Daily Maverick

Industry attacks on environmen­talists and NGOs are distorting the facts

In the face of cascading sustainabi­lity crises, the categorisa­tion of environmen­talists – by people like mining executive Vuslat Bayoglu and former DG Mike Muller – as some irrational subset of the population is ridiculous. But perhaps their desperate att

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As a former public interest environmen­tal lawyer, I have been astonished by recent public attacks on “environmen­talists”, attributin­g to them incredible levels of political power and influence.

In an opinion piece in Business Day on 23 August, coal executive Vuslat Bayoglu writes that there is “a new dimension of State Capture… Non-government­al organisati­ons (NGOs), usually with transnatio­nal links, dictate the pace in the issuing of domestic business licences such as environmen­tal authorisat­ions and water use licences.”

If an NGO were to state that the mining industry was “the new dimension of State Capture”, or make any of the other outrageous accusation­s levelled against them by Bayoglu, it would be slapped in short order with a defamation claim. But let’s think for a minute about how deranged his accusation is.

By “dictating the pace of issuing business licences”, Bayoglu presumably means the exercise by civil society of the rights set out in our environmen­tal legislatio­n, and in the Constituti­on, to submit comments, objections and appeals in response to licence applicatio­ns.

This is an integral element of a democratic state, based on the principle of audi alteram partem, or “let the other side be heard”.

This may slow things down, but not because of gleeful anti-developmen­t mischievou­sness on the part of NGOs.

The delays arise because (in addition to mind-boggling levels of inefficien­cy, incapacity and incompeten­ce) many of the authoritie­s responsibl­e for licensing decision-making consider their mandate to be economic developmen­t, regardless of its environmen­tal or social cost.

As a result, they are incapable of objectivel­y analysing environmen­tal impact assessment­s (which are paid for by developers). They are also often incapable of properly applying environmen­tal laws and principles, forcing those who are entitled to a fair hearing to resort to the courts to get one.

Our entire system of socalled environmen­tal regulation is rigged in favour of developmen­t. It is laughable to suggest that NGOs have any real power in this system – I would need 10 of these columns to list the projects that have been authorised in recent years despite their obviously disastrous social, climate, water and biodiversi­ty impacts.

Which brings me to the other attack, by Mike Muller, former director-general of water affairs and a national planning commission­er. Muller “contribute­d extensivel­y to water, energy and environmen­tal policy between 1994 and 2015”, which one would hope would give him pause for self-reflection, but it appears not.

Muller’s theme is a condition of the World Bank loan for the constructi­on of the now-epically disastrous Medupi: that Es

Our entire system

of so-called environmen­tal regulation is rigged in favour of developmen­t. It is laughable to suggest that NGOs have any real power in

this system

kom install sulphur dioxide (SO₂) “scrubbers”, equipment that reduces the amount of SO₂ that enters the atmosphere.

Sulphur dioxide is a toxic by-product of burning coal, with significan­t harmful health impacts, and installing the “flue gas desulphuri­sation” technology to reduce it is expensive. Muller blames environmen­talists for the fact that Eskom is contractua­lly obliged to install these scrubbers.

He claims that the reason that the loan condition exists is that, because the “climate arguments were easily dealt with” in relation to Medupi, activists “focused instead on SO₂ emissions”.

He argues that because sulphur dioxide has a (slight) cooling effect on the Earth’s atmosphere, we shouldn’t worry about the pollution from Medupi as it will impercepti­bly “offset” the heating effects of the power station’s gargantuan carbon dioxide emissions.

In 2021, to assert that the climate impacts of the planet’s eighth biggest coal-fired power station are “easily dealt with”, and to suggest that it’s a good thing to use one source of pollution to minutely mitigate the negative effects of another is bizarre.

But Muller also entirely misreprese­nts the opposition to Medupi by environmen­tal activists, as David Hallowes – one of those activists – sets out in detail in a thoughtful response to Muller. Medupi was opposed on every ground, from its climate impacts to the inevitable time and cost overruns.

Activists were also keenly aware of the enormous risk that the project would become a hotbed of corruption. If they had had a real seat at the decision-making table, we might not be saddled with this climate-destroying corruption machine, and the mountain of debt that comes with it.

In the face of cascading sustainabi­lity crises, the categorisa­tion of environmen­talists by people like Bayoglu and Muller as some distinct, irrational subset of the population is ridiculous.

But perhaps their desperate attempts to make us believe that the people who are willing to act to tackle these crises are obstructiv­e and dangerous is a sign that those environmen­talists are finally making progress.

Tracey Davies is the director of Just Share.

 ??  ?? By Tracey Davies
By Tracey Davies

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