Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 425South Africa
Tetra4 (Pty) Ltd v National Energy Regulator and Another (60924/21) [2025] ZAGPPHC 425 (2 May 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Tetra4 (Pty) Ltd v National Energy Regulator and Another (60924/21) [2025] ZAGPPHC 425 (2 May 2025)
Tetra4 (Pty) Ltd v National Energy Regulator and Another (60924/21) [2025] ZAGPPHC 425 (2 May 2025)
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sino date 2 May 2025
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO.:
60924/21
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED: NO
Date: 2 May 2025
Signature: E van der
Schyff
In the matter between:
TETRA4
(PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
THE
NATIONAL ENERGY REGULATOR
First Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF MINERAL RESOURCES AND ENERGY
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
Van der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant, Tetra 4 (Pty) Ltd
(“Tetra4”), approached the court seeking a declarator on
the regulatory reach or proper
scope and ambit of the Gas Act 48 of
2001 (“the
Gas Act&rdquo
;). The specific declarators sought in
the notice of motion read as follows:
“
1.
declaring that the licensing
provisions of the
Gas Act 48 of 2001
do not apply to any of the
production activities and incidental activities related thereto, as
authorised under a Production Right
in respect of petroleum (as
defined) and granted in terms of
section 84
of the
Mineral and
Petroleum Resources Development Act 28 of 2002
;
2.
declaring that the Applicant does not require a licence in terms of
section 15(1)(b)
of the
Gas Act for
the operation of its production
plant, including the liquefaction plant constructed or to be
constructed for its Virginia Gas Project;
3.
declaring that the Applicant does not require a licence in terms of
section 15(1)(c)
of the
Gas Act for
the trading in gas outside of the
Piped Gas Industry.”
[2]
When the matter was heard, Tetra4 submitted
a draft order wherein it seeks additional consequential relief in
that the following
NERSA licences are sought to be set aside:
a)
Licence Number G[...] for the purpose of
operating a gas liquefaction facility;
b)
Licence Number G[...]2 for the purpose of
operating a gas storage facility; and
c)
Licence Number G[...]3 for the purpose of
trading in gas.
[3]
The application primarily raises the issue
of the interpretation of the
Gas Act.
[4
]
The first respondent, the National Energy
Regulator of South Africa (“NERSA”) opposes the
application.
Factual matrix
[5]
The factual matrix underpinning this
application is, for the most part, common cause. Tetra4 sets out the
following common cause
facts:
a)
On 20 September 2012, a production right
for petroleum was granted to Tetra4 in terms of section 84 of the
Mineral and Petroleum
Resources Development Act 28 of 2002 (the
MPRDA). The production right was duly executed and registered. It
entitles Tetra4 to
produce or extract petroleum, which by definition
includes natural gas such as coal bed methane from which helium is
later separated;
b)
Within its production area, Tetra4 makes
use of a closed-loop gas-gathering network of pipelines to deliver
the gas from the wells
of its production area to its production
plant;
c)
The production plant is located within the
production area and includes a liquefaction process;
d)
The production facility is not connected to
the distribution infrastructure of the Piped Gas Industry;
e)
In the production process, helium is
separated from the methane gas through a cryogenic liquefaction and
distillation process. In
the process, both helium and methane are
liquefied.
[6]
NERSA provided additional facts that it
regards as relevant, that is likewise common cause:
a)
Tetra4 drilled four exploration and
production wells;
b)
Tetra4 installed gas gathering pipelines to
collect gas and send it to its gas processing facility in one of the
wells;
c)
The gas is cleaned and prepared for
compression in the gas processing facility;
d)
From there, the gas is sent to a compressor
station where it is compressed and filled into Compressed Natural Gas
(CNG) cylinders.
The CNG cylinders are then transported by trucks to
the customers’ sites, where gas is measured and then injected
into the
customers’ buses through a pipeline.
[7]
It is common cause that Tetra4 neither
distributes, nor transports, nor transmits bulk gas by pipeline to
points of ultimate consumption
or to reticulation systems. Collected
mixed gas flow in the Tetra4 system of closed-loop gas-gathering
pipelines from the wells
in its production area to its production
plant, which is located within its production area.
The parties’
respective contentions
[8]
Tetra4 commences its argument from the
viewpoint that the
Gas Act regulates
a national grid of pipelines for
the distribution of hydrocarbon gas to consumers, hence the
downstream piped gas industry. Liquefaction
in this context is done
to transport gas economically and effectively in liquid form over
vast distances. Tetra4 submits that the
Gas Act is
thus not
applicable to the production of petroleum as an upstream activity
under an existing Production Right which was granted
in terms of the
MPRDA. Where the liquefaction process occurs as part of the
production process, it falls not under the piped gas
industry but the
petroleum extractive industry.
[9]
Tetra4 places heavy emphasis on the fact
that the methane gas produced is liquefied within a production plant
as part of upstream
production. The production plant is not connected
to the distribution infrastructure of the piped gas industry.
Ownership of what
Tetra4 describes as ‘the upstream petroleum
products (such as the methane gas) as well as any byproducts thereof
(such as
helium) remains with Tetra4 and is not traded, as per the
definition of trading in the
Gas Act, or
transferred during the
process of upstream production in the production area of Tetra4.
[10]
Tetra4 applied for and was granted a
licence under
section 15
of the
Gas Act for
its liquefaction
facilities. I pause to note that NERSA avers that the licence was
obtained for a storage facility. Tetra4 avers
that the licence was
applied for exclusively to comply with due diligence clauses in
investment contracts concluded with foreign
investors. Tetra4 was
under pressure to qualify for a foreign investment from the
Government of the United States of America. NERSA
was, however,
informed from the outset of Tetra4’s view that, apart from
section 28
thereof, the
Gas Act does
not apply to its production
activities, and that Tetra4 believes its operations do not fall under
NERSA's purview.
[11]
Tetra4 holds the view that all of its
production and incidental activities related thereto, under and in
terms of its production
right issued in terms of the MPRDA, fall
outside the scope, ambit, and field of application of the
Gas Act.
Regarding
its undisputed sale of methane gas, Tetra4 submits that the
gas it produces falls outside the definition of ‘gas’
contained
in the
Gas Act, and
that its sale operations do not fall
under the definition of ‘trading’ as defined in the
Gas
Act. Trading
is defined in the
Gas Act as
‘purchasing and
selling’ of gas and not ‘producing and selling’ as
Tetra4 is currently doing.
[12]
In its founding papers, Tetra4 identified
four issues, which it termed narrower issues, for determination:
a)
Whether the production plant of Tetra4,
together with its liquefaction plant and its closed-loop
gas-gathering network of pipelines
for the collection of the mixed
gas from the various wells in its production area falls within the
field of application of the
Gas Act;
b
)
Whether Tetra4 was required to obtain a
construction licence for its production plant in terms of
s 15(1)(a)
of the
Gas Act;
c)
Whether Tetra4 was required to obtain an
operational licence for its production plant in terms of
s 15(1)(b)
of the
Gas Act;
d
)
Whether Tetra4 is required to obtain a
trading licence for the products (methane and/or helium) as produced
in its production plant
in terms of
section 15(1)(c)
of the
Gas Act
where
those products are not supplied to the national grid under the
custodianship of NERSA, as Gas Regulator.
[13]
NERSA submitted that the court should
exercise its discretion against granting any of the declaratory
orders Tetra4 seeks. NERSA
avers that Tetra4 solicits legal advice
from the court, since Tetra4 does not, in its papers, seek the review
and setting aside
of the licences granted. These licences, NERSA
contends, valid or not, will remain in place and have legal
consequences for a period
of 25 years unless revoked by NERSA, or set
aside by a court in proceedings for judicial review.
[14]
NERSA contends that on a proper
interpretation of the
Gas Act and
in light of the common cause facts,
the activities for which Tetra4 has been licenced by NERSA are
subject to regulation under
the
Gas Act. There
are many statutes that
grant various regulators concurrent jurisdiction to regulate the same
or similar matters.
[15]
NERSA submits that the only issue for
determination arising from the pleaded case, having regard to the
existing licences and the
absence of a review application, is whether
Tetra4’s construction and operation of its liquefaction
facility, storage and
transportation of gas, as well as its trading
activities in gas fall within the ambit of the
Gas Act. NERSA
contends that a licence was granted for a storage facility because
the compression aspect and operation of storage facilities by
Tetra4
can be described as midstream activities.
[16]
NERSA claims that it does not licence the
production and processing of gas as upstream activities, since these
activities fall within
the domain of the Petroleum Agency of South
Africa. NERSA contends that the operation of the CNG and liquefaction
facilities falls
within its regulatory purview. The proximity of a
liquefaction facility to production facilities is irrelevant. NERSA
avers:
“
Tetra4
produces gas and cleans it. This is regulated as an upstream activity
under PASA. However, the gas is produced with the sole
intention to
be taken to the market for sale and this is where NERSA gets
involved. The fact that the processing facility is located
next to
the liquefaction facility does not make the latter an upstream
activity that should not be licenced by NERSA.”
[17]
NERSA contends that Tetra4 stores the gas
it sells in its CNG cylinders. By selling gas, NERSA avers, Tetra4
trades in gas.
[18]
NERSA denies that a connection to the
national pipeline grid is an essential requirement for the
Gas Act to
find application. NERSA notes that the oil and gas industries have
generally used various types of pipelines since the inception
of
their piped-gas businesses. These include gathering pipelines, feeder
pipelines, transmission pipelines, and distribution pipelines.
Each
of these different types of pipelines falls within the dictionary
meaning of a ‘pipe’ and all are used in the
transportation of gas.
Preliminary remarks
[19]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal made it clear that when interpreting a
statute, the factual circumstances of a case have no bearing
on the
analysis.
[1]
In the current
matter, NERSA disputes the need to engage in the interpretative
exercise. NERSA contends that Tetra4 did not seek
any consequential
relief in its founding papers, only declaratory relief. NERSA
contends that the issue on which declaratory relief
is sought is
academic because Tetra4 is currently the holder of licences issued in
terms of the
Gas Act.
[20
]
NERSA submits that the relief sought in the
notice of motion does not amount to a review application. Tetra4 did
not, in the notice
of motion, seek the setting aside of the decision
to grant the licences. NERSA submits that the additional relief
sought when the
matter was heard should not be considered, as it was
not included in the original relief requested. Tetra4 contends that
the relief
subsequently sought is consequential relief that flows
naturally from a finding that the scope of the
Gas Act is
to be
limited in accordance with the interpretation proposed by Tetra4.
[21]
This issue requires the court to revisit
the legal principles applicable when declaratory relief is
considered.
When will a court
consider granting declaratory relief?
[22]
In
Cordiant
Trading CC v Daimler Chrysler Financial Services (Pty) Ltd
[2]
Jafta J said of section 19(1)(a)(iii) of the Supreme Court Act 59 of
1959, the predecessor to
section 21(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act
10 of 2013
, that:
“
Although
the existence of a dispute between the parties is not a prerequisite
for the exercise of the power conferred upon the High
Court by the
subsection, at least there must be interested parties on whom the
declaratory order would be binding. The applicant
in a case such as
the present must satisfy the court that he/she is a person interested
in an “existing, future or contingent
right or obligation”
and noting more is required.”
[23]
When
an applicant has satisfied the court that they are a person, natural
or juristic, interested in an ‘existing, future,
or contingent
right or obligation’, the court must decide whether the case is
a proper one for the exercise of the discretion
conferred upon it.
[3]
[24]
While
the absence of an existing dispute is not an absolute bar to the
grant of a declaratory order, a court may decline to grant
such an
order if it regards the question raised before it as hypothetical,
abstract or academic.
[4]
[25]
In
Clear
Enterprises (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Services and Others
[5]
the Supreme Court of Appeal opined that the interpretative exercise
that stood to be undertaken if the declaratory relief was to
be
considered, did not concern a ‘discrete point of statutory
construction’ but that it would be inextricably linked
to the
facts. Thus, the court held ‘absent an undisputed factual
substratum, it would be extremely difficult to define the
limits of
the declaratory relief that should issue’ (
sic.)
[6]
In
Radio
Pretoria v Chairman, Independent Communications Authority of South
Africa
[7]
reiterated that courts-
‘
do
not give advice gratuitously. They decide real disputes and do not
speculate or theorise… Furthermore, statutory enactments
are
to be applied to or interpreted against particular facts and disputes
and not in isolation.’
[26]
In
Geldenhuys
& Neethling v Beuthin
[8]
Innes CJ observed-
“
After
all, Courts of Law exist for the settlement of concrete controversies
and actual infringements of rights, not to pronounce
upon abstract
questions or to advise upon differing contentions, however
important.”
[27]
The mere fact that existing licences have
been granted to Tetra4 does not mean that there is no ongoing dispute
between the parties,
as evidenced by the consequential relief now
expressly sought by Tetra4. This aspect of the application will be
revisited below.
However,
section 21(1)(c)
of the
Superior Courts Act
10 of 2013
explicitly provides that the court can, in its discretion,
enquire into and determine any ‘existing, future or contingent
right or obligation, notwithstanding that the interested person who
seeks the relief, ‘cannot claim any relief consequential
upon
the determination’. Where consequential relief is claimed in
addition to seeking declaratory relief, it indicates a
live or
existing dispute between the parties; however, it is not a
jurisdictional requirement for granting declaratory relief.
[28]
Determining the scope and ambit of the
regulatory regime embodied in the
Gas Act against
the factual matrix
of the application is a question of law that stands to be determined
without regard to the specific facts of
Tetra4’s situation,
although the application of this interpretation will have a direct
impact on Tetra4. The declaratory
relief sought will define the
parties’ rights regarding the legal question that underpins
this application and state the
existing legal situation. The
affidavits reveal the existence of a genuine dispute that is not
theoretical or abstract. NERSA has
an interest in opposing the
declarator sought, and this ironically supports Tetra4’s
submission that this case meets the
requirement for declaratory
relief to be granted. The declaration will have a practical effect
once it is granted, as it will clarify
a pre-existing position in
delineating the regulatory ambit of the
Gas Act and
determining the
parties’ rights and the limits thereof in terms of the Act. A
declaration will guarantee certainty and accountability.
In the
circumstances and having regard to the parties’ relationship,
it will not only amount to presenting an answer to a
hypothetical
question of law.
Determining the scope
and regulatory reach of the
Gas Act
Interpretation
guidelines
[29]
The principles that courts apply when
interpreting statutes, as well as the process through which they
apply these principles, reflect
the constitutional relationship
between the courts and the other branches of government. It is the
court’s role to make legally
binding decisions regarding the
interpretation of statutes when disputes arise. Whenever the court is
called upon to interpret
legislation, it calls to the fore the
constitutionally entrenched relationship between the legislative and
executive branches of
government. The constitutional limits of
judicial power prohibit courts from writing or rewriting statutes and
set the permissible
bounds of interpretation. If there are omissions
or vacuums in a statute, rectification is the mechanism to remedy
such shortcomings.
The legislature must remedy any omissions, as the
court is not the drafter of legislation.
[30]
It
is trite that South African courts have moved away from a literal
interpretation of statutes to one where both the text and context
play a role, ‘even where the words to be construed are clear
and unambiguous’.
[9]
The
court’s task, within the permissible bounds of interpretation,
is to give effect to the purpose of the statute under
consideration.
Controversial provisions should thus be read in the context of the
statute as a whole, and the statute as a whole
should be read in the
historical context of the situation which led to its enactment.
[10]
[31]
Context
is multi-layered or multifaceted. An essential part, and the core
facet of the context within which any statute stands to
be
interpreted, is the constitutional imperative that legislation must
be interpreted in a manner that promotes the spirit, purport,
and
objects of the Bill of Rights.
[11]
Context is furthermore obtained through a reasoned assessment of the
broad purpose underlying a statute’s enactment. This
often
requires a consideration of the mischief the legislature sought to
address by enacting the specific statute. Legislative
history is thus
another source of relevant context.
[12]
Context is also provided by the content of the legislation as a
whole.
[32]
Context
can never be used or relied on to create a meaning that the language,
when viewed in context, is incapable of bearing.
[13]
This would be crossing the constitutional boundaries of
interpretation. Text and context play a unique yet co-determinative
role
in the interpretation process. Neither is predominant, but both
are elements of a unitary interpretative process. The clearer the
language used in the text and the more obvious its meaning in
accordance with the ordinary understanding of language, the less
the
influence of context in arriving at a conclusion. The more meanings
there are and the more finely balanced they are, the more
powerful
the influence of contextual factors will be.
[14]
The
Gas Act
[33
]
The
Gas Act was
assented to on 12 February
2002 and commenced on 1 November 2005. It is proclaimed in the
preamble that the Act was promulgated
to:
a)
promote the orderly development of the
piped gas industry,
b)
establish a national regulatory framework;
c)
establish a National Gas Regulator as the
custodian and enforcer of the national regulatory framework, and
d)
provide for matters connected therewith.
[34]
The
definition section of the
Gas Act commences
with a disclaimer. The
meaning attributed to specific words or phrases in the
Gas Act bears
the particular meaning contained in the definition section, ‘unless
the context indicates otherwise.’
[15]
[35]
Gas is defined as:
“
all
hydrocarbon gases transported by pipeline, including natural gas,
artificial gas, hydrogen rich gas, methane rich gas, synthetic
gas,
coal bed methane gas, liquefied natural gas, compressed natural gas,
re-gasified liquefied natural gas, liquefied petroleum
gas or any
combination thereof.”
[36]
Other
relevant definitions are:
“
distribution
” means
the distribution of bulk gas supplies and the transportation thereof
by pipelines with a general operating pressure
of more than 2 bar
gauge and less than 15 bar gauge or by pipelines with such other
operating pressure as the National Energy Regulator
may permit
according to criteria prescribed by regulation to points of ultimate
consumption or to reticulation systems, or to both
points of ultimate
consumption and to reticulation systems, and any other activity
incidental thereto, and “distribute”
and
“distributing” have corresponding meanings.
“
liquefaction”
means
converting natural gas from a gaseous state to a liquid state;
“
mine”
means
“mine” as defined in the Minerals Act, 1991 (Act No.
31 of 1991) [the Minerals Act is Act 50 of 1991];
[16]
“
production”
means
the recovery, processing, treating and gathering of gas from wells in
the earth up to the boundary of the mine, or the manufacture
of
synthetic or artificial gas, or the manufacturing of any gases in the
refining process up to the boundary of the factory, and
any other
activity incidental thereto, and “
produce”
and “
producing”
have corresponding meanings;
“
re-gasification”
means
converting liquefied natural gas to a gaseous state at a
re-gasification plant;
“
storage”
means
the holding of gas as a service and any other activity incidental
thereto, but excludes storage of gas in pipelines which
are used
primarily for the transmission and distribution of gas;
“
trading”
means
the purchase and sale of gas as a commodity by any person and any
services associated therewith, excluding the construction
and
operation of transmission, storage, and distribution systems,
and “
trading services”
has
a corresponding meaning;
“
transmission”
means
the bulk transportation of gas by pipeline supplied between a source
of supply and a distributor, reticulator, storage company,
or
eligible customer, or any other activity incidental thereto, and
“
transmit”
and
“
transmitting”
have
corresponding meanings;
[37]
The objects of the Act, as captured in
section 2, are to –
“
(
a
)
promote the efficient, effective, sustainable and orderly development
and operation of gas transmission, storage, distribution,
liquefaction and re-gasification facilities and the provision of
efficient, effective and sustainable gas transmission, storage,
distribution, liquefaction, re-gasification and trading services;
(
b
)
facilitate investment in the gas industry;
(
c
)
ensure the safe, efficient, economic, and environmentally responsible
transmission, distribution, storage, liquefaction, and
re-gasification of gas;
(
d
)
promote companies in the gas industry that are owned or controlled by
historically disadvantaged South Africans by means of licence
conditions so as to enable them to become competitive;
(
e
)
ensure that gas transmission, storage, distribution, trading,
liquefaction and re-gasification services are provided on an
equitable
basis and that the interests and needs of all parties
concerned are taken into consideration;
(
f
)
promote skills among employees in the gas industry;
(
g
)
promote employment equity in the gas industry;
(
h
)
promote the development of competitive markets for gas and gas
services;
(
i
)
facilitate gas trade between the Republic and other countries; and
(
j
)
promote access to gas in an affordable and safe manner.”
[38]
The
Gas Act ascribes
certain functions to
the Gas Regulator in
section 4
thereof. This include the issue of
licences for (i) the construction of gas transmission, storage,
distribution, liquefaction and
re-gasification facilities; (ii) the
conversion of infrastructure into transmission, storage,
distribution, liquefaction and re-gasification
facilities; (iii)
operation of gas transmission, storage, distribution, liquefaction
and re-gasification facilities; and (iv) trading
in gas. The Gas
Regulator is also tasked with promoting the optimal use of available
gas resources and to promote competition in
the gas industry.
[39]
Section 15 of the Act prescribes the
activities that require a licence. The section provides that –
“
(1) No
person may without a licence issued by the Gas Regulator—
(
a
)
construct gas transmission, storage, distribution, liquefaction
and
re-gasification facilities or convert infrastructure into such
facilities;
(
b
)
operate gas transmission, storage, distribution, liquefaction
or re-
gasification facilities; or
(
c
)
trade in gas.”
[40]
Section 28 of the Act requires that the
owner of an operation involving the production or importation of gas,
a person engaged in
the transmission of gas for that person’s
exclusive use, and small biogas projects in rural communities not
connected to
the national pipeline grid, must register their
operations with the Gas Regulator.
Discussion
[41]
Oil
and gas are major industries in the energy market, playing a
significant role in the global economy as the world’s primary
fuel sources. South Africa has initiated the transition from a fossil
fuel-based electricity generation system to one based on
renewable
sources, aiming to meet its greenhouse gas emission reduction
goals.
[17]
The Integrated
Resource Plan (IRP) is a government-developed plan that attempts to
forecast the elements needed for power generation
in the future.
Gas-fueled dispatchable energy generation is considered to be a
significant element of this forecast.
[18]
Currently, natural gas contributes 3% to the total energy supply in
the country.
[19]
Gas can play
a significant role in the energy mix in the sectors of electricity
production (gas to power) and transportation (gas-to-liquid,
compressed natural gas, and liquefied natural gas).
[20]
[42]
In
this matter, both parties explained that the gas value chain in South
Africa consists of three value chain components: upstream,
midstream,
and downstream.
[21]
The
exploration for and production of gas constitute the upstream
component. The midstream component's role is to transport and
store
gas. The downstream component is responsible for distributing gas to
end-users. Both parties rely on the differentiation
between these
components to substantiate their respective views. Tetra4 essentially
argues that liquefaction in their production
area occurs as part of
the production phase and is an upstream activity, not regulated by
NERSA but by the Petroleum Agency of
South Africa. NERSA argues that
liquefaction is a midstream activity irrespective of whether it
occurs in the production area.
[43]
It
is declared in the preamble to the
Gas Act that
the Act was
promulgated to promote the orderly development of the piped gas
industry.
[22]
The term
‘industry’ broadly denotes an organised economic activity
concerned with manufacturing, extracting and processing
raw
materials.
[23]
The gas
industry, in general, is thus concerned with the exploration,
extraction, refining, transportation, storage, and distribution
of
gas.
[44]
This
raises the question of what the ‘piped gas industry’
comprises. To give meaning to the term ‘piped gas industry’,
and simultaneously determining the regulatory scope of the
Gas Act,
it
is informative and relevant that the definition of gas in the
Gas
Act defines
the term gas as all hydrocarbon gases transported by
pipeline.
[24]
[45]
The definition of the term' gas’ in
the
Gas Act limits
its meaning to a distinct class of compounds, to
wit, hydrocarbon gases. This definition excludes any noble gas from
the ambit
of the Act. As it currently reads, the
Gas Act does
not
provide the regulatory context within which the transmission,
storage, distribution, liquefaction, re-gasification, and trade
of
non-hydrocarbon gases like noble gases are regulated. Helium is a
noble gas, and this disposes of the question of whether helium
is
regulated in terms of the
Gas Act.
[46
]
Different types and phases of hydrocarbon
gases are then listed in the definition to emphasise the broad
application matrix of the
Gas Act as
it pertains to hydrocarbon
gases. The hydrocarbon gas in question can be natural gas, artificial
gas, or synthetic gas. This clearly
indicates that all hydrocarbon
gases fall within the definition of the term ‘gas',
irrespective of whether the hydrocarbon
gas in question is naturally
occurring, produced artificially, or synthetically. The composition
of hydrocarbon gas is irrelevant
for the purposes of the definition
of gas. Hence, it includes hydrogen rich, methane rich or coal bed
methane gas. The specific
phase or state of a hydrocarbon gas when
converted from its gaseous state to a liquefied state, or the
reduction of the hydrocarbon
gas volume, does not exempt it from the
scope of the
Gas Act. Hence
, the hydrocarbon gas is still defined as
a gas, whether it is a compressed gas, liquefied natural gas,
re-gasified liquefied gas,
or liquefied petroleum gas.
[47]
The definition, however, does not end with
the scientific identification of the substance to which the
Gas Act
relates
. It adds an additional identifying characteristic to the
hydrocarbon gas regulated under the
Gas Act, namely
, its mode of
transportation.
[48]
By specifically defining the term ‘gas’
in relation to the substance's transportation method, irrespective of
its state
or form, the application field of the
Gas Act and
the Gas
Regulator’s regulatory ambit are limited to exclude upstream
production activities.
[49]
Production
refers to the recovery, processing, treating, and gathering of gas
from wells in the earth up to the boundary of the
mine, or the
production area.
[25]
The gas
is not static in this process, it flows through pipes. However, this
flowing or moving of the gas cannot be regarded as
the transportation
of gas since the gas is not transported by pipeline between a
supplier and another point of consumption or reticulation
across the
boundaries of the production area. NERSA’s submission that the
gas is transported by pipeline in Tetra4’s
production area,
hence meeting the requirement of ‘transported by pipeline’,
does not hold water if read in conjunction
with the definition of
production. It is insightful that a differentiation is made in
terminology used in the Gas Master Plan when
reference is made to
‘indigenous natural gas production’ on the one hand, and
‘the importation of natural gas,
in the form of piped gas and
LNG from neighbouring countries’.
[26]
The identification of gas transported in a pipeline by the usage of
the term ‘piped gas’ is acknowledged and confirmed
by
policymakers in the sector.
[50]
By referring to the piped gas industry and
limiting the meaning of the term gas to gas transported by pipeline,
the legislature
limited the application sphere of the
Gas Act to
the
midstream and downstream activities related to gas. This conclusion
is supported when regard is had to the definition of trading
as
contained in the
Gas Act. The
term is defined as the ‘buying
and selling’ of gas. The legislature clearly did not anticipate
a scenario where gas
would be produced and sold by the same entity.
[51]
This limited application scope of the
Gas
Act is
ascribed to the fact that the gas industry in South Africa, to
date, primarily comprises hydrocarbon gas transported by pipeline
from Mozambique. Until recently, all gas operations were linked to
the national pipeline grid. South Africa’s primary gas
supply
originated from the Pande and Temane fields in Mozambique and was
transported via the ROMPCO pipeline, jointly owned by
Sasol and the
governments of Mozambique and South Africa, to Sasol’s
facilities in Sasolburg and Secunda. Other national
pipelines are the
Lilly Pipeline owned by Transnet that carries methane-rich gas from
Sasol in Secunda to Durban with offtake points
in Newcastle,
Empangeni, Richards Bay, and Durban. Sasol owns and operates several
gas pipelines originating in Secunda, reaching
destinations such as
Johannesburg, Ekurhuleni, Pretoria, Sasolburg, and Emalahleni.
PetroSA owns a subsea pipeline to Mossel Bay.
The
Gas Act came
into
existence in this specific context. It has its genesis in an
environment where gas production occurred elsewhere, and the
regulatory authority was only concerned with regulating the
transmission, storage and distribution of gas in the country.
[52]
The conclusion reached herein is further
supported if regard is had to
section 4
of the
Gas Act. Section
4(a)
obliges the Gas Regulator to issue licences for the construction of
transmission, storage, distribution, liquefaction, and
re-gasification facilities. No mention is made of production and the
processes incidental thereto.
Section 4(b)
, on the other hand,
prescribes that the Gas Regulator must gather information relating to
the production, transmission, storage,
distribution, trading,
liquefaction, and re-gasification of gas. Production is specifically
included in
section 4(b).
Production and liquefaction are listed as
separate activities. This supports the view that liquefaction,
regulated in the
Gas Act, is
the process of converting natural gas to
a liquid to facilitate its transportation in a pipeline. It stands
apart from, and does
not refer to, the production of gas where the
liquid gas is a byproduct in the production process of e.g., helium.
[53]
The
legislature is clearly aware of the limited application scope of the
Gas Act, a
fact evinced by the publication of the Gas Amendment
Bill.
[27]
This Bill proposes
to amend the
Gas Act by
amending and inserting certain definitions,
among others, to provide for the orderly development of the gas
industry and to enhance
the national regulatory framework of the gas
industry. Notably, any reference to the ‘piped’ gas
industry is done away
with in this Bill. The definition of the term
gas is proposed to be amended, among other, by deleting the phrase
‘transported
by pipeline’. The term ‘distribution’
is proposed to be redefined not to refer exclusively to the
distribution
and transportation of bulk gas supplies by pipeline, but
to include transportation by pipeline as a possible transportation
mechanism.
[54]
In the result, I hold that the production
of gas and all activities incidental thereto are excluded from the
regulatory ambit of
the
Gas Act, save
for the requirement to register
production operations with the Gas Regulator. NERSA is correct in
submitting that the legislative
framework of the petroleum extractive
industry, in principle, allows for other regulatory bodies to require
that licences be obtained
to authorise certain actions. The necessary
legislation must, however, be in place to empower regulatory
authorities to assert
regulatory power. In its current form, the
Gas
Act does
not empower the Gas Regulator to fulfill a dual regulatory
function as far as the production of gas is concerned.
[55]
The
Gas Act only
finds application when gas
that was produced is transported by pipeline and supplied to a
distributor, reticulator, storage company,
or eligible consumer. As
far as helium is concerned, the Gas Regulator holds no regulatory
powers over the midstream and downstream
activities involving helium.
It is completely excluded from the Gas Regulator’s regulatory
reach.
[56]
Courts are called upon to interpret
legislation. Courts can, however, not step into the legislature’s
shoes to create legislation
where voids exist. This would be
overstepping the clear boundaries set by the principle of separation
of powers. If the legislature
intends to extend the
Gas Act’s
regulatory ambit and NERSA’s custodial responsibilities to the
gas production stage beyond requiring the registration of
production
operations, the legislation stands to be amended.
[57]
In the factual setting of the matter before
me, Tetra4 gathers, processes, and treats gas in the production area.
Through cryogenic
processing, the helium is separated from the
natural gas. The liquid methane is a byproduct of this cryogenic
processing, which
is integral to the production of helium. Tetra4’s
current operations do not fall under the purview of the Gas
Regulator.
[58]
In addition to the declarators sought,
Tetra4 seeks the setting aside of the licences it applied for and
that were issued by NERSA
under the
Gas Act. Tetra4
submits that the
setting aside of these licences is a consequence of a finding that
its activities are not regulated under the
Gas Act.
>
[59]
I disagree. Tetrta4 applied for the
licences because, on its own version, it was obliged to do so by its
funders and foreign investors.
The funders were not cited as parties
to this application. I have had no insight into the agreement
concluded between Tetra4 and
its funders. On the face of it, the
funders and foreign investors have a direct interest in an order
setting aside the licences.
I cannot grant an order setting aside the
licences in the absence of parties that ostensibly have an interest
in the matter.
[60]
In considering the determination of costs,
the general principle is that costs follow success. No case was made
out for costs to
be granted on a punitive scale. The issues involved
were complex, and both parties were represented by more than one
counsel.
ORDER
In
the result, the following declarators and order are granted:
1.
T
he licensing provisions of the
Gas Act 48
of 2001
do not apply to any of the production activities and
incidental activities related thereto, authorised under a Production
Right
in respect of petroleum (as defined) and granted in terms of
section 84
of the
Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act 28
of 2002
;
2.
The Applicant does not require a licence in terms
of
section 15(1)(b)
of the
Gas Act for
the operation of its
production plant, including the liquefaction plant constructed or to
be constructed for its Virginia Gas Project
as long as the
liquefaction facility is used during the production stage of gas;
3.
The Applicant does not require a licence in terms
of
section 15(1)(c)
of the
Gas Act for
the trading in gas outside of
the Piped Gas Industry;
4.
The First Respondent is to pay the costs of the application
on a
party and party scale. Such costs to include the costs of two counsel
on Scale C.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High
Court
Delivered: This
judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
For
the applicant:
Adv.
M. Oosthuizen SC
With:
Adv.
J. Rust SC
Instructed
by:
Faskens
Incorporated
For
the first respondent:
Adv.
N. Maenetjie SC
With:
Adv.
R. Tshetlo
Adv.
S. Mashiane
Instructed
by:
Cheadle,
Thompson & Haysom Incorporated
Date
of the hearing:
6
March 2025
Date
of judgment:
2 May
2025
[1]
Desert
Place Hotel Resort (Pty) Ltd v Northern Cape Gambling Board
2007
(3) SA 187
(SCA) at para [7].
[2]
2005
(6) SA 205
(SCA) at para [16].
[3]
Durban
City Council v Association of Building Societies
1942
AD 27
at 32,
Family
Benefit Friendly Society v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1994 (2) PH F43 (TPD), Association
for
Voluntary Sterilization of South Africa v Standard Trust Limited and
Others
(325/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 87
(7 June 2023) at para [10].
[4]
Association
for Voluntary Sterilization of South Africa v Standard Trust Limited
and Others, supra,
at
para [12],
West
Coast Rock Lobster Association and Others v Minister of
Environmental Affairs and Tourism and Others
[2011] 1 All SA 487
(SCA) at para [45].
[5]
[2011]
ZASCA 164
(SCA) at paras [16]-[19].
[6]
Clear
Enterprises (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Services, supra,
at
para [16].
[7]
2005
(1) SA 47
(SCA) at para [41].
[8]
1918
AD 426
at 441.
[9]
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism and Others
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004
(4) SA 490
(CC) at para
[90]
.
[10]
The
principle likewise finds application in other legal jurisdictions,
and was aptly verbalised by Lord Bingham in
R
(Quintavalle) v Secretary of State for Health
[2003] 2 AC 687
at paras [7] and [8] – referred to by Wallis M
‘Interpretation Before and After
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Edumeni Municipality
2012 4 SA 593
(SCA)’ PER/PELJ 2019 (22) 9.
[11]
S
39(2) of the Constitution.
[12]
Santam
Insurance Ltd v Taulor
1985
(1) SA 514
(A) 526-527B.
[13]
Wallis,
note 10, above, 15.
[14]
Note 10, above, 14.
[15]
S
1
of the
Gas Act.
[16
]
The
term, when used as a noun, is defined in the now repealed Minerals
Act 50 of 1991 -
“
mine”
means,
when—
(a)
used as a noun
(i)
any excavation in
the earth, including the portion under the sea or under other water
or in any tailings, as well as any borehole,
whether being worked or
not, made for the purpose of searching for or winning a mineral; or
(ii)
any other place
where a mineral deposit is being exploited,
including
the mining area and all buildings, structures, machinery, mine
dumps, access roads or objects situated on such area
and which are
used or intended to be used in connection with such searching,
winning or exploitation or for the processing of
such mineral:
Provided that if two or more such excavations, boreholes or places,
or excavations, boreholes and places, are being
worked in
conjunction with one another, they shall be deemed to comprise one
mine unless the Director: Mineral Development notifies
the owner
thereof in writing that such excavations, boreholes or places, or
excavations, boreholes and places, comprise two or
more mines’
[17]
See
Clark, S., Van Niekerk, J., Petrie, J., and McGregor C. ‘The
role of natural gas in facilitating the transition to renewable
electricity generation in South Africa’
Journal
of Energy in South Africa
2022, vol 33:3.
[18]
Integrated
Resource Plan Department of Energy 2011 – 2019. Each iteration
of the IRP mentions the use of gas for dispatchable
energy
generation. In the 2023 IRP it is reiterated that natural gas has
emerged as a critical part of South Africa’s future
energy
mix.
[19]
The
South African Energy Sector Report 2023, Department Mineral
resources and Energy.
[20]
Mokrani,
T. ‘The Role of Natural Gas in the South African Energy Mix’
Chemical
Engineering Transactions
2022, vol 96.
[21]
A
similar explanation is set out in the Gas Master Plan published in
Government Gazette No. 50569 on 26 April 2024, 48.
[22]
The
various aspects listed in the preamble should be read in conjunction
with one another. Read in seclusion, the second declaration
in the
preamble that the
Gas Act was
promulgated to establish a national
regulatory framework, is incomplete and does not make sense. If the
question is asked, what
national regulatory framework is to be
established in terms of the Act, the answer is found in the first
declaration –
a national regulatory framework for the piped
gas industry.
[23]
Collins
English Dictionary. The term is defined in the Cambridge Dictionary
as ‘the companies and activities involved in
the process of
producing goods for sale, especially in a factory or specialised
area.’ The term can also refer to a specific
type of business.
[24]
Section
1
of the
Gas Act commences
with a disclaimer ‘unless the
context indicates otherwise’. This is the context within which
the term is used in
the Act.
[25]
S1
of the
Gas Act.
[26
]
Gas
Master Plan,
supra
72.
[27]
B-2023,
published in Government Gazette No. 50009 of 19 January 2024.
sino noindex
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