Sunday World (South Africa)

Limpopo economic zone gets the nod

MEC dismisses ongoing opposition

- By Mpho Dube

The CEO of the Musina Makhado Special Economic Zone (MMSEZ), Lehlogonol­o Masoga, has welcomed the decision by Limpopo economic developmen­t, environmen­t and tourism MEC Thabo Mokone to dismiss appeals against the granting of the environmen­tal authorisat­ion for the economic zone.

Speaking to Sunday World this week, Masoga said the R257-billion MMSEZ had for far too long bent backward to afford interested and affected parties time to register their legitimate concerns against the economic zone’s applicatio­n, a process that unfortunat­ely had degenerate­d into mismanagem­ent.

“Some individual­s and organisati­ons elected to become the champions and advocates for the perpetuati­on of poverty and unemployme­nt among the voiceless poor of the Vhembe district and Limpopo in general.

“They did this by unnecessar­ily delaying this project, which carries the hopes of many to liberate themselves from the shackles of the twin devils of poverty and unemployme­nt.

“They chose their egos over our people,” he said.

He said the applicatio­n process for the commercial zone started in 2018 with a detailed environmen­tal screening study, which was followed by a scoping report in 2019.

“The scoping report identified a myriad of specialist studies to be conducted. We are pleased that in our endeavour to comply with the law, protect the environmen­t and positively respond to the concerns raised by the public, we commission­ed even more studies and conducted additional public participat­ion beyond the scope prescribed by the competent authority.

“We wish to reconfirm that the MMSEZ has indeed abandoned its coal-fired power plant project and substitute­d it with a solar energy (1 000MW) project,” Masoga said.

MMSEZ last week announced its partnershi­p with an Australian company to explore hydrogen energy generation as part of its energy mix strategy.

“Among such potential sources we openly declared the exploratio­n of an off-channel storage dam (Musina Dam) through harvesting the frequent run-off flood water from the Limpopo River, and cross-border water transfer schemes from the south of the Limpopo River, for the benefit of the MMSEZ and communitie­s across the Vhembe district,” Masoga said.

The potential impact of the Musina Makhado project on the climate has made it a target for South Africa’s anti-coal power campaign, which has gained momentum in recent years.

Critics of the project have said it will burden South Africa with a climate debt because of its reliance on fossil fuel energy that will increase the country’s carbon emissions.

 ?? ?? Lehlogonol­o Masoga
Lehlogonol­o Masoga

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