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Cape Town mayor looks to apartheid's legacy to curb climate change

by Sebastien Malo | @SebastienMalo | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Saturday, 15 September 2018 00:11 GMT

Newlands swimming pool sits empty in Cape Town, South Africa February 9, 2018. Picture taken February 9, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings

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"To reduce carbon emissions, you have to deal with the spatial planning of your city"

(Corrects incorrect figures provided by Cape Town's mayor in paragraph seven)

By Sebastien Malo

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 14 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The outgoing mayor of Cape Town, known for averting a near catastrophic water shortage, said she hopes to leave office on the heels of another victory in the fight against climate change - slashing greenhouse emissions from transportation.

Patricia de Lille said South Africa's second-largest city could reduce its greenhouse gas footprint by building homes for low-income residents on land left undeveloped as a legacy from apartheid.

It is a unique solution tied to the country's cruel history.

The parcels of land were used to buffet the white-minority from members of the majority black population who were oppressed and segregated under the system of apartheid, which was imposed by white-governments from 1948 until the early 1990s.

"It's valuable land, close to transport," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation on the sidelines of a climate change summit in San Francisco on Wednesday.

Under her plan, de Lille said, erecting low-cost housing on five city-owned plots will allow people to live closer to their jobs in the city center, thereby cutting car transportation and reducing carbon dioxide emissions.

"We're using those pieces of land that belong to the city to bring about transport-oriented development," she said, adding that transportation accounts for about 30 percent of carbon emissions in Cape Town.

"To reduce carbon emissions, you have to deal with the spatial planning of your city," said de Lille.

Her plan was adopted by Cape Town's government in 2016, but has not yet been put into action.

De Lille, a former anti-apartheid militant who quit as mayor of Cape Town last month after a bitter dispute within her political party, said it "must be implemented."

"If it does not happen, I will be the first person to protest and I will mobilize the masses," she said.

"This is an opportunity for me to drive integration of the city, by bringing people of color closer to the city."

De Lille, whose resignation is effective Oct. 31, has been a mayor of Cape Town since 2011, and has a large support base among her fellow mixed-race residents of the city.

Under her tenure, the port city, a tourist hub with a population of about 4 million, avoided a feared "Day Zero" when its taps would have run dry due to severe drought after three years of low rainfall.

De Lille was speaking at the Global Climate Action Summit, a three day event that has drawn about 4,500 delegates from city and regional governments from around the world. (Reporting by Sebastien Malo @sebastienmalo, Editing by Jared Ferrie

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