Mail & Guardian

Gold rush’s toxic legacy lingers

It could take R30-billion or more to clean up the thousands of abandoned mines in South Africa

- Mark Olalde

On the border of Johannesbu­rg and Soweto, the Riverlea community nestles among tailings piles to both the north and south. Unlined and unfenced streams run along the piles of mine waste, the liquid cocktail dyed fluorescen­t blue or reddishbro­wn from the heavy metals and chemicals leaching off the dumps. During the windy season, dust from the dumps pelts residents.

Up the road, zama zamas — informal miners — work in an abandoned mine and process the gold by mixing and burning it with mercury. Much of life here is dictated by these old mines.

Regulatory failure around mine closures has scarred South Africa with thousands of abandoned mines and waste sites. Without proper closure, the gold mining industry in particular has had an impact on the environmen­t and affected the health of poor communitie­s along the mining belt.

Patricia Plaatjies is a 62-year-old pensioner who lives across the street from the dumps near Riverlea. Since 2009 she has survived on an oxygen machine, spending 16 hours a day tethered to it in her living room.

“If I was younger I would have relocated from here, but look at my age. Where am I going to go?” Plaatjies said. “I’ve known this place all my life. It’s my home.”

She accuses the tailings piles of causing her troubles. “You inhale the dust in the day. It comes into your house. You inhale it when you’re sleeping. It’s just all over. The dust is terrible, terrible, terrible,” she said.

At least 1.6-million people live in informal settlement­s around Johannesbu­rg, many of them on or near mine waste sites, according to a 2011 study titled Ecologies of Gold in Places, a journal of architectu­re and urbanism.

But, owing to a lack of epidemiolo­gical studies on the impacts of living in proximity to this waste, litigation and other measures against offending companies are limited.

“A lot of the mining houses have been getting away with murdering this country,” said André Swart, dean of the University of Johannesbu­rg’s faculty of health sciences.

During 129 years of gold mining in the Witwatersr­and Basin, the industry dumped six billion tonnes of mine waste and more than 270 tailings piles remain. Most are unlined and many were purposeful­ly positioned on top of sinkholes and aquifers to dry them out more quickly.

“There’s a significan­t amount of leaching of heavy metals into the waters and if people use these water sources, it will cause significan­t impacts to their health,” Swart said.

About 52 kilotonnes of gold were mined throughout the history of the Witwatersr­and Basin, leaving an estimated 430 kilotonnes of low-grade uranium in the basin’s mine residue — equal to the weight of 2 365 Boeing 747 jetliners.

In the basin, uranium occurs naturally tenfold more than gold does, and much of the West Rand and far West Rand have uranium concentrat­ions between 15 and 130 times the average in the Earth’s crust.

“We put up residences, townships, developmen­ts quite close to these areas because it’s usually the cheapest piece of land we can find, and that just exposes the vulnerable to higher levels of pollution,” Swart said.

According to the Chamber of Mines, the amount of fine gold produced in South Africa has decreased every year since 2002 and the grade of ore has decreased every year since 2005.

In 2013 mining houses that were Chamber members produced 562 000 times as much waste as gold, significan­tly up from a decade before when the ratio was about 212 000:1.

That means the production of one standard gold bar in 2013 unearthed nearly seven million kilograms of waste, equivalent in weight to the Springboks’ entire starting line-up 4 450 times over.

According to the 2012 Gauteng Mine Residue Areas Strategy, produced by the province’s department of agricultur­e and rural developmen­t, 374 “mine residue areas” — often toxic and radioactiv­e land — exist over 321km2 of Gauteng, the size of about 46 000 football pitches.

As the area includes 94 gold mines and 60 re-mining operations, the report estimated that only 8% of the land could be cheaply rehabilita­ted.

“Collective­ly, the dust problem poses a significan­t health risk and reduces the quality of life for a large number of citizens. Furthermor­e, this undermines the credibilit­y of the mining industry as a responsibl­e corporate citizen,” the report found.

The government has a list of 6 000 officially derelict and ownerless mines around the country, a list it is currently unwilling to make public.

It could take R30-billion or more to remediate these derelict and ownerless mines, according to a report published in May by the Gauteng City-Region Observator­y, a think-tank with the universiti­es of Johannesbu­rg and t he Witwatersr­and, as well as Gauteng’s provincial government, as partners.

Ayanda Shezi, the spokespers­on for the department of mineral resources, said the rehabilita­tion of derelict mines is administer­ed by both the Council for Geoscience and Mintek.

“On average, 40 sites have been rehabilita­ted per annum over a period of six years. The target has been raised to 50 sites per annum since 2014-2015,” she said.

But, the department’s 2010-2011 annual report stated that only five mines had been rehabilita­ted that year. A 2015 treasury report found that only three derelict and ownerless mines were rehabilita­ted in 2011-2012, 13 in 2012-2013 and 28 in 2013-2014.

According to mining legislatio­n, a company must apply for and receive a closure certificat­e from the department before it can close a mine. Shezi said the department had received 52 valid closure certificat­e applicatio­ns in the past three years.

Seven Promotion of Access to Informatio­n requests were submitted by Oxpeckers investigat­ive journalist­s to the mining department regarding mine closure trust funds, financial provisions, mine sales and closure certificat­es. After the allotted 30 days, the department had neither furnished any informatio­n nor requested an extension.

“People are reaping the rewards [of mining] but have very little accountabi­lity,” said Louis Snyman, an attorney at the Centre for Applied Legal Studies at Wits University.

A lack of transparen­cy also pervades the closing of currently operationa­l mines.

All active mines are required by law to hold money in a mine closure trust fund or other financial provisions ring-fenced specifical­ly for environmen­tal rehabilita­tion, but this money is often woefully inadequate to clean up a mine and is sometimes not used at all.

Proper mine closure faces an additional challenge from the process of selling off mines to junior mining houses — often called “scavenger companies” — that can afford to mine the remaining low-grade ore but almost never have enough funds for remediatio­n. Mines are passed down the chain until they are abandoned to zama zamas.

Jozua Ellis, senior environmen­tal manager for AngloGold Ashanti, said environmen­tal programmes often get lost in mine sales. “That’s the next mining company’s prerogativ­e,” he put it bluntly.

“We have reasonable access to funds to put towards these projects, but the guy down the road might not have that. And there’s not a superfund of some sort,” Ellis said. “There is a requiremen­t to be funded for mining liabilitie­s, but we’ve seen where that’s gotten us. It’s not working.”

According to Shezi, trust funds and other financial provisions held across the country for mine closures total R45-billion. She did not respond to questions about how the money was being spent.

The department’s guidelines instructin­g companies on how to calculate trust funds have not been updated since 2005, not even to account for a decade of inflation.

When mines are finally abandoned, the department has the legal power to open and use the trust funds and financial provisions, but it is often wary to do so because it also takes on the mine’s liability.

“[Mining companies] take advantage of the vulnerabil­ity of the people they’re dealing with, and they take advantage of the fact that the governance sector is somewhat disjointed and somewhat undercapac­itated,” Snyman said.

Changes in legislatio­n currently being implemente­d transfer regulatory power on closure from the department of mineral resources to the department of environmen­tal affairs, although enforcemen­t will remain with mineral resources. The environmen­t department declined to comment on these changes.

“There are very clear guidelines for mines’ closure and rehabilita­tion and the management of these, but unfortunat­ely they are not enforced. Just implementi­ng and enforcing the relevant legislatio­n will make a significan­t difference,” Swart said.

Falling gold prices over the past five years have been a mixed bag for the environmen­t, as expansion dropped off and companies abandoned a number of mines. Experts predict rapid movement when commodity prices bounce back and coal, not gold, will be the target.

“There’s going to be a huge influx of new mining rights applicatio­ns that will be granted,” Snyman said. “Northern Limpopo is one of the areas that has been identified as a mineral-rich area.

“Limpopo is also one of the poorest provinces in South Africa and has one of the highest rates of corruption in the country. It’s a perfect storm.” — oxpeckers.org

 ?? Photos: Oupa Nkosi ?? ‘Terrible dust’: Patricia Plaatjies (left) is 62. She has to use an oxygen machine in her Riverlea home because of the pollution from mine dumps (above and below left) that has affected her health and that of other residents in the area for years.
Photos: Oupa Nkosi ‘Terrible dust’: Patricia Plaatjies (left) is 62. She has to use an oxygen machine in her Riverlea home because of the pollution from mine dumps (above and below left) that has affected her health and that of other residents in the area for years.
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