The Citizen (Gauteng)

Greens in bid to block new mine

PROTECTED AREA: COALITION TAKES MINISTERS ON

- Ilse de Lange – ilsedl@citizen.co.za

Mining will threaten integrity of wetlands and other habitats in conservati­on area – coalition.

Acivil society coalition’s applicatio­n to stop Indian-owned mining company Atha-Africa Ventures (Atha) from starting to mine coal in the Mabola Protected Environmen­t outside Wakkerstro­om in Mpumalanga will kick off in the High Court in Pretoria this week.

The coalition, represente­d by the Centre for Environmen­tal Rights, wants the court to set aside the decisions of former mineral resources minister Mosebenzi Zwane and the late minister of environmen­tal affairs Edna Molewa to permit Atha to mine in the protected area.

They also want the matter referred back for reconsider­ation and the final decision on the proposed mine to be put on hold until after the outcome of internal appeals and litigation pertaining to other authorisat­ions, including environmen­tal authorisat­ion and the water use licence granted to Atha.

Molewa gave permission to Atha to go ahead in August 2016 while Zwane did so three months later.

The coalition maintained that neither minister conducted a public participat­ion process or notified interested and parties that would be affected that they had received and were considerin­g Atha’s applicatio­n.

It would argue that the ministers did not take their decisions in an open and transparen­t manner and ignored the requiremen­t of the Protected Areas Act that mining only be allowed in such an environmen­t in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.

It said the ministers had failed to take into account the interests of local communitie­s and South Africa’s responsibi­lities relating to the environmen­t.

The coalition added that Atha had not made adequate provision to rehabilita­te the mining area.

The proposed mine was not within a protected area, it would be in a strategic water source area and would, according to the coalition, threaten water security regionally as well as locally.

Mining activity would also seriously threaten the integrity of the wetlands and other habitats in the protected area, the coalition said.

The area includes three farms used for grazing for commercial livestock and was home to several subsistenc­e farmers.

The area between Wakkerstro­om and the mining area was also an internatio­nally recognised birding site surrounded by protected areas that are major tourist attraction­s.

Both ministers and the Mpumalanga agricultur­e MEC defended the decisions as rational, reasonable and transparen­t. They said they would ask the court to dismiss the applicatio­n. Atha is only opposing any attempt to delay a final decision.

The government maintained that Mpumalanga and the Wakkerstro­om area was economical­ly depressed, so it was necessary to strike a balance between socioecono­mic developmen­t and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity.

The mine would benefit the region as semiskille­d and unskilled labour would be sourced from local communitie­s, it added.

Ministers’ decisions violate Protected Areas Act

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