Climate change floods disrupt South Africa rights and services

Severe floods in 2026 have affected eight provinces, closing schools and straining healthcare while the government delays key climate regulations.

Floods began in Limpopo, Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal before spreading in May to the Western Cape, North West, Free State, Eastern Cape and Northern Cape. Roads collapsed, homes were washed away, schools closed and healthcare facilities struggled.

The Climate Change Act 22 of 2024 requires needs assessments within one year and adaptation plans for education and health within two years. These steps remain on hold until the Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment issues regulations, despite earlier promises.

In May 2026 South Africa abstained from a United Nations General Assembly resolution on climate obligations. The government has declared flooding a national disaster for the second time this year.

The International Court of Justice issued an advisory opinion in 2025 on state climate duties. Authors from SECTION27 argue that delays leave constitutional rights under Sections 24, 27 and 29 exposed.

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Flooded informal settlement in Western Cape during severe storms with high winds and rain.
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Severe storms hit Western Cape, causing deaths and flooding

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Heavy rains and gale-force winds from two cold fronts battered the Western Cape on Monday, leading to at least one confirmed death, widespread flooding in informal settlements, school closures, and disruptions to power and transport.

Northern Cape Premier Dr Zamani Saul has welcomed the national government's classification of recent severe weather as a national disaster. The move follows heavy rainfall and flooding that killed three people and damaged infrastructure across several districts.

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Floods triggered by storms in South Africa's Western Cape have killed at least 11 people and affected around 150000 residents. Premier Alan Winde reported extensive infrastructure damage and called for humanitarian aid as cleanup begins.

The Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment presented a R625 million proposal on 9 June to transfer management of 60 air quality monitoring stations to the South African Weather Service. The plan aims to address the fact that more than half of the country's 130 stations are not fully operational.

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The Western Cape Government reports that storms last month caused nearly R10 billion in damage across the province. Eleven people died in the floods and one remains missing. Additional funding will be requested from the national government.

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