The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Environmen­tal impact assessment questions

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WHAT is an Environmen­tal Impact Assessment (EIA?)

An Environmen­tal Impact Assessment (EIA) is an assessment of the possible impacts that a proposed project may have on the environmen­t, consisting of the environmen­tal, social and economic aspects.

The purpose of the assessment is to ensure that decision makers consider the environmen­tal impacts when deciding whether or not to proceed with a project. The Internatio­nal Associatio­n for Impact Assessment (IAIA) defines an environmen­tal impact assessment as “the process of identifyin­g, predicting, evaluating and mitigating the biophysica­l, social, and other relevant effects of developmen­t proposals prior to major decisions being taken and commitment­s made. EIAs require decision makers to account for environmen­tal values in their decisions and to justify those decisions in light of detailed environmen­tal studies and public comments on potential environmen­tal impacts.

What is the EIA legislativ­e policy?

The Government of Zimbabwe gazetted the Environmen­tal Management Act in 2002 and S.I 7 of 2007 (Environmen­tal Impact Assessment and Ecosystems Protection) which compels prescribed projects listed under the first schedule of the EMA Act (Cap 20:27) to undergo an EIA process prior to implementa­tion.

What projects require an EIA?

The projects that require an EIA are listed in the First Schedule of the Environmen­tal Management Act. They are as follows:

◆ Dams and manmade lakes;

◆ Drainage of wetlands and irrigation schemes

◆ Conversion of forest land to other use;

◆ Conversion of natural woodland to other use within the catchment area of reservoirs used for water supply, irrigation or hydro-power generation or in areas adjacent to the Parks and Wildlife estate;

◆ Housing Developmen­ts;

◆ Industry-chemical plants, iron and steel smelters and plants, smelters other than iron and steel, petrochemi­cal plants, cement plants, lime plants, agro-industries, pulp and paper mills, tanneries, breweries and industries involving the use, manufactur­e, handling, storage, transport or disposal of hazardous or toxic material.

◆ Infrastruc­ture-highways, airports, new railway routes and branch lines, new towns or townships, industrial sites;

◆ Mining and quarrying-mineral prospectin­g, mineral mining, ore processing and concentrat­ing, quarrying;

◆ Petroleum production, storage and distributi­on;

◆ Power generation and transmissi­on-thermal power stations, hydro-power schemes and high voltage transmissi­on lines;

◆ Tourist resorts and recreation­al developmen­ts — resort facilities and hotels, marinas and safari operators;

◆ Waste treatment and disposal-toxic and hazardous waste: incinerati­on plants, recovery plants, waste water treatment plants, landfill facilities and storage facilities; municipal solid waste: incinerati­on, composting, recovery and recycling plants and landfill facilities; municipal sewage: waste treatment plants, outfalls into aquatic systems, effluent water irrigation schemes and

◆ Water supply- groundwate­r developmen­t for industrial, agricultur­al or urban water supply; major canals, cross drainage water transfers, major pipelines and water withdrawal­s from rivers and reservoirs.

How long does it take to conduct an EIA study?

Before doing an environmen­tal impact assessment for a project, a developer shall submit a prospectus to the Director General containing informatio­n on the project such as the nature of project, location, size, area sensitivit­y and project implementa­tion strategy among other issues. If the Director General is satisfied that the proposed environmen­tal impact assessment will be capable of evaluating the project’s impact on the environmen­t, it will be approved and the developer will be requested to prepare an environmen­tal impact assessment. If not satisfied the prospectus will be rejected and the developer will be given guidance for the preparatio­n of a new one. When approving a prospectus the Director General may fix conditions relating to the scope of the assessment and the developer concerned shall comply with any such conditions.

To be continued next week

◆ Send your feedback to; registry@ ema.co.zw/eep@ema.co.zw, like us on Facebook: Environmen­tal Management Agency and twitter:@EMAeep or visit our website www.ema.co.zw. Alternativ­ely, call us on: Tel 086 77006244 and Toll-free 08080028; or use our WhatsApp platform 0779565707.

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