WESSA’s origins nearly one hundred years ago were grounded in advocating for dedicated conservation areas such as the Kruger National Park and other parks that now play a critical role in conserving and protecting our natural heritage and rich biodiversity. From the beginning we have tried to use our vision, expertise, experience, and passion to leverage citizens and decision-makers into finding lasting collaborative solutions as to how humans live on the planet. Thus, our motto: people caring for the Earth.

A century later, we find ourselves in a world threatened by climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution in which humans have removed themselves from nature and sought to exploit our natural resources to support consumer lifestyles. The Earth has limits, and we have crossed several of those boundaries already that now have dire impacts on our ecosystem and the Earth our children will inherit.

Educate, Advocate and Act

In the face of these challenges, and in recognition of South Africa’s rich terrestrial and marine resources, WESSA’s strategic focus has centred on three core activities: educate, advocate, and act. In turn we have committed ourselves to and are guided by the principles of sustainable (ecosystem) development; natural justice and a just transition; and collective sustainability. Specifically on the advocacy front we have sought to be both proactive and reactive, and work at both a local and national basis.

All-of-society approach

To this end, our local membership regions and branches have become actively involved in local issues which has ranged from participating in campaigns against oil and gas extraction in the ocean (like the Shell and CGG anti-seismic campaigns), taking up sewage and pollution issues in local rivers and catchments, and inputting into various environmental impact assessments amongst others. We try use our local knowledge, access to membership’s (scientific) expertise, and a collaborative all-of-society approach to leverage positive change.

Strong public stance on issues

At a national level, we have focused on raising our “voice” on environmental matters and taken a stronger public stance on issues. Consequently, we have given detailed input into government policy on aspects such as plastic waste, nuclear energy, and the biodiversity “economy;” and collaborating with other environmental NGO’s and the DFFE on initiatives such as the 30 x 30 commitment (30% of our marine and terrestrial habitats restored and protected by 2030). We are also working to establish a raft of policy positions on various aspects such as mining, energy, sustainable use, water catchments, pollution and the like to create a principled and strategic platform from which to engage on daily issues.
Within the operational side of WESSA, this has also resulted in dedicated resources to support advocacy work, the re-aligning of our blue flag beach oversight to be more advocacy orientated, and the creation of a species project focus on Pangolins. As such, advocacy is joint endeavour of central staff, membership, and the Board’s Environmental Governance Committee (EGC), which gives us an especially useful range of resources and interest.

While our planet and country’s ecosystems are in a critical state, we are blessed with a rich biodiversity in South Africa’s land and seas, and our advocacy work will continue to seek collaborative and sustainable solutions to protecting, building resilience, and being part of the nature upon which we are dependent.