Long-Term Planning Efforts: The South African Long-Term Mitigation Scenario Planning Process

Countries
Region
Sub-Saharan Africa
Climate Objective
Mitigation
Planning and Implementation Activity
Developing Strategies and Plans
Analysis and Data Collection
Developing and Implementing Policies and Measures
Long-Term Strategies
Sectors and Themes
Energy
Barriers Overcome
Information
Institutional
Technological
Source
Global Good Practice Analysis (GIZ UNDP), World Resources Institute (WRI)
Language
English
Case Summary

South Africa’s Long-Term Mitigation Scenario (LTMS) is one of the earliest long-term climate mitigation planning processes undertaken in a developing country. This case study describes how the LTMS arose, its objectives, its design and outputs, and how these have informed and interacted with mitigation policy subsequently. It reflects on the LTMS’ contribution to long-term planning for climate mitigation.

South Africa’s LTMS is a good practice because it was an innovative and, at the time, unique policy process, made possible by auspicious timing, champions, and expertise. It prompted to build a middle ground in an environment of trust, enabled significant early achievements for the country’s climate mitigation policy.

Key findings from the case study include:

  • A proactive and well-respected delegation steeped in the long-term perspective of an international policy process creates a “policy window” that enabled the LTMS
  • The LTMS initiators, individuals from academia, civil society, and government, were deeply engaged in the international climate-mitigation policy discussion and its long-term time frames.
  • The forming of LTMS helped generate an evidence base of best available data
  • Climate mitigation was firmly established on the national policy agenda

Further Information

Case study author(s)

Emily Tyler, Low Carbon Policy Specialist & PhD candidate, University of Cape Town, South Africa

Year Published
2018