A national greenhouse gas inventory management system for South Africa

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Date
2017Author
Stevens, Luanne B.
Goodwin, Justin
Salisbury, Emma
Ahlgren, Christofer
Mangwana, Phindile
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
South Africa has committed to reducing its contribution to the global GHG budget. It ratified the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Kyoto Protocol. The UNFCCC stipulates that Non-Annex 1 countries are required to submit
inventory reports every two years as part of their Biennial Update Reports (BURs) or National Communications (NCs). To assist with
this increased reporting a National GHG Inventory Management System (NGHGIS), with new internal procedures and capacities, is
being developed. The NGHGIS has been designed to ensure transparency, consistency, comparability, completeness and accuracy
of the GHG inventory. It ensures the quality of the inventory through planning, preparation and management of inventory activities.
The NGHGIS has been set up in a web-based, collaborative platform that allows for document management, sharing and storage. The
main components of the NGHGIS are the (a) organisational structure; (b) inventory preparation work plan where responsibilities are
assigned; (c) data supplier and stakeholder lists; (d) input datasets (linked to the stakeholder list) providing information on required
data, MOU’s, and data due dates; (e) quality assurance and quality control (QA/QC) objectives, checks, logs and tools; (f) emission
calculation method statements; (g) GHG inventory outputs which include estimation files, a trend viewer and a public website; and
(h) improvement plans. In addition to the web-based system, new institutional arrangements and data flows have been proposed, the
legal landscape has been mapped, draft MOUs for data suppliers have been drawn up and a detailed QA/QC plan has been developed.
The final stage of the NGHGIS is the development of the data collection plan and technical guidelines for the Agriculture, Forestry and
Other Land Use (AFOLU) and Waste sectors. The centralised NGHGIS will reduce the loss of information, improve continuity between
inventories and assist in the timely completion of inventory updates
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/26172http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/2410-972X/2017/v27n2a7
http://www.cleanairjournal.org.za/download/caj_vol27_no2_2017_p44.pdf