prevent them, these systemic disadvantages reinforce one another throughout peoples’ lives, leading to gaping disparities in old age.

As a result, progress towards achieving the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) could be at risk, expressly SDG 10 on Reducing Inequalities.

Rethink policies, expand opportunities

The report recommends that countries rethink long-held policies and practices associated with livelihoods and work.

Many governments are already introducing opportunities for life-long learning, as well as strengthening and taking full advantage of intergenerational workforces.

They are also introducing flexible retirement ages to accommodate a broad range of personal situations and preferences.

Pension dilemma

Authorities must also rethink social protection systems, including pension provision.

“One major challenge is maintaining the fiscal sustainability of public pension systems while ensuring income security for all older persons, including workers in informal employment,” the authors said.

Other crucial elements involve expanding decent work opportunities for women and other groups traditionally excluded from the formal job market.

The aim is to secure their well-being when older, and to expand the productive capacity of the economy.

The informal care sector’s considerable contribution to the formal economy also should be properly recognized ad factored in, the analysis suggests.

Source: United Nations