I stumbled on a BBC documentary called "South Africa: On the edge of darkness" (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ofwx-kyxHq4) a week or so ago.
It was a hard look at the South African energy and climate situation where coal provides 85% of the electricity while the customers endure frequent load shedding (power failures, brownouts, blackouts) and rooftop solar is taking off* as the country attempts to meet its climate pledges, against vehement and entrenched opposition. The stakes are so high that André De Ruyter, the anti-corruption CEO who took over ESKOM, the South African utility, in 2019, was poisoned the day after he announced his resignation in December 2022.
* South Africa rooftop solar installations increased from 1MW to 4.4MW in 14 months
as the unreliability of the energy sector seems to be driving a transition to independent power.
After that program, BBC showed "Life at 50ºC" which is about how people around the world, particularly in the developing world, those who are feeling the brunt of the damage, are reacting to the changes in the weather, the climate, their daily lives
What impressed me about the stories presented is the resourcefulness and determination of the people. It is life and death and living so they realize that so clearly the purity of their purpose shows through, no matter what they do, what difficult decisions they have to make.
This is their weather and climate and lifetime and I thank BBC for presenting the stories of these remarkable people and showing us a little of their immediate reality.