The Citizen (KZN)

Civil society vs mining giant

- Amanda Watson

A three-year fight between eight nonprofit and civil society groups and a mining house wanting to mine coal in an ecological­ly sensitive area, as well as two state department­s seemingly bent on ensuring the mining happens, is set to resume in the High Court in Pretoria on October 16 with a judicial review of permission­s given to mine in the area.

The opposing parties are: Earthlife Africa Johannesbu­rg, BirdLife SA, Mining and Environmen­tal Justice Community Network of SA, Endangered Wildlife Trust, Bench Marks Foundation, groundWork, Federation for a Sustainabl­e Environmen­t, and the Associatio­n for Water and Rural Developmen­t.

They are represente­d by the Centre for Environmen­tal Rights (CER) on one side, and Atha Africa Ventures (AAV), the department­s of environmen­tal affairs and mineral resources.

The fight is over the more than 80 square kilometres of the Mabola protected environmen­t in Mpumalanga, one of the 22 strategic water source areas, and is a water source of the Vaal River, which is already under stress.

The area was declared protected on January 22, 2014 in terms of the National Environmen­tal Management: Protected Areas Act, 2003.

According to CER’s 2016 appeal to the mineral resources department, the undergroun­d and surface areas of the mine would be located within the Wakkerstro­om-Luneberg Grasslands which is classified as endangered.

CER claimed the undergroun­d area lay within a kilometre of a department of environmen­tal affairs’ designated freshwater ecosystem priority area, while the entire surface and undergroun­d areas of the mine fell within an area identified by the department in the Mining and Biodiversi­ty Guideline, 2013, as having the highest importance for biodiversi­ty and being at the highest risk from mining.

AAV is an India-owned company. It proposed to create an estimated 550 “direct job opportunit­ies” and “ensure a developmen­t income spent in SA exceeding R1 billion” among other plans.

October’s judicial review applicatio­n is one of several launched by CER on behalf of the group.

 ?? Picture: James Oatway ?? PROTECTED. The Usutu River in the Enkangala Drakensber­g Strategic Water Source falls under the Mabola Protected Environmen­t Area, and flows through Swaziland, Mozambique, and Heyshope Dam in Vaal River.
Picture: James Oatway PROTECTED. The Usutu River in the Enkangala Drakensber­g Strategic Water Source falls under the Mabola Protected Environmen­t Area, and flows through Swaziland, Mozambique, and Heyshope Dam in Vaal River.

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