Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAubrey Dickerson Modified over 9 years ago
2
Division: EIDD SA ENVIRONMENTAL GOODS AND SERVICES FORUM MARBA VISAGIE 22 August 2007
3
Index 2 SA ENVIRONMENTAL GOODS AND SERVICES FORUM EGSAF
4
"There are many positive ways for business to make a difference in the lives of the poor – not through philanthropy but through initiatives that over time will help build new markets" Kofi Annan
5
To supply cleaner technologies, products and services that reduce environmental risk minimise pollution minimise resource use To supply cleaner technologies, products and services for measuring, preventing, limiting, minimising and/or correcting: o environmental damage to water, air and soil; and o problems related to waste, noise and ecosystems (Source: OECD) EGS consists of activities, which produce goods and services…
6
5 Market size Analysts expect the EGS industry to grow to $ US $688 billion by 2010 and just under $800 billion by 2015 (US Department of Commerce, 2000) EGS industry worth €439 billion by 2010 (European Union, 1999) Most of this growth is expected to take place in developing countries and economies in transition, at an annual rate of 8-12 % (Vikhlyaev, 2003)
7
The global EGS industry has almost unlimited potential, which will be driven by the twin demographics … … of the worlds dwindling natural resources and continued population growth (Canadian Council for Human Resources in the Environment Industry (CCHREI) ) EGS GROWTH POTENTIAL
8
Sector groupings with diversification and growth potential: Natural-resource based sectors Medium technology sectors Advanced manufacturing sectors Labour intensive sectors Tradable services sectors NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL POLICY FRAMEWORK (NIPF)
9
Clear presence in the five key NIPF sectoral groupings Essential sustainability role in natural- resource based sectors Labour intensive - all levels of skill Tradable service EGS in NIPF CONTEXT
10
Composition SA EGS Industry (2006) 88% of EGS supply is at lower end of value chain 10% resource management 2% at upper end: Cleaner Production services and Cleaner Technologies Elevate skills and revenue capacity of the EGS value chain
11
EGSA South Africa’s Challenge SA Environmental industry (2000) Employed 100 000 - 500 000 SA Industry + government spent R600m - R2 400m Rated 37th out of 47 countries (competitiveness) SA Environmental industry (2004) Domestic demand for EGS exceeds supply Growing at 10-15% p.a. SA Industry + government spent R14, 5 billion - R23, 2 billion Action Plan: grow skills, jobs, value-intensity Meet domestic demand, export Sources: CSIR study (2000) & NEDLAC study (2006)
12
Join forces with government to 1.Position South Africa as an EGS springboard into Africa 2.Brief trade negotiators on WTO issues eg. Doha (31) and trade agreements 3.Brief policy developers (economic, environmental & social) 4.Operationalise marketing and information dissemination systems, underpinned by an EGS industry database 5.Implement an EGS skills base through education and training and encourage investment in R&D 6.Encourage procurement supplied by EGS SMMEs 7.Further strategic interventions (eg. coordination, local capacity etc.) Proposed elements EGS Action Plan
13
Nominations: Forum Steering Committee to partner with the dti and formulate an EGS Sector Strategy and Action Plan Secretariat: Capacity to follow due process, communicate, set meetings, produce minutes Members: Willingness to attend meetings, meet timelines Capacity to study draft documents and improve Problem solving, innovative thinking, realistic. Team players Nominations: Forum Steering Committee
14
EGSA 13 Thank you for participating Forwarded registration? marba@thedti.gov.za Website: www.enviropaedia.com
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.