Business Day

Sasol, Embalenhle ties are complex

- Antony Sguazzin

In a modest house on a dirt street in Embalenhle, Dzimadzi Masilela sits in her living room and weeps. On the wall behind her is a picture of her only son, Liwa, dead at 44 after a lifetime of respirator­y disease.

In a modest house on a dirt street in Embalenhle, Dzimadzi Masilela sits in her living room and weeps. On the wall behind her is a picture of her only son, Liwa, dead at 44 after a lifetime of respirator­y disease. Next door lives Rose Masondo, whose granddaugh­ter, Mainita, died from asthma at just 10 years old.

Their lives played out in the shadow of Secunda, a vast coalto-fuels and chemicals plant run by Sasol, that SA and internatio­nal groups say is the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases from a single site.

The inhabitant­s of Emba, as the town is known, are tied to Sasol in a complicate­d embrace. Secunda is responsibl­e for a host of emissions and pollutants derived from burning coal that experts says cause illnesses from respirator­y complaints to cancer, and yet it supplies economic opportunit­ies that are key to survival in a country with 29% unemployme­nt.

“Sasol, in many ways is helpful to us as a community,” said Masilela, 64, who runs a creche for the children of Sasol workers in a metal shack decorated with painted rhinos and giraffes. “The only issue is the smoke and the effect it has on our health, but what can we do about it?”

The plant sits in the heart of

Mpumalanga. The region is where coal deposits led to Eskom erecting 11 coal-fired power stations that together with Sasol’s plant cause pollution across a swathe of the central and eastern parts of the country. Coal is also used for domestic cooking in the region, further compoundin­g the problem. Environmen­tal activists have sued the government over the pollution caused by the two companies, urging it to act to curb emissions.

Sasol does not dispute that Secunda is the world’s biggest single-site emitter. At 56.5million tonnes of greenhouse gases a year, Secunda’s emissions exceed the individual totals of more than 100 countries, including Norway and Portugal, according to the Global Carbon Atlas. A 2019 study by Palo Altobased Gray Sky Solutions estimates the plant may account for as many as 72 deaths a year.

“Worldwide studies have establishe­d linkages between air quality and human health,” Sasol said in response to questions, including whether its pollutants cause respirator­y disease, cancer and death.

“SA air quality standards are generally well aligned with the standards applied in other countries in which we operate, especially the EU.”

Air quality standards differ from emissions limits. However,

SA’s limits on the emission of sulphur dioxide, one of the most dangerous pollutants generated by burning coal, are significan­tly weaker than those of a range of countries including India and China. Permissibl­e levels of particulat­e emissions are several times higher than the EU’s and those recommende­d by the World Health Organisati­on.

And those most directly exposed to the toxic output do say they are suffering the health effects. That is a concern made more acute by the arrival in SA of the coronaviru­s, whose symptoms include respirator­y difficulti­es. While there were just 61 cases as of Monday, that was more than double the previous day’s tally that prompted President Cyril Ramaphosa to declare a national state of disaster.

“In the community where we are living at Emba there are a large number of people who are having sickness related to air quality,” said Fana Sibanyoni, who works with MS Environmen­tal Projects, a local environmen­tal activist group.

“People are having asthma and they are dying, people are having cancer.”

Constructi­on of Secunda began in the 1970s as SA, becoming increasing­ly isolated due to its apartheid policies, sought to reduce its reliance on crude oil imports. Today, the plant stretches for kilometres between the towns of Emba and Secunda. Clouds of steam rise from the boilers and dominate the view from both towns and the local casino, Graceland, which sits on a hill above the complex.

The company says it is acting to curb its pollution, setting a target for a 10% carbon reduction by 2030 and promising more detail on its plans in the “latter part of 2020”.

Sasol has won postponeme­nts until 2025 for complying with legal emissions limits, and it has yet to come up with a solution for cutting sulphur-dioxide emissions beyond that date. In 2019 its board refused to table a climate change resolution at its annual general meeting.

The pressure to invest in equipment to curb emissions comes at a time when Sasol’s finances are in free-fall. The company’s debt has surged and its stock has plunged after billions of dollars of cost overruns at a chemical project in the US and the collapse in the oil price.

The company was due to address investors on how it plans to protect its balance sheet later on Tuesday.

Secunda “produces without doubt the most polluting liquid fuels in the world,” said Lauri Myllyvirta, lead analyst for the Centre for Energy Research and Clean Air, an independen­t research body.

“The most alarming part is that Sasol is delaying and opposing SA’s new air pollutant emissions standards that would more than halve the health impacts of industrial emissions.”

And yet Sasol is integral to SA’s economy and especially that of Secunda.

Together with its suppliers the company employs 22,000 people in Secunda and surroundin­g settlement­s. It finances training programmes, pays for houses to be converted from coal to less polluting liquefied petroleum gas and sponsors community initiative­s.

A banner above one of the town’s main streets reads, “Our Sasol allowed us to provide quality health care to our community.”

It is little consolatio­n for Masilela. “They do try help us with our needs. So saying I am against it or feel bad wont help,” she said.

“Maybe I would feel better if I had other children, but he was my only child.”

IN THE COMMUNITY WHERE WE ARE LIVING AT EMBA A LARGE NUMBER OF PEOPLE ARE HAVING SICKNESS RELATED TO AIR QUALITY

 ?? /Bloomberg ?? Dirty habits: Sasol does not dispute that Secunda in Mpumalanga is the world’s biggest single-site emitter, at 56.5-million tonnes of greenhouse gases a year, which exceed the individual totals of more than 100 countries, including Norway and Portugal.
/Bloomberg Dirty habits: Sasol does not dispute that Secunda in Mpumalanga is the world’s biggest single-site emitter, at 56.5-million tonnes of greenhouse gases a year, which exceed the individual totals of more than 100 countries, including Norway and Portugal.

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