- Sasol and the Minerals Council have been lobbying against the implementation of a carbon tax in South Africa for at least a decade.
- Sasol is the country’s biggest air polluter after Eskom. Read more
- But the latest tactic in this campaign implicates a huge swathe of corporate SA in a concerted effort to undermine, delay and impede the implementation of a carbon tax regime that could lead to a meaningful reduction in emissions.
In a statement titled “Organised business joint position on carbon tax”, Business Unity South Africa (BUSA), Business Leadership South Africa (BLSA) and others, have called for, amongst other things: government to consider a higher carbon price only “post 2035”; a delay in annual carbon tax increases until “at least 2030”; and the retention and increase of tax-free allowances for big emitters.
Related news: Multi-representative business bodies in South Africa propose improvements to carbon tax
The members of these business groupings include companies which have made commitments on climate action, and which have taken stands against climate lobbying, which – if genuine – should preclude them from supporting the BUSA position. For example:
- Coronation and Old Mutual are members of the global investor initiative Climate Action 100+(CA100+), which aims “to ensure that the world’s largest corporate greenhouse gas emitters take necessary action on climate change”. CA100+ has a strong position against precisely the anti-climate lobbying that the BUSA statement represents.
- Nedbank in 2021 adopted an energy policy which set a global leadership standard among large commercial banks by avoiding the adoption of the standard “net zero by 2050” target, and instead aiming for zero fossil fuel exposure by 2045.
- The JSE has released Climate Disclosure Guidance which includes recommendations for disclosure of climate-related lobbying activities and membership of all relevant industry associations and groups involved in climate-related lobbying.
Other members of BUSA and BLSA are already experiencing the impacts of climate change, making it hard to understand why they would support a position that delays climate action. For example, Sanlam has recently reported that its financial results have been impacted by increased climate change-related claims affecting its short-term insurance business.
Related news: Sasol pumps out more carbon emissions each year than Portugal
Here are four reasons why the demands set out in the “joint position”, if acceded to, risk South Africa’s ability to meet its obligations under the Paris Agreement, and ensure a just transition to a low-carbon and climate-resilient economy and society:
- South Africa’s carbon tax – including the current proposed amendments thereto – is already too low to be effective: ignoring the significant tax-free allowances (ranging from 60-95%), the current carbon tax amounts to US$9 per tonne of carbon dioxide (tCO₂). If the maximum tax-free allowances are taken into account, the effective rate is US$0.45. The proposed amendments to the Carbon Tax Act envisage a tax rate of US$30 per tCO₂, before allowances, by 2030. This is still significantly lower than the rate of between $50 and $100/tCO2e recommended by most global benchmarking, to align with Paris Agreement goals.
- Carbon tax is an essential tool to reduce emissions and combat climate change: the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) confirms that, unless there are immediate, rapid, and large-scale reductions in greenhouse gases (GHGs), it will be impossible to limit warming to safe levels. Global emissions must be reduced by 45% (from 2010 levels) in just over seven years (by 2030) to keep warming to within 1.5°C of pre-industrial levels.
At this stage, the only envisaged legal mechanism to compel GHG emission reductions is the carbon tax. An effective carbon tax rate is the best method for incentivising practices and strategies that accelerate decarbonisation, and therefore a pivotal component of South Africa’s just transition to a low-carbon economy.
It is not controversial that taxing carbon emissions is a powerful tool to change behaviour – and redirect capital – by altering economic incentives. If carbon were priced to reflect the actual costs of emissions to society, this would be transformative in limiting the worst impacts of the climate crisis.
- Fossil fuel companies have had sufficient time to prepare: following about a decade of intense opposition and lobbying by fossil fuel companies and industry associations, a carbon tax was introduced in South Africa in 2019. In order to give companies time to prepare, it was introduced in stages: the first phase was to run from 1 June 2019 until the end of 2022, and the second, from 1 January 2023 to 2030. Phase 1 included tax-free emission allowances of between 60-95%.
In February 2022, Finance Minister Godongwana announced that this first phase would be extended for another three years until 2026. The reason provided for this extension was “to ensure an orderly just transition and assist with the economic recovery due to the COVID-19 pandemic … ligning the carbon tax rate adjustments for the period 2023 to 2025 with the extension of the first phase is an important price signal to companies to continue to transition their activities towards low carbon cleaner business practices and to take early action”.
Even in the face of this significant concession from government, organised business has doubled down on its opposition to any increases in the tax rate.
- Delaying cuts now means that the majority of people in South Africa will suffer more later: claiming that the carbon tax will have dire socio-economic consequences ignores the very real socio-economic risks associated with delaying the transition, as well as the current and future impacts of failing to mitigate climate change.
Both the deadly KZN floods of April 2022 and the “Day Zero” drought in the Western Cape have been scientifically linked to climate change, with the costs of these disasters being borne by at-risk communities and individuals, rather than by the emitters who caused the problem in the first place.South Africa is one of the most carbon-intensive economies in the world, which poses a serious threat to our economic competitiveness.
Fossil fuel interests maintain that they have the interests of the broader economy at heart when resisting the carbon tax, but they are in fact acting in their own short-term interests while placing the rest of the economy at increasing risk of the trade consequences of failing to decarbonise.
CALL TO ACTION
- We call on the members of the industry associations named in the “organised business joint position on carbon tax” to publicly distance themselves from the position to demonstrate the legitimacy and credibility of their climate commitments.
- We call on government to stand firm on its proposed amendments to the Carbon Tax Act. Failing to take more significant steps to reduce emissions in the short and medium term, will require steeper and deeper emission reduction cuts in future, with more severe consequences for our economy and the majority of people in South Africa.
“Over the last ten years, a worrying pattern has emerged: a persistent and well-resourced fossil fuel lobby has paid lip service to South Africa’s climate goals while simultaneously working hard to delay and weaken the country’s carbon taxes. This is done in the interests of securing short-term profits for corporates, but will have devastating long-term consequences for ordinary people who are already bearing the brunt of the climate impacts caused by these companies,” says Brandon Abdinor, Climate Advocacy Lawyer at the Centre for Environmental Rights
Author: Bryan Groenendaal
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