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10/21/11. . Presentation Overview. The early days 1994 to 2005The first national climate change conference, October 2005Building the science-policy interface 2005 to 2008 the LTMS case studyCabinet's 2008 policy directionsThe national climate change response policy conference, March 2009The p
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5. 10/21/11 In 2005, with the 3rd IPCC Assessment Report, it also became clear that South Africa, along with other more advanced developing countries (e.g. China, India, Brazil, Mexico, South Korea and Saudi Arabia), would have to start seriously considering its responsibility for climate change and, that, as a fossil-fuel-powered nation, this would have important policy implications.By June 2005 the departments of environment and science and technology starting organising a unique climate change conference consisting of two components – The 1st, starting on a Monday, was a Climate Change Science conference involving the top South African and African scientists;The 2nd, starting one day later, was a Climate Change Policy conference with its programme aligned with, and informed by, the Climate Change Science conference;At the time, this concept was regarded as revolutionary and a real initiation of pragmatic science-policy dialogue
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