PRESS RELEASE
23 February 2004
"Ours is not perception, environmental injustice
and racism is a reality"
A peoples' memorandum to the 8th World Congress on Environmental
Health
We the residents representing civic organisations of south
Durban (Wentworth, Isipingo, Bluff, Merebank), Clare Estate, Richards Bay,
Pietermaritzburg, Chatsworth, Sydenham, Potchefstroom, Table View (Cape
Town), Sasolburg, Boipatong and Secunda gathered, at John Dunn Hall, to
share our experiences and suffering as a result of industrial pollution
in south Durban over the week-end of February 21-22, prior to the 8th World
Congress on Environmental Health.
We have also heard from researchers who, through their research, have shared
and confirmed our concerns.
We take note of the reality that:
Multi-national industrial corporations (MNC's) in South Africa, many of
whom have exhibitions at the Congress, are:-
* Dumping hazardous chemicals and pollution in our neighbourhoods that lead
to death and injury of workers and residents, and
the retardation of our population [1];
* Driven by greed to maximise profits at the cost to community health;
* Not taking responsibility for their pollution and use public platforms
to shift the environmental health debates to vehicle pollution and domestic
pollution;
* Undermining the community environmental health concerns by using employment
as a bargaining tool for their unsustainable and polluting developments,
and compromising community struggles by pushing industrial led social development
projects [2]; and
* Transferring dirty technology, such as incinerators to South Africa and
increasing the pollution burden on poor and vulnerable
communities
The national, provincial and local government is:-
* Failing the people by refusing to challenge MNC's for their polluting
practices [3];
* Allowing an industrial sector to develop that is holding our democracy
at ransom by its continued pollution and injury to free South Africans;
* Not giving meaning to its commitments of Section 24 of the Bill of Rights
in our Constitution which guarantees us an environment that is not harmful
to our health and well-being;
* Allowing the development of a sick and malformed society because children
are exposed to pollution daily in their learning as well as their living
environments [4];
* In collusion with industry to promote unsafe expansion of industrial development;
* Marginalizing communities due to improper consultation processes; and
* Not honouring the commitments of its international conventions such as
the Stockholm Convention by allowing the development of
incinerators which are a source of dioxin production.
Noting the above, we hereby call upon the conscience of more than 600 environmental
health academics, researchers, practitioners and government representatives,
and of those industrial people attending the Congress to:- * Ensure that
the outcomes of the Congress respond to the environmental justice calls
of the communities who live in situations where their health and well-being
are compromised as a result of poor industrial practices and environmental
governance;
* Urge participants to ensure that conclusions on research should be practical
and implementable and show the causal nexus, and that the research is reported
back to the people;
* Develop mechanisms to give meaning to the resolutions taken at this Congress,
in order that it does not become another talk-shop;
* Start undertaking research to highlight the impact upon vulnerable sectors
of our communities especially those with HIV and Aids and the young, who
cannot afford to be exposed to pollution that erodes our health;
* Create tools in order that community people as well as government can
hold polluters accountable for the destruction of healthy
environments, which will start dismantling the "cosy" relationship
between government and the polluter that results in the creation of a sick
population; and
* Create a space in the 9th Congress on Environmental Health where communities
can share their realities with those that choose to
research, govern and pollute us.
We call on the SA government:
- Stop polluting industrial practices;
- To ensure that community concerns raised in Parliament on
3-4 February 2004, is addressed in the reworking of the National
Environmental Management: Air Quality Bill [5].
Finally, we call on government and industry to pay reparations to those
affected and are suffering from the polluting practices of MNC's.
For more information:
S. (Bobby) Peek - 082 464 1 383, groundWork,
Desmond D,Sa - 083 982 6939, SDCEA
End notes:
[1] Sasol releases more than 400 000 tons of volatile organic
compounds into the environment annually at their plants in
Secunda; Shell/BP have leaked more than 1 million litres of
petrol under community houses and more than 26 tons of tetra
ethyl lead next to community houses (for more information
visit www.groundwork.org.za/airquality/airmonitoringreport2003.pdf
<http://www.groundwork.org.za/airquality/airmonitoringreport2003.pdf>)
[2] Instead of Shell/BP replacing their leaking pipelines
in south Durban, they are spending millions of rands on social
assessment, to find ways of spending their "social investment"
in the south Durban community.
[3] An example: the eThekwini (Durban) City Council unwillingness
to hold Shell/BP accountable for their continual violations
of the communities' environments. The eThekwini (Durban) Mayor
is central to this in calling for the reconsideration of the
legal action by his health department against Shell/BP.
[4] White et al, 2003 (University of Cape Town) and Robins
et al 2002 (Michigan University - USA), have done studies
in areas around the Caltex Refinery in Cape Town Refinery,
and the Engen and Shell/BP refineries in south Durban respectively
and have linked the pollution from these industries with impacts
on learners in local schools.
[5] Following are ten major shortcomings in the Bill that
need to be addressed urgently:
1. The Bill fails to focus on the improvement of health.
2. No timeframes are stipulated for the setting of ambient
air pollution standards or for the development of a national
framework for air quality management.
3. Emission standards, which minimise pollution that comes
out of the chimneys and pipes of industry, are not guaranteed.
4. Local municipalities bear the brunt of monitoring air pollution
and holding large multinational industries accountable for
their
air pollution.
5. If, by chance, the Minister does recognise that an area
needs special attention because of air pollution (i.e. is
declared a
priority area), it will take more than two years before action
is proposed to reduce the pollution, and even then the proposed
action may be contested by industry.
6. In these priority areas it is not guaranteed that industry
will have to comply with emission standards.
7. The licence to operate a facility does not require that
the authorities regulate against the very many industrial
incidents that result in abnormal pollution being dumped on
the community.
8. There is no specific information system developed to collect
information to understand and monitor industrial pollution.
9. The Bill allows polluting industries that currently have
temporary, conditional licences, to convert these into final
licences
without changing their polluting technology.
10. The Minister may allow exemptions to some industries to
allow them to pollute.
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