SA Speaker Didiza urges unified climate actionat SADC PF 58th Plenary Assembly

5 December 2025

The Speaker of the National Assembly of South Africa, Hon. Thoko Didiza.

By Moses Magadza in Durban, South Africa

The Speaker of the National Assembly of South Africa, Hon. Thoko Didiza, has urged Southern African parliaments to act collaboratively and urgently to confront the mounting climate crisis, warning that women and youth in the region are already paying the highest price for inaction.

Addressing the media at the opening of the 58th Plenary Assembly of the SADC Parliamentary Forum (SADC PF) in Durban, Hon. Didiza said the region could no longer afford rhetorical commitments while communities across Southern Africa continue to lose their homes, livelihoods and dignity.

“Our hearts and prayers are with the people of New Hanover, whose houses and infrastructure were washed away by floods just five days ago,” she said.

She noted that earlier this year, over 21,000 people in KwaZulu-Natal, Eastern Cape and Northern Cape were affected by floods, heatwaves and climate-related shocks.

“These examples point to the urgent need for collective actions to avert further effects of climate change,” she stressed.

She described climate change as “fundamentally a crisis of inequality,” and stressed that its impacts disproportionately fall on women and young people.

“Our women and our youth bear the heaviest brunt,” she said. Women, who are central to food security and rural household economies, face “compounded vulnerabilities” as prolonged droughts and flash floods destroy livelihoods and make water collection increasingly dangerous.

Climate change, she noted, “exacerbates existing gender inequalities, limiting access to education, increasing poverty, and threatening the safety of women and children.”

She added that young people were inheriting “a dangerously compromised world,” facing declining agricultural productivity and limited opportunities. Yet, she described them as powerful agents of change, armed with innovation and digital literacy.

The Speaker said the recently concluded COP30 in Brazil did not achieve consensus on a roadmap for a fossil fuel transition or on climate finance for developing countries. However, it produced outcomes that “revived the call to work together.”

Another important milestone, she noted, was the “creation of a just transition mechanism,” long championed by South Africa.

“A just transition means giving developing countries the support they need to grow their economies in a cleaner, resilient, efficient and sustainable manner,” she said.

Hon. Didiza stressed that parliaments are decisive actors in the climate response.

On mitigation, she called for laws that incentivise renewable energy, policies mandating sustainable land and water management, and national Climate Change Acts that set clear targets and accountability mechanisms.

On adaptation, she urged gender-responsive and youth-sensitive budgeting, stricter oversight of adaptation funds and national resilience plans and ensuring projects reach the most vulnerable communities.

“The true measure of our commitment lies in how we allocate our resources,” she said.

Hon. Didiza stressed that the climate crisis transcends national borders and demands regional solidarity.

“A drought in one member state impacts food security across the region,” she warned. She called on SADC PF to strengthen its framework for climate governance, harmonise legislation, coordinate approaches to transboundary water management, and accelerate ratification of regional climate protocols.

“Let us commit to moving from rhetoric to tangible results. Let us rise to meet the urgency of this moment,” she said.

She reaffirmed South Africa’s dedication to regional cooperation and a just transition that “leaves no woman, no young person, and no vulnerable person behind.”

SADC PF Secretary General Her Excellency Boemo Sekgoma. Photos: SADC PF, Parliament of South Africa

Speaking at the same occasion, SADC PF Secretary General Her Excellency Boemo Sekgoma said the Forum is strengthening regional collaboration by working closely with national parliaments, governments and development partners to ensure coordinated responses to the worsening impacts of climate change, particularly on women and youth.

She explained that SADC PF, with the support of Sweden under the SRHR, HIV and AIDS Governance Project, focuses on aligning regional policy positions with national realities and advocating for shared resources, noting that no single country can tackle the crisis alone.

She cited Zimbabwe as an example where Parliament has begun developing a Climate Change Bill to ensure that legislation reflects global commitments, such as the Paris Agreement, while responding to the practical needs of communities whose lives and infrastructure are frequently disrupted by extreme weather.

-Moses Magadza is the Media and Communications Manager at the SADC Parliamentary Forum.

Last Posts

ORANIA: A nation within a nation

By Fortune Madondo Whilst black-on-black violence is on the rise in South Africa (SA) due to xenophobic and afrophobic tendencies, there exists an unusual place in SA today. A place where history, Identity, and politics…

5 December 2025

United States Ambassador to Botswana, H.E. Ambassador H.A. Van Vranken

Botswana Universities Launch Collaborative Ideas Lab to Drive Innovation

Gaborone, June 16, 2026 – Botswana’s higher education sector will today mark a major milestone with the launch of the Ideas Test Lab, a collaborative incubation programme designed to foster innovation, entrepreneurship, and problem-solving among…

5 December 2025

Members of “March and March” and “Operation Dudula” chant anti-migrant slogans during a protest march in Durban, South Africa, in May 2026. (Rajesh Jantilal/AFP via Getty Images)

South Africa’s inequality fuels xenophobia amid global capital pressures

By Fortune Madondo South Africa’s role as the continent’s financial anchor has come under sharp scrutiny, with analysts warning that entrenched global capital interests and unresolved apartheid legacies are driving deep socio-economic divides and fueling…

5 December 2025

SADC Executive Secretary H.E. Elias Magosi

SADC Executive Secretary Elias Magosi joins African Union preparatory talks ahead of mid-year Coordination Meeting

Gaborone, June 9, 2026 – The Southern African Development Community (SADC) Executive Secretary, H.E. Elias M. Magosi, has joined continental leaders in preparatory talks for the 8th African Union (AU) Mid-Year Coordination Meeting, set to…

5 December 2025

Cuba, the GAE and the United States: Anatomy of a State Slander

The GAE is not an opaque structure, nor parallel to the Cuban State; it has been, on the contrary, an articulated response of proven efficiency to the economic siege that has historically tried to suffocate…

5 December 2025

EU Ambassador to Botswana and SADC, Petra Pereyra had a good meeting with Honourable Minister of Minerals and Energy, Bogolo Kenewendo. They briefly discussed the implementation of the EU-funded ASPIRE (Accelerating Sustainable and Productive Investment in Renewable Energy and Efficiency) programme

EU’s ASPIRE programme: Can Botswana break free from coal dependency?

Gaborone, Botswana – The European Union has unveiled a €5.3 million initiative aimed at accelerating Botswana’s shift towards renewable energy and efficiency. Known as the Accelerating Sustainable and Productive Investment in Renewable Energy & Efficiency…

5 December 2025

Related Stories