The Citizen (Gauteng)

Mining pollution captured

POWER GENERATION: PHOTOGRAPH­ER RECORDS ENVIRONMEN­TAL IMPACTS OF COAL INDUSTRY

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SA is one of the top 20 emitters of climate-changing carbon dioxide worldwide.

Gas-billowing coal plants, cracked earth, abandoned mines and lifeless water. These are some of the stark images documentin­g coal mining pollution in Mpumalanga.

These photograph­s, in a recently launched book called Broken Land and an exhibition in Johannesbu­rg, display the work of South African photojourn­alist Daylin Paul, 34, who spent four years documentin­g the environmen­tal impacts of South Africa’s coal industry.

“In Mpumalanga there is dust everywhere. The water is milky. The air is a smoggy brown and it burns your throat to breathe,” said Paul, speaking from London, where he is hoping to bring his exhibition.

“People are sick with tuberculos­is, asthma, diarrhoea and headaches.”

South Africa’s power generation is dominated by coal, which produces more than 80% of power and makes the country one of the top 20 emitters of climate-changing carbon dioxide worldwide.

With load shedding returning this month due to technical faults, Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe has said the country plans to boost electricit­y generation over the next decade with a mix of renewable energy and coal power.

According to government’s Integrated Resource Plan released this month, by 2030 coal would account for 59% of electricit­y, with another 8% coming from hydropower, 6% from solar power, 18% from wind and 1% from gas and diesel.

For now coal is taking a heavy toll in the communitie­s surroundin­g the country’s coal plants and mines, who are “having their basic human rights taken away”, Paul said.

“Rights to clean water, air (and) land to farm and support their families are not being fulfilled,” said Paul, adding that he hoped the photograph­s made people angry enough to act.

“A big reason I am in London is because of the Extinction Rebellion (protests) taking place here,” said Paul, referring to a global protest movement, launched in Britain, urging government­s to take much swifter action against climate change.

In August, a Greenpeace-funded study using NASA satellite data spotlighte­d the town of Kriel in Mpumalanga as the second biggest sulphur dioxide (SO2) emissions hotspot in the world.

In June, the national government was taken to court by local environmen­tal groups for failing to tackle the air pollution levels.

Paul said many of the communitie­s he photograph­ed had also been displaced by mining companies, or forced to relocate after mine blasting sent cracks through the walls of their homes. Some were given government housing, he said.

Paul also climbed undergroun­d into abandoned mines where unemployed community members were carrying out small-scale mining to extract and sell pieces of coal to survive, he said.

“I am claustroph­obic,” Paul said. “But if pregnant women and children were climbing undergroun­d, I had to too,” he said.

Paul believes his life was also saved by a man who flagged him away from what he did not know was quicksand.

“The mines are often left as open pits,” said Paul. “When rain comes in, it turns the earth into quicksand filled with sulphuric acid. I was told that people had fallen in and burned to death.”

Paul said taking the photograph­s took an emotional toll, and he “left a part of myself there”.

“I do not want people to sip wine and enjoy this exhibition,” said Paul. “I want them to realise that this is all of our fight.”

The exhibition ends at Johannesbu­rg’s Wits Art Museum tomorrow and returns to Cape Town early next year.

– Reuters

 ??  ?? STARK REMINDER. Some of the images, which are in a recently launched book called Broken Land and an exhibition in Johannesbu­rg, document coal mining pollution in Mpumalanga.
STARK REMINDER. Some of the images, which are in a recently launched book called Broken Land and an exhibition in Johannesbu­rg, document coal mining pollution in Mpumalanga.

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