Keep your Eye on the Storm #ClimateChange

Looks like South Africa’s storm category listing is about to go up. Another major tornado captured on video this weekend. Terrifying weather patterns!

use this one

This tornado like storm captured on cellphone video between Vryheid and Dundee in KZN, is the 2nd of its kind in less than 10 days.

Below, a distant tornado is making its way through farm land used to grow export product. Unfortunately, it had an adverse effect on the crops. On the highveld, farmers have become accustomed to irregular losses and unpredicted setbacks due to the changing weather. A decade ago, scientists were able to predict the weather changes with relative certainty, though there aren’t any foolproof ways to shelter the crops.

Mpumalanga storm

The weather doesn’t always mean mayhem and destruction though, just one day before the Mpumalanga tornado, these storm clouds brought much needed relief farmers in East London.

EL tornado storm 2    east london tornado storm

It’s not all about the wet weather. Cold fronts in the middle of spring, earthquakes in Orkney and even this sand storm from Bloemfontein through to Johannesburg are all part of the recent irregular weather patterns.

JHB sandtorm 2    JHB sandstorm 1

The change has definitely caught the attention of South Africa’s insurance companies. At the beginning of this year, after one helluva hail storm, a majority of them operating in the country met to analyse and find better ways to predict when damage will occur.

Subsequently, insurance companies have started issuing warnings about pending hailstorms, while others have made it a marketing issue, as if getting a payout is privilege.

Weather scientists, reinsurance experts and an international agricultural insurance specialist met with the South African Insurance Association and the Insurance Institute of South Africa, in Sandton “due to recent extreme weather events that have caused massive damage and that had led to insurance claims of more than R1 billion in the past year,” they said in a joint statement.

The association’s chief executive, Barry Scott, says in 2012 and 2013, the industry experienced a dramatic increase in hail insurance claims in motor and property sectors…[Read more]

Who knows, in  a few years, the weather could be the most interesting and important subject in global social discourse.

World Toilet Day – Who Really Gives a Shit?

A make-shift toilet in SA. This picture originally appeared in the City Press newspaper.
A make-shift toilet in SA. This picture originally appeared in the City Press newspaper.

Earlier this year the Mothutlung township in the North West province of South Africa nearly went up in flames over prolonged water cuts. Though short-lived, the protests brought the importance of access to fresh water into sharp focus for communities around the country. The National Development Plan, (Government’s 30 year plan for eradicating poverty and stimulating economic and employment growth) describes the situation as water-stressed and precarious. Our dependence on water from the Lesotho Highlands Project couldn’t have been illustrated more clearly than President Jacob Zuma’s rush intervention to prevent the mountain kingdom from slipping into political turmoil over the past few weeks.

Water is irrefutably linked to sanitation. Another point of outrage during 2014 has been so-called poo-protests. This term was coined by journalists after residents of the Khayelitsha township in Cape Town started dumping their shit (literally) at the International Airport and on the steps of the provincial legislature. The shit they were dumping had not been removed from so called bucket toilets that are in thousands of homes across the country.

Below you will find three maps illustrating South Africa’s sanitation profiles in each province, using the 2011 SA census data.

bucket toilet map

pit toilet ventilation

flush toilet with pipes

So remember, the next time you plonk your ass down for a release, pull the flush lever and last night’s supper disappears into the unknown, spare a thought for the people who don’t have that basic right, who wake up to the foul smells of broken service delivery promises, and who still think that nobody really gives a shit.

WHAT THE UNITED NATIONS SAYS ABOUT TOILETS

*World Toilet Day is a day to take action. It is a day to raise awareness about all people who do not have access to a toilet – despite the human right to water and sanitation.

It is a day to do something about it.

Of the world’s seven billion people, 2.5 billion people do not have improved sanitation. 1 billion people still defecate in the open. Women and girls risk rape and abuse because they have no toilet that offers privacy.

We cannot accept this situation. Sanitation is a global development priority. This is why the United Nations General Assembly in 2013 designated 19 November as World Toilet Day. This day had previously been marked by international and civil society organizations all over the world but was was not formally recognized as an official UN day until 2013. World Toilet Day is coordinated by UN-Water in collaboration with Governments and relevant stakeholders.* – http://www.unwater.org/worldtoiletday