Moses Magadza
The SADC Parliamentary Forum (SADC PF), in collaboration with its partners, convened a regional workshop under the theme ‘Fostering Sustainable Futures: Integrating Climate Resilience in Southern Africa’.
At least 50 delegates attended the two-day workshop last week. The SADC PF organised the workshop in partnership with the International Conservation Caucus Foundation (ICCF) and the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung (KAS).
Rachel Mundilo, the programme manager for the SADC PF’s Standing Committee on Food, Agriculture and Natural Resources (FANR), said the workshop aligns with strategic Goal 4 of the new SADC PF Strategic Plan (2024-2028), which seeks to successfully implement parliamentary initiatives that contribute to addressing climate change.
The goal is aligned with strengthening legislative frameworks that promote climate change action, which also mainstreams gender and key populations, enhances capacity-building programmes on climate justice and governance to raise awareness among MPs, and promotes renewable energy investments and sustainable land and water management.
The workshop took place at a time when SADC countries are facing increasing vulnerability to climate change, making prioritising holistic and climate-resilient pathways paramount, rooted in equitable and sustainable use of natural resources.
A statement by the organisers noted that although the SADC region is endowed with abundant natural resources, it bears the brunt of climate emergencies, making it imperative that everyone, including parliamentarians, participates in shaping appropriate responses.
The workshop aimed at strengthening parliamentary action by supporting capacity development to promote climate resilience and ecosystem conservation.
It also sought to ensure that benefits derived from the exploitation of natural resources in the region benefit everyone, including the most vulnerable, especially women and children, and that those benefits contribute to resilient responses to climate change.
Expectations are that the workshop will provide a platform for parliamentarians from across the SADC region to engage with subject-matter experts on a range of issues. These issues include the state of climate change response since the first report of the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and nearly a decade after the first Conference of the Parties (COP).
Other issues on the agenda were innovative policy approaches and legislative frameworks that promote climate resilience and ecosystem conservation.
The importance of community engagement and sustainable development, the environmental impact of extractive industries, focusing on critical minerals and raw materials as well as the role of parliaments in conducting oversight and guarding against potential risks were also discussed.
The meeting targeted members of parliament from the SADC region and other lawmakers from the various national conservation caucuses: members of Angola’s ‘Big Ten’ Forum, the Botswana Conservation Parliamentary Caucus (BOCOPAC), the Mozambican Parliamentary Forum on Conservation (MPFC), the Namibia Conservation Parliamentary Caucus (NACOPAC), the Zambia Parliamentary Caucus on Environment and Climate Change (ZPCECC), the Zimbabwe Parliamentary Conservation Caucus (ZimPCC) as well as the SADC Parliamentary Forum.
Various experts on the topics to be discussed lead the various planned sessions, providing technical expertise and presenting the expected role of parliamentarians in advancing the climate resilience agenda.
Heather Sibungo, Namibia’s deputy minister of Environment, Forestry and Tourism; Jill Barasa, Africa Programme director for the ICCF group; Anja Berretta, head of Regional Programme Energy Security and Climate Change in Sub-Saharan Africa with KAS, and Thorsten Hutter, the German Ambassador to Namibia, were among those scheduled to speak during the workshop.
The Speaker of the Parliament of Zimbabwe, Advocate Jacob Francis Nzwidamilimo Mudenda, was expected to deliver the keynote address.