The Minister dismissed the appeal on 7 March 2016 but has amended and added certain conditions to the authorisation, including a climate change impact assessment, the first for South Africa. Thabametsi Power Project has been given six months to conduct a climate change impact assessment and a palaeontological impact assessment before the project can start.
ELA, together with partner organisation groundWork and community networks in the Vaal, the Highveld and KwaZulu-Natal, argue that energy from renewable sources should be prioritised over coal-fired power because of coal’s detrimental impact on the environment and human health.
Although the Minister’s acknowledgement that the climate impacts of coal-fired power generation must be assessed is a significant victory, CER has a number of concerns about the decision. These include:
CER will write to the Minister on ELA’s behalf, requesting clarification on these issues, and ELA will then evaluate whether to challenge the appeal decision in court.
Although the law requires a comprehensive assessment of all impacts of a proposed development, climate change impacts are rarely given adequate consideration - despite their importance on both a national and global level. ELA’s appeal argued that climate change impacts are much broader than merely a calculation of the project’s expected greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions - consideration must also be given to the impact that the project will have on already-limited water resources and land productivity, which will worsen because of climate change.
The Thabametsi power station is one of eleven proposed privately owned coal-fired power plants (independent power producers (IPPs)) which have, or are expected to submit bids to sell electricity to Eskom under the Coal Baseload Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme (CBLIPPPP). ELA, groundWork and the South Durban Community Environmental Alliance have launched appeals against two other proposed IPPs, namely KiPower in Mpumalanga and Colenso in KZN. The outcomes of these appeals are awaited.
A new coal-fired power station requires multiple regulatory approvals, including an environmental authorisation (often incorporating a waste management licence), an atmospheric emission licence and a water use licence.