There was a name change in one of the Department's programmes from "Sector Services, Coordination and Information Management and International Relations Programme" to the "Environmental Sector Programmes and Projects" due to the transfer of Working for Water and Working on Fire programmes from the Department of Water Affairs to the Department of Environmental Affairs in the 2011/12 financial year. Notwithstanding this, the focus on spending over the medium term will be on improving service delivery and job creation in the environmental sector, with the bulk of the budget to be spent on job creation projects within the EPWP housed within the Environmental Sector Programmes. This sector targets job creation, while undertaking environmentally friendly projects. The focus of this programme is on the number of full-time equivalent jobs created per financial year. In fact, the Department increased the number of full time equivalent jobs created through EPWP projects from 16 318 in the 2008/09 financial year to 26 881 in 2011/12 and expects to increase this number considerably in the current financial year, aiming to reach about 36 500 in 2014/15. This is expected to increase the number of filled posts in the Department beyond the current 1 246 positions in order to ensure adequate capacity in the management of the Department as well as adequate management and oversight for the implementation of EPWP projects. The Department's emphasis on job creation links well to Government priorities, long-term infrastructural and other capital plans that initially surfaced in the 2011 State of the Nation Address, but became more pronounced in the most recent 2012 State of the Nation Address by President Jacob Zuma. The focus on job creation is amply captured in the New Growth Path (NGP) released in November 2010 and sets the country's sights firmly on the creation of five million new jobs by 2020. The NGP is South Africa's latest in a long line of documents defining economic policy and seeks to address the high levels of unemployment in South Africa as well as foster sustainable economic growth.