Business Day

Court bid to stop TotalEnerg­ies drilling

- Denene Erasmus

Environmen­tal lobby groups The Green Connection and Natural Justice have jointly initiated a legal challenge against the decision to grant TotalEnerg­ies environmen­tal authorisat­ion for explorator­y drilling for offshore gas and oil in block 5/6/7, located off the coast between Cape Town and Cape Agulhas.

The groups announced on Monday that they had filed a review applicatio­n with the high court in Cape Town seeking to have the initial decision to grant environmen­tal authorisat­ion by the department of mineral resources & energy (DMRE) overturned. They also want the court to review and set aside environmen­t minister Barbara Creecy’s decision to reject appeals brought against the DMRE’s decision.

The authorisat­ion granted by the DMRE gives TotalEnerg­ies the right to conduct exploratio­n activities across an area of about 10,000km² located 60km170km from the coast, at a depth of 1,000m to 3,200m.

TotalEnerg­ies holds rights to the exploratio­n block, along with Shell and PetroSA.

The Green Connection’s strategic lead, Liziwe McDaid, emphasised the importance of this legal action in safeguardi­ng the interests of coastal communitie­s and the ocean they rely on, as the decisions being challenged could have significan­t long-term consequenc­es.

“We do not believe that the DMRE’s decision to grant environmen­tal authorisat­ion and Creecy’s subsequent dismissal of appeals were in the public interest, for both current and future generation­s.

“This is why this legal action is so critical because it challenges decisions that could have far-reaching impacts on the wellbeing of coastal communitie­s and the ocean that they depend on,” said McDaid.

The legal grounds for the review highlight the government’s failure to assess the socioecono­mic impact of a potential oil spill on local fisheries and disregard for climate change effects linked to oil or gas usage. The Green Connection and Natural Justice also expressed concern over the lack of proper evaluation of oil spill blowout contingenc­y plans.

In court papers seen by Business Day, the groups said a well blowout, as outlined in TotalEnerg­ies’ final environmen­tal impact report, occurs when there is an uncontroll­ed release of crude oil or natural gas from a well after pressure control systems have failed. If such an incident were to happen, it would have severe ramificati­ons for commercial fishing in the area.

The groups stated that TotalEnerg­ies did not supply a full assessment of how this would affect local communitie­s and fisheries.

TotalEnerg­ies also intends to carry out offshore drilling in the Deep Water Orange Basin off the West Coast between Port Nolloth and Hondeklip Bay, for which the DMRE has already granted exploratio­n rights.

It also plans to drill between Mossel Bay and Cape St Francis (offshore blocks 11B/12B) and has submitted a production right applicatio­n, which is now in its public participat­ion stage.

TotalEnerg­ies and PetroSA have for some time been in talks about the state-owned petroleum company being a potential off-taker for gas from blocks 11B and 12B to supply gas to PetroSA’s gas-to-liquids refinery in Mossel Bay. The plant has been at a standstill since 2020 due to the depletion of offshore gas feedstocks.

 ?? /123RF ?? Ocean impacts:
TotalEnerg­ies has been authorised to explore for offshore oil and gas in an area of about 10,000km² located between Cape Town and Cape Agulhas.
/123RF Ocean impacts: TotalEnerg­ies has been authorised to explore for offshore oil and gas in an area of about 10,000km² located between Cape Town and Cape Agulhas.
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