Sunday Tribune

Toxic cocktail suspected in stink

Pollutions busters roped in Campbell’s book gets global face

- NOKUTHULA NTULI

INTERNATIO­NALLY respected air quality experts have been brought in by a civic associatio­n to investigat­e the cause of the stink coming from the Shongweni landfill site and to help prepare for a possible court battle.

The team from the multinatio­nal engineerin­g firm WSP Parsons Brinckerho­ff will include environmen­tal and air quality specialist­s Dr Jon Mcstay and Dr Lisa Ramsay.

Mcstay holds a doctorate from the University of Cape Town and is the director at WSP while Ramsay, who holds a masters and PHD from Cambridge University, is based at the University of Kwazulu-natal.

They are being funded through the efforts of the Upper Highway Air non-profit organisati­on.

The NPO’S attorney Charmane Nel said the objective was to access the waste management company Enviroserv’s data as so much was still unexplaine­d.

“We want to know what waste was there when the ph dropped? We want access to those waste streams,” she said.

Enviroserv has disputed allegation­s that fumes from the landfill site have had a health impact on surroundin­g communitie­s but the 10 000 members of the NPO are unconvince­d.

Many claim they suffer persistent headaches, respirator­y problems, sore throats and coughing because of the smell.

Addressing a public meeting on Wednesday, Ramsay said an investigat­ion would include soil and water impact assessment­s as well as an air and odour impact assessment to identify the “odour compound in the air experience­d by the community”.

“We are going to use various approaches so that we can present findings that are validated.

“So we are going to be using a monitoring and modelling approach,” she said.

The NPO has purchased two air and meteorolog­ical monitoring stations to assist with the investigat­ion and Ramsay has also volunteere­d to use her own.

Some of the technology has been brought in from abroad and has never been used in a court case before but Ramsay said would be admissible.

She said the gas that had been identified by Enviroserv as causing the smell was hydrogen sulphide (H2S) which gave a rotten smell at all landfills.

“You might be smelling H2S at times but you would not be experienci­ng the health impacts you are experienci­ng now if it was just H2S.

“So we are not listening to what we have been told, we are going into this investigat­ion with an objective to determine which gas is causing these health impacts,” she told the meeting.

She said there was a possibilit­y that they could find a cocktail of toxic gases as the cause of health symptoms.

To get samples for the investigat­ion, which could take up to four months, the WSP team would need access to the landfill site and waste inventory data and Nel said negotiatio­ns with Enviroserv were under way.

Enviroserv chief executive Dean Thompson has reiterated the company’s commitment to remedying the situation and has brought in their own experts to assist.

“Enviroserv is currently in discussion with the Upper Highway NPO regarding possible collaborat­ion between the experts,” he said.

The Enviroserv team and the NPO committee have met numerous times since the Department of Environmen­tal Affairs issued the first compliance notice in August following intermitte­nt malodour and health-related complaints.

The department instructed Enviroserv to revert to treatment regimens as dictated by the previous minimum requiremen­ts, of treating incoming waste to a ph of 9.

Thompson conceded that the ph levels on the site had dropped since 2013, creating an environmen­t conducive to sulphurous emissions but he said those gases could not have made people sick.

Nel said the findings from the WSP’S study would be used as court evidence in a battle to get the landfill closed down.

“First they (Enviroserv) said it wasn’t them causing the odour now they are saying it’s not their fault.

“The reality is that there is a mess and they have to fix it. We don’t want a situation where the remedy creates more problems than there are,” said Nel.

She is assisting the organisati­on pro bono.

The Hillcrest Private Hospital is also installing an air-monitoring device and the management has written to Environmen­tal Affairs Minister Edna Molewa expressing concern about the fumes from the landfill. South Africa X-factor THE SUNDAY Tribune’s assistant editor, Carol Campbell, is to have her debut novel, My Children Have Faces, taken to a global audience after US publisher Waveland Press announced this week it had bought the North American rights.

The book, published by Umuzi, an imprint of Penguin Random House, won the South African literary award for a debut novel in 2015.

Movie rights were subsequent­ly sold to film-maker Andre Stolz.

Waveland is an establishe­d academic publisher that distribute­s the works of Sol Plaatjie and Bessie Head, among others.

Penguin Random House spokespers­on Ryno Posthumus said the novel about the Karoo’s karretjiem­ense told the story of an illiterate mother who must battle to prove that her children “have faces”, that they exist officially, to protect them from a killer.

Campbell said the internatio­nal recognitio­n of a “true South African story” was deeply rewarding.

“An author spends so many years writing a book, not knowing if it will even be published and then, suddenly, it is out there and it takes on a life of its own. The world wants the stories of Africa.”

When the book was first published, reviewer Michelle Magwood described it as “extraordin­ary”. “It captures the passive pragmatism of the people, the sense that tomorrow will come in its own time.”

Campbell’s second novel Esther’s House, on how corrupt officials in Oudtshoorn were destroying good people, won the Minara Aziz Hassim award, also in 2015.

Her third novel, the final in the Karoo trilogy, is scheduled for publicatio­n next year.

 ??  ?? Kevin Ellis returned from the World Dance Masters competitio­n in Dublin, Ireland, this week, where he was crowned the silver men’s advanced European solo champion for 2017. Ellis won a total of three gold medals and a gold honours medal at the...
Kevin Ellis returned from the World Dance Masters competitio­n in Dublin, Ireland, this week, where he was crowned the silver men’s advanced European solo champion for 2017. Ellis won a total of three gold medals and a gold honours medal at the...
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa