Business Day

Community consent ‘will end mining’

- Linda Ensor Parliament­ary Writer ensorl@businessli­ve.co.za

If the law is interprete­d so that the consent of communitie­s is required for mining to take place, there would be very little mining activity at all, mineral resources directorge­neral Thabo Mokoena told MPs.

If the law is interprete­d so that the consent of communitie­s is required for mining to take place, there would be very little mining activity at all, mineral resources director-general Thabo Mokoena told MPs.

Mokoena argued in parliament on Wednesday that the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Developmen­t Act only requires meaningful consultati­on with communitie­s before a mining right is granted and not consent as ordered by a judgment in the Pretoria high court in November.

Judge Annelie Basson ruled that the mineral resources minister had no lawful authority to grant a mining right to Australian firm Transworld Energy and Mineral Resources unless “full and informed” consent had been obtained from the surroundin­g Umgungundl­ovu community.

The matter related to an applicatio­n for the right to mine titanium in the Wild Coast area of Xolobeni but would affect all communitie­s under customary law. Mining law experts have warned that the judgment could severely damage investment in SA and cripple mining.

The department has taken the judgment on appeal on the sole issue of consent. A highlevel panel that assessed key legislatio­n to accelerate fundamenta­l change also recommende­d that there be community consent before mining rights are granted.

Mokoena’s comments were made during a presentati­on to parliament’s mineral resources committee on the department’s response to the panel’s recommenda­tions regarding the act.

Mokoena said if the route of consent rather than meaningful consultati­on is followed “we may as well forget about mining in this country”.

He said the requiremen­t of consent would be used by “opportunis­tic elements in our communitie­s”, adding it would also undermine the efforts being made to increase the contributi­on of mining to GDP.

“Our view in the department is that we have a duty and responsibi­lity to protect mining. It is incumbent upon the department to make sure that mining continues to survive,” Mokoena told MPs.

The department’s director of mineral policy developmen­t, Sibongile Malie, noted that in terms of the act, the state is the custodian of mineral rights and has sovereignt­y over them on behalf of all citizens.

The department says the principle of community consent removes the state’s custodians­hip of mineral resources. “If the state is depending on consent before a right is issued, it means that the state is not really a custodian as it is dependent on the community first saying yes or no,” Malie said.

She said regulation­s in the act would be amended to strengthen the community consultati­on process and enforcemen­t.

DA MP Hendrik Schmidt said consultati­on with communitie­s by mining firms is often not meaningful and does not involve a genuine attempt to reach consensus. There should be a stronger obligation on companies to reach an agreement of some sort with communitie­s.

Custodians­hip also does not grant absolute rights to the state, which had to exercise its powers to the benefit of all South Africans, he said.

Johan Lorenzen, an associate attorney at Richard Spoor Inc Attorneys, tweeted that “consent for communitie­s is simply not a radical propositio­n”.

“After centuries of racial dispossess­ion it is the least we can do as a society. South African companies already comply with consent requiremen­ts for indigenous people in Latin America. Why not at home?”

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