Towards the achievement of environmental standards in the South African sugar industry : the role of GIS.
Date
1999
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
The South African Sugar Industry is a major land user in the South African provinces of
KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga. Although offering substantial economic benefits in
these regions, monocultural sugarcane production has had a fundamental impact on the
natural environment in which sugarcane is produced. Attention was focused on the
growing sector of the industry after flood events during the previous decade resulted in
major soil erosion of sugarcane land. Widespread intentional cane burning is attracting
increasing societal and regulatory pressure. New national environmental legislation in
the spirit of the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development
(UNCED) Agenda 21 and various other international agreements, demand that
industries - including agriculture - demonstrate sustainability in their use of
environmental resources. National law now more rigorously addresses biodiversity and
wetland environmental issues. New water laws will fundamentally alter the existing
water-use paradigm in sugarcane production. These issues are not unique to South
Africa, having much in common with those faced by other major sugar producing
countries. In order to effectively manage the impacts of production processes on the
environment, organisations are turning to internationally accepted environmental
management standards, such as the ISO 14000 series, in order to demonstrate their
environmental responsibility to government and society, whilst promoting their
acceptability to consumers. The SA Sugar Industry is in the early stages of
investigating appropriate environmental management systems.
The natural resources required for - and impacted upon - by sugarcane production are
variable in space and over time. Effective and responsible environmental management
must make optimum use of appropriate technology to effectively utilise the large
volumes of often complex data pertaining to these resources and associated
environmental processes. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) are computer systems
designed for the capture, analysis, storage and display of spatial data and attribute data
related to location. Whilst not a new development, recent advances indicate that GIS
has substantially matured as a decision support technology and as such is being used
successfully by many organisations involved in environmental management, where its
use offers unique benefits at a variety of decision levels and spatial scales. GIS is
applied at many complexity levels, from simple thematic map production to complex
spatial analysis. The major advantage of GIS is considered by some to be its ability to
spatially model environmental scenarios, producing graphic results (usually maps). As
such, GIS has considerable value in formal Decision Support Systems. The major
environmental issues facing South African sugarcane producers are fundamentally
spatial in nature. The development and incorporation of environmental GIS capacity
into their proposed environmental management system is indispensable in addressing
these issues and moving towards achieving and maintaining acceptable environmental
standards in the SA sugar growing sector.
Description
Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1999.
Keywords
Sugarcane industry--South Africa., Sugarcane--Environmental aspects--South Africa., Environmental management--South Africa., Geographic information systems--South Africa., Theses--Crop science.