The Citizen (KZN)

Zwane told to heed appeals

- Ilse de Lange

The North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria has given Mineral Resources Minister Mosebenzi Zwane 30 days to consider the appeals lodged by two environmen­tal groups against the granting of coal mining rights in an environmen­tally sensitive area in the Belfast district in Mpumalanga.

Judge Vivian Tlhapi ordered the minister to consider the internal appeals lodged by the Escarpment Environmen­t Protection Group (Eepog) and Birdlife South Africa against the mining rights granted to William Patrick Bower (Pty) Ltd (WPB) in 2012 to mine for coal in an area between Dullstroom and Belfast.

If the minister failed to consider the appeals, it would be deemed a dismissal and the environmen­tal groups would be entitled to approach the court for an order to set aside the granting of the mining rights.

The groups lodged internal appeals with the minister in 2012 and 2013 after finding out that the mining rights had been granted to WPB, but turned to the court for relief when no decision was forthcomin­g.

The organisati­ons contend the granting of the mining rights was unlawful and should have been refused because it would result in unacceptab­le pollution, ecological degradatio­n and/or damage to the environmen­t.

Eepog chairperso­n Jacobus Pretorius said in court papers the properties earmarked for coal mining were located on a watershed with runoff from the site draining into the Lakenvlei wetland system and Elandsfont­einspruit catchment area.

The area contained habitat classified in the Mpumalanga Terrestria­l Biodiversi­ty Assessment as “truly exceptiona­l and irreplacea­ble” and the Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Agency was opposed to the granting of new mining rights in the Steenkamps­berg Wet Grasslands.

The properties also fell within the boundaries of the Steenkamps­berg important bird area, a national freshwater ecosystem priority area.

Pretorius said properties lay within 100m of a wetland that fed clean water into two major rivers. In addition, the Belfast-Dullstroom area was a high water-yield area that contribute­d significan­tly to the overall water supply of the country.

He said the proposed mining posed a significan­t negative risk to the water quality and seasonal flow patterns or volumes of water in the wetland system, which in turn posed a risk to the endangered bird species – including the critically endangered wattled crane and white-winged flufftail – which are dependent on the system.

He stressed that WPB’s own environmen­tal report made it clear that the mine would have a serious negative effect on water resources in the area.

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