Coat of Arms imageSA Govt Info image
row imagewww.gov.zawhat's newlinksfaq'ssitemapfeedbackrow image
speeches & statementsdocumentsour leadersabout governmentabout saeventssearch
 
Homepage Homepage
Speeches and statements

>

New on the website


>

State of the Nation address

>

National Budget

>

Parliamentary media briefings (GCIS)

>

Statements on Cabinet meetings

>

Audio files


>

By subject

>

By government leaders

>

By government departments and bodies

>

By category
> Cabinet statements
> Events
> Media advisories
> Parliamentary questions and answers
> Speeches
> Statements
> Transcripts

>

By former leaders


>

Search on speeches and statements


Minister Sexwale joins Climate Change Expedition Team to the Antarctica

26 Jan 2012

Minister of Human Settlements Tokyo Sexwale will from this weekend join a climate change expedition consisting of renowned global scientists, business people, philanthropists, artists and global decision makers and thought leaders to the Antarctica.

The aim of the expedition, dubbed Destination: Reality 2012, is to reveal the full truth about the climate change crisis facing the world and to try remove any doubts that still exist around the seriousness of this issue.

The team is convened by Founder and Chairman of The Climate Reality Project, Nobel Peace Prize winner, an Oscar Award winner for a documentary on climate change and former Vice President of the United States of America, Al Gore.

It consists, among others, of Virgin Group Founder Richard Branson, Executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Christiana Figueres, President of Iceland Ōlafur Ragnar Grīmsson, Chairman of the Turner Foundation Ted Turner.

In a letter to Expedition members, Mr Gore says he was last in the Antarctica in 1988 and was looking forward to learning from the world scientists and a “very select group of extra-ordinary individuals” as they developed and shared new ways to confront and solve the climate change crisis.

“Ashore in Antarctica, we will explore its many natural wonders and observe, first hand, the dramatic impacts of climate change on the continent, and learn about what they mean for the world as a whole,” he writes.

The 116-strong group will depart for the Antarctica from Ushuaia in Chile aboard the National Geographic Explorer on the 29th of January and return on the 5th of February, 2012.

Arts and Culture Minister Paul Mashatile will be acting minister during this period.

Enquiries:
Xolani Xundu at
Tel: 012 421 1339 or
Cell: 083 788 5747

Issued by: Department of Human Settlements
26 Jan 2012


    [ Top ]

    Related links
    >

    Subscribe to mailing lists

    >

    RSS feed

     

    About the site | Terms & conditions | Contact your government
    Developed and maintained by GCIS
    This site is best viewed using 800 x 600 resolution with Internet Explorer 4.5, Netscape Communicator 4.5, Mozilla 1.x or higher.