South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeadsBy Sheree BegaThe ‘invisible ocean killers’ accumulate in food chains and threaten public health, says the environment department
Plastic pollution a global health emergency, says Lancet reportA new study links plastic pollution to disease, deaths and $1.5 trillion in annual health costs By Sheree BegaPeople who own the sunThere is no official registry of socially owned renewable energy projects in South Africa, but research has identified more than 20 operating initiatives across the country By Lindiwe Pakati and Thabo MolelekwaUCT study finds exotic plants fuel Cape Town wildfiresThe popular Canary Island date palm and pine trees are a significant fire hazard By Sheree BegaPartner ContentThe art of giving: How South Africans are keeping their causes aliveBy Standard Bank SA’s draft second climate plan calls for urgent action, global supportBy Sheree BegaHeatwaves, floods, droughts: Why the plan needs your voice Water mafias: It’s like working in a war zone, say municipal workersBy Sheree BegaCriminal syndicates destroy and manipulate water infrastructure for profit, undermining the state’s efforts to ensure water for all Invoke terrorism laws to deal with water mafias, says Human Rights CommissionBy Sheree BegaThe commission also said the sabotage of water services infrastructure should be considered a crime in terms of the Criminal Matters Amendment Act Countries are legally liable for climate inaction, International Court of Justice rulesBy Sheree BegaClimate change is an existential problem of “planetary proportions” that affects all forms of life and the very health of the planet, according to a recent landmark ruling of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the obligations of states. In its unanimous advisory opinion the ICJ, the principal judicial organ of the United Nations, […] Traces of ARVs in drinking water ‘harmless’ but can affect health over timeBy Sheree BegaPharmaceutical contaminants in water are a growing risk, warns the Water Research Commission Plant poachers get slapped with jail sentences of 15 years eachBy Sheree BegaThe rare plants which occur in the Northern and Western Cape, have an estimated street value of R6 million to R30 million A fifth of world’s wetlands may vanish by 2050, scientists warnBy Sheree BegaThe destruction of wetlands affects water availability, biodiversity, climate stability and the wellbeing of all life, including people’s livelihoods People back climate policy when weather events feel personal, new study findsBy Sheree BegaPeople in South America are most likely to say that climate change is behind extreme weather, while people in Africa and North America are less likely to agree Africa’s freshwater fish crisis: 26% of species threatened with extinctionBy Sheree BegaFreshwater fish are an ‘aquatic version of the canary in the coalmine’ for Africa’s rivers, lakes and wetlands, a new report notes Climate crisis puts older adults at high risk from extreme heat, Unep warnsBy Sheree Bega‘Zombie’ microbes may reawaken as Earth’s ice melts, a study has found Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
People who own the sunThere is no official registry of socially owned renewable energy projects in South Africa, but research has identified more than 20 operating initiatives across the country By Lindiwe Pakati and Thabo MolelekwaUCT study finds exotic plants fuel Cape Town wildfiresThe popular Canary Island date palm and pine trees are a significant fire hazard By Sheree BegaPartner ContentThe art of giving: How South Africans are keeping their causes aliveBy Standard Bank SA’s draft second climate plan calls for urgent action, global supportBy Sheree BegaHeatwaves, floods, droughts: Why the plan needs your voice Water mafias: It’s like working in a war zone, say municipal workersBy Sheree BegaCriminal syndicates destroy and manipulate water infrastructure for profit, undermining the state’s efforts to ensure water for all Invoke terrorism laws to deal with water mafias, says Human Rights CommissionBy Sheree BegaThe commission also said the sabotage of water services infrastructure should be considered a crime in terms of the Criminal Matters Amendment Act Countries are legally liable for climate inaction, International Court of Justice rulesBy Sheree BegaClimate change is an existential problem of “planetary proportions” that affects all forms of life and the very health of the planet, according to a recent landmark ruling of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the obligations of states. In its unanimous advisory opinion the ICJ, the principal judicial organ of the United Nations, […] Traces of ARVs in drinking water ‘harmless’ but can affect health over timeBy Sheree BegaPharmaceutical contaminants in water are a growing risk, warns the Water Research Commission Plant poachers get slapped with jail sentences of 15 years eachBy Sheree BegaThe rare plants which occur in the Northern and Western Cape, have an estimated street value of R6 million to R30 million A fifth of world’s wetlands may vanish by 2050, scientists warnBy Sheree BegaThe destruction of wetlands affects water availability, biodiversity, climate stability and the wellbeing of all life, including people’s livelihoods People back climate policy when weather events feel personal, new study findsBy Sheree BegaPeople in South America are most likely to say that climate change is behind extreme weather, while people in Africa and North America are less likely to agree Africa’s freshwater fish crisis: 26% of species threatened with extinctionBy Sheree BegaFreshwater fish are an ‘aquatic version of the canary in the coalmine’ for Africa’s rivers, lakes and wetlands, a new report notes Climate crisis puts older adults at high risk from extreme heat, Unep warnsBy Sheree Bega‘Zombie’ microbes may reawaken as Earth’s ice melts, a study has found Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
UCT study finds exotic plants fuel Cape Town wildfiresThe popular Canary Island date palm and pine trees are a significant fire hazard By Sheree BegaPartner ContentThe art of giving: How South Africans are keeping their causes aliveBy Standard Bank
SA’s draft second climate plan calls for urgent action, global supportBy Sheree BegaHeatwaves, floods, droughts: Why the plan needs your voice Water mafias: It’s like working in a war zone, say municipal workersBy Sheree BegaCriminal syndicates destroy and manipulate water infrastructure for profit, undermining the state’s efforts to ensure water for all Invoke terrorism laws to deal with water mafias, says Human Rights CommissionBy Sheree BegaThe commission also said the sabotage of water services infrastructure should be considered a crime in terms of the Criminal Matters Amendment Act Countries are legally liable for climate inaction, International Court of Justice rulesBy Sheree BegaClimate change is an existential problem of “planetary proportions” that affects all forms of life and the very health of the planet, according to a recent landmark ruling of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the obligations of states. In its unanimous advisory opinion the ICJ, the principal judicial organ of the United Nations, […] Traces of ARVs in drinking water ‘harmless’ but can affect health over timeBy Sheree BegaPharmaceutical contaminants in water are a growing risk, warns the Water Research Commission Plant poachers get slapped with jail sentences of 15 years eachBy Sheree BegaThe rare plants which occur in the Northern and Western Cape, have an estimated street value of R6 million to R30 million A fifth of world’s wetlands may vanish by 2050, scientists warnBy Sheree BegaThe destruction of wetlands affects water availability, biodiversity, climate stability and the wellbeing of all life, including people’s livelihoods People back climate policy when weather events feel personal, new study findsBy Sheree BegaPeople in South America are most likely to say that climate change is behind extreme weather, while people in Africa and North America are less likely to agree Africa’s freshwater fish crisis: 26% of species threatened with extinctionBy Sheree BegaFreshwater fish are an ‘aquatic version of the canary in the coalmine’ for Africa’s rivers, lakes and wetlands, a new report notes Climate crisis puts older adults at high risk from extreme heat, Unep warnsBy Sheree Bega‘Zombie’ microbes may reawaken as Earth’s ice melts, a study has found Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Water mafias: It’s like working in a war zone, say municipal workersBy Sheree BegaCriminal syndicates destroy and manipulate water infrastructure for profit, undermining the state’s efforts to ensure water for all Invoke terrorism laws to deal with water mafias, says Human Rights CommissionBy Sheree BegaThe commission also said the sabotage of water services infrastructure should be considered a crime in terms of the Criminal Matters Amendment Act Countries are legally liable for climate inaction, International Court of Justice rulesBy Sheree BegaClimate change is an existential problem of “planetary proportions” that affects all forms of life and the very health of the planet, according to a recent landmark ruling of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the obligations of states. In its unanimous advisory opinion the ICJ, the principal judicial organ of the United Nations, […] Traces of ARVs in drinking water ‘harmless’ but can affect health over timeBy Sheree BegaPharmaceutical contaminants in water are a growing risk, warns the Water Research Commission Plant poachers get slapped with jail sentences of 15 years eachBy Sheree BegaThe rare plants which occur in the Northern and Western Cape, have an estimated street value of R6 million to R30 million A fifth of world’s wetlands may vanish by 2050, scientists warnBy Sheree BegaThe destruction of wetlands affects water availability, biodiversity, climate stability and the wellbeing of all life, including people’s livelihoods People back climate policy when weather events feel personal, new study findsBy Sheree BegaPeople in South America are most likely to say that climate change is behind extreme weather, while people in Africa and North America are less likely to agree Africa’s freshwater fish crisis: 26% of species threatened with extinctionBy Sheree BegaFreshwater fish are an ‘aquatic version of the canary in the coalmine’ for Africa’s rivers, lakes and wetlands, a new report notes Climate crisis puts older adults at high risk from extreme heat, Unep warnsBy Sheree Bega‘Zombie’ microbes may reawaken as Earth’s ice melts, a study has found Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Invoke terrorism laws to deal with water mafias, says Human Rights CommissionBy Sheree BegaThe commission also said the sabotage of water services infrastructure should be considered a crime in terms of the Criminal Matters Amendment Act Countries are legally liable for climate inaction, International Court of Justice rulesBy Sheree BegaClimate change is an existential problem of “planetary proportions” that affects all forms of life and the very health of the planet, according to a recent landmark ruling of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the obligations of states. In its unanimous advisory opinion the ICJ, the principal judicial organ of the United Nations, […] Traces of ARVs in drinking water ‘harmless’ but can affect health over timeBy Sheree BegaPharmaceutical contaminants in water are a growing risk, warns the Water Research Commission Plant poachers get slapped with jail sentences of 15 years eachBy Sheree BegaThe rare plants which occur in the Northern and Western Cape, have an estimated street value of R6 million to R30 million A fifth of world’s wetlands may vanish by 2050, scientists warnBy Sheree BegaThe destruction of wetlands affects water availability, biodiversity, climate stability and the wellbeing of all life, including people’s livelihoods People back climate policy when weather events feel personal, new study findsBy Sheree BegaPeople in South America are most likely to say that climate change is behind extreme weather, while people in Africa and North America are less likely to agree Africa’s freshwater fish crisis: 26% of species threatened with extinctionBy Sheree BegaFreshwater fish are an ‘aquatic version of the canary in the coalmine’ for Africa’s rivers, lakes and wetlands, a new report notes Climate crisis puts older adults at high risk from extreme heat, Unep warnsBy Sheree Bega‘Zombie’ microbes may reawaken as Earth’s ice melts, a study has found Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Countries are legally liable for climate inaction, International Court of Justice rulesBy Sheree BegaClimate change is an existential problem of “planetary proportions” that affects all forms of life and the very health of the planet, according to a recent landmark ruling of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the obligations of states. In its unanimous advisory opinion the ICJ, the principal judicial organ of the United Nations, […] Traces of ARVs in drinking water ‘harmless’ but can affect health over timeBy Sheree BegaPharmaceutical contaminants in water are a growing risk, warns the Water Research Commission Plant poachers get slapped with jail sentences of 15 years eachBy Sheree BegaThe rare plants which occur in the Northern and Western Cape, have an estimated street value of R6 million to R30 million A fifth of world’s wetlands may vanish by 2050, scientists warnBy Sheree BegaThe destruction of wetlands affects water availability, biodiversity, climate stability and the wellbeing of all life, including people’s livelihoods People back climate policy when weather events feel personal, new study findsBy Sheree BegaPeople in South America are most likely to say that climate change is behind extreme weather, while people in Africa and North America are less likely to agree Africa’s freshwater fish crisis: 26% of species threatened with extinctionBy Sheree BegaFreshwater fish are an ‘aquatic version of the canary in the coalmine’ for Africa’s rivers, lakes and wetlands, a new report notes Climate crisis puts older adults at high risk from extreme heat, Unep warnsBy Sheree Bega‘Zombie’ microbes may reawaken as Earth’s ice melts, a study has found Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Traces of ARVs in drinking water ‘harmless’ but can affect health over timeBy Sheree BegaPharmaceutical contaminants in water are a growing risk, warns the Water Research Commission Plant poachers get slapped with jail sentences of 15 years eachBy Sheree BegaThe rare plants which occur in the Northern and Western Cape, have an estimated street value of R6 million to R30 million A fifth of world’s wetlands may vanish by 2050, scientists warnBy Sheree BegaThe destruction of wetlands affects water availability, biodiversity, climate stability and the wellbeing of all life, including people’s livelihoods People back climate policy when weather events feel personal, new study findsBy Sheree BegaPeople in South America are most likely to say that climate change is behind extreme weather, while people in Africa and North America are less likely to agree Africa’s freshwater fish crisis: 26% of species threatened with extinctionBy Sheree BegaFreshwater fish are an ‘aquatic version of the canary in the coalmine’ for Africa’s rivers, lakes and wetlands, a new report notes Climate crisis puts older adults at high risk from extreme heat, Unep warnsBy Sheree Bega‘Zombie’ microbes may reawaken as Earth’s ice melts, a study has found Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Plant poachers get slapped with jail sentences of 15 years eachBy Sheree BegaThe rare plants which occur in the Northern and Western Cape, have an estimated street value of R6 million to R30 million A fifth of world’s wetlands may vanish by 2050, scientists warnBy Sheree BegaThe destruction of wetlands affects water availability, biodiversity, climate stability and the wellbeing of all life, including people’s livelihoods People back climate policy when weather events feel personal, new study findsBy Sheree BegaPeople in South America are most likely to say that climate change is behind extreme weather, while people in Africa and North America are less likely to agree Africa’s freshwater fish crisis: 26% of species threatened with extinctionBy Sheree BegaFreshwater fish are an ‘aquatic version of the canary in the coalmine’ for Africa’s rivers, lakes and wetlands, a new report notes Climate crisis puts older adults at high risk from extreme heat, Unep warnsBy Sheree Bega‘Zombie’ microbes may reawaken as Earth’s ice melts, a study has found Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
A fifth of world’s wetlands may vanish by 2050, scientists warnBy Sheree BegaThe destruction of wetlands affects water availability, biodiversity, climate stability and the wellbeing of all life, including people’s livelihoods People back climate policy when weather events feel personal, new study findsBy Sheree BegaPeople in South America are most likely to say that climate change is behind extreme weather, while people in Africa and North America are less likely to agree Africa’s freshwater fish crisis: 26% of species threatened with extinctionBy Sheree BegaFreshwater fish are an ‘aquatic version of the canary in the coalmine’ for Africa’s rivers, lakes and wetlands, a new report notes Climate crisis puts older adults at high risk from extreme heat, Unep warnsBy Sheree Bega‘Zombie’ microbes may reawaken as Earth’s ice melts, a study has found Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
People back climate policy when weather events feel personal, new study findsBy Sheree BegaPeople in South America are most likely to say that climate change is behind extreme weather, while people in Africa and North America are less likely to agree Africa’s freshwater fish crisis: 26% of species threatened with extinctionBy Sheree BegaFreshwater fish are an ‘aquatic version of the canary in the coalmine’ for Africa’s rivers, lakes and wetlands, a new report notes Climate crisis puts older adults at high risk from extreme heat, Unep warnsBy Sheree Bega‘Zombie’ microbes may reawaken as Earth’s ice melts, a study has found Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Africa’s freshwater fish crisis: 26% of species threatened with extinctionBy Sheree BegaFreshwater fish are an ‘aquatic version of the canary in the coalmine’ for Africa’s rivers, lakes and wetlands, a new report notes Climate crisis puts older adults at high risk from extreme heat, Unep warnsBy Sheree Bega‘Zombie’ microbes may reawaken as Earth’s ice melts, a study has found Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Climate crisis puts older adults at high risk from extreme heat, Unep warnsBy Sheree Bega‘Zombie’ microbes may reawaken as Earth’s ice melts, a study has found Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Antiretroviral drugs in South Africa’s rivers raise environmental concernsBy Sheree BegaA new study has found that lopinavir and efavirenz are the top pollutants in water bodies, many associated with waste water treatment plants University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More Latest News The Proteas’ legendary fire reignited The politics of the belly: Why poverty fuels, not suppresses, political engagement G20 business leaders call for lower borrowing costs for Africa South Africa proposes ban on polluting plastic microbeads Dada Morero in trouble with treasury, coalition partners over Johannesburg finances MBDA celebrates women who shape city’s future The blood of South Africa’s past demands we condemn genocide in Gaza In a therapy session with my African father Digital islands: Woke ideology, masked as progressive, is a power grab Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
University of KwaZulu-Natal aims to run on mini solar power stationsBy Lyse CominsThe university’s ambition to become South Africa’s first predominantly renewable-powered university is taking shape through a new high tech project Load More