Daily Dispatch

Community wins right to access mining applicatio­n. But who will win the war?

The march of technologi­cal progress has long impinged on rural and traditiona­l communitie­s around the world. Finding mutually beneficial common ground is fraught with pitfalls, writes Tracy-Lynn Field

- Tracy-Lynn Field is a professor of environmen­tal and sustainabi­lity law at the University of the Witwatersr­and.

South African law states that mineral resources are the common heritage of all the country ’ s people. The state is the custodian of these resources for the benefit of all citizens.

The Mineral and Petroleum Resources Developmen­t Act also states that mineral resources must be developed sustainabl­y. The Constituti­on protects the right of all people to an environmen­t that’s not harmful to health or well-being. The Act aims to promote equitable access to the nation’s mineral resources. It’s also meant to ensure that holders of mining rights contribute towards the socio-economic developmen­t of the areas where they are operating.

But in reality, the situation is heavily skewed in favour of the mining industry. The Act fails to protect communitie­s whose land, livelihood and culture will be directly affected, and possibly destroyed, by mining.

The most recent example of the Act’s failure is the Umgungundl­ovu (known as “Xolobeni ”) community’s struggle to access an applicatio­n to mine heavy mineral sands on their land.

South Africa’s coastlines contain some of the world’s richest and unexploite­d deposits of heavy mineral sands. The minerals (zircon, ilmenite, rutile) are raw material for titanium dioxide, a white pigment used in paint, coatings, glazes, paper, and even the cosmetics industry.

Initiative­s to exploit these mineral sands have gained momentum in recent years at the behest of the national Department of Mineral Resources and Australian mining multinatio­nal Mineral Commoditie­s Ltd. Unfortunat­ely, critical decisions about this were constraine­d by the bias inherent in the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Developmen­t Act.

Mining licences and community rights

To mine the heavy mineral sands, Mineral Commoditie­s Ltd – through its subsidiary Transworld Energy Resources – needed to apply for a mining right from the Department of Mineral Resources. A mining right applicatio­n includes important informatio­n such as the particular­s of the applicant, the mining works programme and the social and labour plan for socio-economic developmen­t of mine-affected areas.

Within 14 days after accepting an applicatio­n, the regional manager of the Department of Mineral Resources must make this acceptance known. The department must then call on interested and affected parties to comment within 30 days.

Until very recently, the forms of notice prescribed by the law were publicatio­n in the provincial Government Gazette, a notice in the magistrate’s court or one in a local or national newspaper. In practice, these weren’t conducive to reaching parties who need to know, particular­ly rural communitie­s.

Importantl­y, the Act is silent on the right of interested and affected parties to know that an applicatio­n has been submitted, and their right to access the informatio­n in an applicatio­n. This informatio­n asymmetry immediatel­y places parties such as the Xolobeni community at a disadvanta­ge.

On the east coast, members of the Xolobeni community have been resisting mining on their land for more than 15 years. In March 2015, they learnt that Transworld Energy Resources had filed an applicatio­n to mine on their land. They approached the Department of Mineral Resources’ regional manager to get a copy of the applicatio­n. He referred them to a Transworld Energy Resources representa­tive and the environmen­tal consultant. Community members became increasing­ly frustrated as these role players sent them from pillar to post.

Seeing the applicatio­n, community members reasoned, would enable them to meaningful­ly consult with the mining company. It would help them determine how the mining might disrupt or benefit their lives.

In late 2015, they decided to approach the High Court for a determinat­ion of their rights to the informatio­n in the mining applicatio­n. The company eventually forwarded a copy of the applicatio­n to the community’s attorneys in February 2016. It didn’t concede that the community members were entitled to the informatio­n.

A court victory

On 14 September 2020, the North Gauteng High Court ruled that the community and other interested parties had a right to a copy of an applicatio­n for a mining right. This, the court said, would enable “meaningful consultati­ons ”.

This right, the court ruled, is grounded in the provisions of the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Developmen­t Act itself. The community need not rely on the cumbersome Promotion of Access to Informatio­n Act.

This decision builds on the Xolobeni community ’ s first court victory against Transworld Energy Resources, in November 2018. In this case, Judge Basson ruled that the Department of Mineral Resources was obliged to obtain the “full and informed consent” of the community prior to granting any mining right. This right, the court said, is secured by the Interim Protection of Informal Land Rights Act, 1996.

Both decisions have been hailed as “groundbrea­king”, “game-changing”, a huge victory for mining communitie­s everywhere in the country.

A tactical gain or a game-changer?

But do these decisions correct the imbalance that existed? Or are they merely tactical gains in a war that has already been lost?

The plight of the Xolobeni community is not dissimilar to hundreds of other miningaffe­cted communitie­s across the globe who are at war with the proponents of mining. At war because what’s at stake is survival itself: of people, livelihood­s, species, landscapes, the survival of the company in the marketplac­e. At war because blood has already been spilled, at Xolobeni and elsewhere.

The war is essentiall­y about two things. It’s about different visions of developmen­t: agricultur­e, tourism, subsistenc­e versus mining, urbanisati­on, industrial­isation. And it’s about the age-old question of whether mining, with all its adverse impacts, can benefit the many, or only the selected, significan­t few.

Currently, it is waged under opaque conditions:

● Lack of access to informatio­n – applicatio­ns, reports, the actual operations of the mine.

● Opacity of shareholdi­ng structures and beneficial ownership.

● Opacity concerning the involvemen­t of state officials and customary authoritie­s in the profits from the mine.

The Xolobeni decisions bring a little more clarity. But without thorough institutio­nal reforms, wise choices on the exploitati­on of mineral resources for the benefit of all South Africans will remain elusive.

The South African government should follow internatio­nal best practice. It should require the disclosure of beneficial ownership in mining (and gas) companies. And it should crack down on the involvemen­t of politicall­y exposed persons, including traditiona­l authoritie­s, in mining deals.

But do these decisions correct the imbalance that existed? Or are they merely tactical gains in a war that has already been lost?

 ?? Picture: JOHN CLARKE ?? RESOURCE RICH: South Africa ’ s east and west coastlines have some of the world ’ s richest, unexploite­d, naturally occurring heavy mineral sands.
Picture: JOHN CLARKE RESOURCE RICH: South Africa ’ s east and west coastlines have some of the world ’ s richest, unexploite­d, naturally occurring heavy mineral sands.

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