Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 401South Africa
Ingrain SA Proprietary Ltd v Olowa N.O and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 401; 8555/2022 (7 June 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ingrain SA Proprietary Ltd v Olowa N.O and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 401; 8555/2022 (7 June 2023)
Ingrain SA Proprietary Ltd v Olowa N.O and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 401; 8555/2022 (7 June 2023)
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sino date 7 June 2023
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HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case No. 8555/2022
REPORTABLE: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
DATE:
2023-06-07
In the matter between:
INGRAIN
SA PROPRIETARY LTD
Applicant
And
ABIMBOLA
OLOWA N.O.
First
Respondent
GAUTENG
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENT,
AGRICULTURE
AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT
Second
Respondent
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL FOR
ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT, ENVIRONMENT,
AGRICULTURE
AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT,
GAUTENG
Third
Respondent
MINISTER
OF FORESTRY, FISHERIES AND
THE
ENVIRONMENT
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
PA VAN NIEKERK, AJ
[1]
Applicant is a company with limited liability which conducts business
as a major food producer
and is involved in agri-processing.
Applicant launched an application to review a Compliance Notice
issued by the First Respondent
and after initially opposing the
matter by filing a Notice of intention to Oppose dated 10 March 2022,
the matter was settled between
the parties and a draft consent order
was prepared which this Court is requested to sanction by making such
draft order an order
of Court.
[2]
In terms of the draft order, the parties consented to an order the
effect of which would be that
certain decisions of First Respondent,
Second Respondent and Fourth Respondent be reviewed, declared
unlawful and set aside as
a result of which the order would result in
a judgment
in
rem
[1]
and
a Court that sanctions an agreement which would result in a judgment
in
rem
is required to provide reasons for doing so.
[2]
I am satisfied that the draft order presented by agreement between
the parties should be sanctioned by this Court and my
reasons follow
infra
.
THE PARTIES:
[3]
First Respondent is a Grade 1 Environmental Manager Inspector
employed by Second Respondent and
First Respondent issued the
impugned notice in such official capacity.
[4]
Second Respondent is the Gauteng Department of Environment,
Agriculture & Rural Development
who is
inter alia
responsible for ensuring compliance with the Air Quality Act referred
to
infra
.
[5]
Third Respondent is the Member of the Executive Council for Economic
Development, Environment,
Agriculture and Rural Development, Gauteng
who was joined in the application after dismissing an objection to
the impugned notice.
[6]
Fourth Respondent is The Minister of Forestry, Fisheries & the
Environment who is responsible
for implementation of the legislative
scheme created to ensure Enforcement and Compliance with
Environmental Laws and Regulations.
THE IMPUGNED DECISIONS:
[7] On 1
March 2021 First Respondent caused the delivery of a notice to
Applicant, the heading of
which reads:
“
NOTICE
OF INTENTION TO ISSUE A COMPLIANCE NOTICE IN TERMS OF SECTION 31L OF
THE NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT ACT, 1998 (ACT
107 OF 1998)
(‘NEMA’) IN RESPECT OF AN UNLAWFUL CONDUCT OF A LISTED
ACTIVITY IN TERMS OF S21 OF THE NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL
AIR QUALITY
ACT, (NO. 39 OF 2004), NEMAQA AT No. 1[...]MEYERTON, 1960 (‘THE
SITE’).”
[8] In
the notice
supra
Applicant was informed that First Respondent
has reasonable grounds to believe that Applicant is contravening the
provisions of
Government Notice (GN) 893 of 21 November 2013, based
on the following reasons as quoted from the Notice:
“
2.
I have reasonable grounds for believing that you have contravened the
provision of Government Notice
(GN) 893 of 22 November 2013
promulgated in terms of NEMAQA.
3.
I have reached this opinion because of the following:
3.1 The
site inspection conducted by the EMIs from this Department on 6
October 2020.
3.2 The
email correspondence with the facility representative dated, 23
November 2020 confirming the capacity
and concentration of the
Hydrochloric Acid kept on site.
4.
Based on the findings of the site inspection dated 06 October 2020,
the Department is of
the view that this activity is been undertaken
illegally without a Provisional Atmospheric Emission License of an
Atmospheric Emissions
License.”
[9] In
paragraph 5 of the notice
supra
, the listed activity in terms
of S21 of the National Environmental Management Air Quality Act, No.
39 of 2004 (NEMAQA) is described
as follows:
“
Category
7: Inorganic Chemical Industry,
•
Sub-category
7.2: Production of Acids.
•
Description: the
production, bulk handling and/or use in manufacturing of
hydrofluoric, hydrochloric, nitric and sulphuric acid
(including
oleum) in concentration exceeding 10%. Process in which oxides
of Sulphur are emitted through the production of
acid Sulphites of
alkalis or alkaline earths or through the production of liquids
Sulphur or Sulphurous acid.
•
Application: all
installations producing, handling and/or using more than 100 tons per
annum of any of the listed compounds (excluding
metallurgical
processes related activities regulated under category).”
[10] Under the
heading of “
finding of non-compliance
” in such
notice it is stated:
“
Tongaat
Hullet is handling 300 tons of Hydrochloric acid in a concentration
ranging between 30 – 33%
.”
[11] The Applicant
was afforded an opportunity to make representations to First
Respondent within 21 calendar
days after receipt of the notice should
the Applicant be of the view that there are compelling and
substantial reasons for the
First Respondent not to exercise the
First Respondent’s powers in terms of Section 31L to issue a
Compliance Notice which
would require the Applicant to
inter alia
cease with all activities on site that are listed in terms of
Section 21 of NEMAQA until such time that the applicable Atmospheric
Emission Licence (AEL) has been obtained from the competent
authority.
[12] The notice
supra
further draws the Applicant’s attention to the
following:
“
8.
Please note that although it is illegal to conduct a listed activity
without a provisional/final
Atmospheric Emission License (AEL), in
terms of Section 22A of the NEM: AQA, you may submit an application
to the relevant competent
authority for rectification of the unlawful
conduct of this listed activity
.”
[13] In response to
the notice
supra
, of 11 March 2021 Applicant submitted written
representations to Second Respondent requesting that a Compliance
Notice not be issued
and for that request relied on the assertion
that the Applicant’s use of hydrochloric acid does not
constitute a listed activity
falling within the ambit of section 21
of AQA and as a result of which the Applicant is entitled to continue
with its activities
utilising hydrochloric acid without an AEL.
In the written representations, Applicant explained to Second
Respondent the
following:
[13.1] Applicant does not engage
in the primary or secondary production of hydrochloric acid.
Applicant explained to
Second Respondent that:
“
Primary
production means the intentionally manufacturing of hydrochloric
acid, while secondary production is the recovery of hydrochloric
acid
(regeneration) by industries that use hydrochloric acid in a process
and recover waste hydrogen chloride or hydrochloric acid
to re-us
e”
.
[13.2] At the Applicant’s
Mill, hydrochloric acid is used as a reagent in agri-processing and
is added in liquid form
as a reagent to modify maize starch molecules
in the production of modified starches and to convert maize starch to
acid glucose;
[13.3] Ingrain is neither
engaged in the inorganic chemicals industry nor does it produce
hydrochloric acid.
[14] In summary,
Applicant informed the Second Respondent that the use of hydrochloric
acid in the Applicant’s
processes does not fall under the
definition of a “
listed activity”
in terms of
Section 21 of AQA, as Applicant neither manufacture or recover such
acid in the processes where Applicant use such
chemicals.
[15] Notwithstanding
the aforesaid, on 5 May 2021 First Respondent caused a Compliance
Notice to be served on
deponent to the Founding Affidavit who is the
Mill Manager of Applicant, the heading of which compliance notice
reads as follows:
“
COMPLIANCE
NOTICE IN TERMS OF SECTION 31L OF THE NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL
MANAGEMENT ACT, 1998 (ACT 107 OF 1998) (‘NEMA’)
IN
RESPECT OF AN ACTIVITY LISTED IN TERMS OF S21 OF THE NATIONAL
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT AIR QUALITY ACT, (NO. 39 OF 2004), NEMAQA
AT
No. 1[...] MEYERTON, 1960 (‘THE SITE’).
”
[16] In the
aforesaid Compliance Notice, First Respondent deals with the
representations received by Applicant
referred to in paragraph [13]
supra
, by quoting from the listed activity under category 7,
sub-category 7.2 the following:
“
The
description of the activity; the production ‘
bulk
handling’
and or use in
manufacturing of hydrofluoric, ‘hydrochloric’, nitric and
sulphuric (including oleum)
in
concentration exceeding 10%
.
Ingrain SA handles hydrochloric acid that has concentration ranging
between 30 - 33%.
The above
applies to ‘all installations producing, handling and or
using
more than 100 tons per annum
of
any of the listed compounds (excluding metallurgical processes
related activities regulated under category 4)’
.
Ingrain SA
handle
300 tonnes
of Hydrochloric acid
per annum. Henceforth, it fit in the ambit of this sub-category.”
[17] In terms of the
aforesaid Compliance Notice Applicant was required to cease all
activities on site that are
listed in terms of Section 21 of NEMAQA
within 24 hours until such time that the applicable AEL has been
obtained from the competent
authority. Applicant was further
advised that a failure to comply with the aforesaid notice may
attract a fine not exceeding
R10 million or imprisonment for a period
not exceeding 10 years or both such fine and such imprisonment.
[18] On 18 may 2021
Applicant addressed a written notice an intention to file an
objection to the Compliance Notice
and requested that the Compliance
Notice be suspended pending resolution of the objection. It was
again recorded that the
Applicant’s mill manufactures food
products, is not part of the inorganic chemicals industry, does not
manufacture any acid
at all, and that the hydrochloric acid utilised
by Applicant at its mill is used as an ingredient in the manufacture
of food products.
Further facts were recorded intending to
confirm minimal environmental impact on the use of hydrochloric acid
by the Applicant.
[19] Thereafter on
21 May 2021 Applicant filed a formal objection to the Compliance
Notice in terms of Section
31M of NEMA (“
the objection
”).
The objection was accompanied by a legal opinion which outlined why
the activities conducted at the Applicant’s
Mill did not
constitute listed activities requiring the Applicant to obtain an
EIL, and this legal opinion
inter alia
dealt with the
ambiguity of the first sentence in sub-category 7.2 of Government
Notice 893 which reads:
“
The
production, bulk handling and or use in manufacturing of
hydrofluoric, ‘hydrochloric’, nitric and sulphuric acid
(including oleum) in concentration exceeding 10%.
"
[20] The legal
opinion
inter alia
stated that, if the rules of statutory
interpretation are applied and the context in which it appears is
taken into account, particularly
the heading of category 7 of the
listed notice “
Inorganic Chemicals Industry
” and
the sub-heading of sub-category 7.2 “
Production of acids
”,
it is clear that the listed activity is intended to regulate the
production or manufacturing of the acids referred to in
the listing
notice. Thus, according to the legal opinion, the use of hydrochloric
acid in the manufacture of food products does
not trigger the listed
activity in sub-category 7.2 and there was therefore no basis for the
Compliance Notice issued by First
Respondent as the manufacturing of
food products does not amount to “
production”
of
the chemicals as envisaged in Category 7 and sub-category 7.2 of the
listed notice of activities.
[21] On 9 November
2021 Third Respondent dismissed the objection on the grounds that the
hydrochloric acid which
is handled at the Applicant’s Mill “
is
in exceedance of the 10% threshold
” set in activity 7.2 of
the listed notice as a result of which Third Respondent concluded
that Applicant is not exempt from
the requirement to obtain an AEL.
In conclusion the aforesaid letter reads:
“…
accordingly
decided to dismiss your objection and uphold the Department’s
decision to issue the Objector with a Compliance
Notice. In
view of this, please be advised that the Compliance Notice issued
remains valid and the directive that the Objector
ceases its
operations until such time that an Atmospheric Emission License (sic)
is obtained from the competent authority should
be adhere to.”
THE CONSTITUTIONAL AND LEGISLATIVE
FRAMEWORK:
[22] The issue of
the impugned notice was effected within a comprehensive legislative
framework which regulates
the empowering provisions in terms whereof
First Respondent was empowered to issue a Compliance Notice.
The relevant legislative
framework is summarised hereunder.
[23]
The National Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998 (NEMA) gives
effect to Section 24 of the Constitution
[3]
which confers
inter
alia
a right to an environment which is not harmful to health and measures
to prevent pollution. NEMA contains provisions to enforce
compliance with certain laws aimed to achieve the provisions of
Section 24 of the Constitution.
[4]
[24]
The National Environmental Management: Air Quality Act 39 of 2004
(“
AQA
”)
provides measures to prevent and control air pollution. The
object of AQA is achieved
inter
alia
by listing certain activities that result in atmospheric omissions
and which the Minister or MEC believe have or may have a significant
detrimental effect on the environment, including health, social
conditions, economic conditions, ecological conditions or cultural
heritage. Certain activities may be listed by publication in
the Government Gazette resulting in such activities being regulated
by the issue of an Atmospheric Emission Licence (AEL).
[5]
[25] In Government
Notice 893 of 22 November 2013 the Minister of Water and
Environmental Affairs (the predecessor
of the Fourth Respondent)
amended the list of activities previously listed in terms of the
provisions of Section 21(1)(b) of AQA
and included under category 7
of such notice a sub-category 7.2 which reads:
“
Production
of acids”.
[26] In summary, the
issue of the impugned notice was effected in terms of the provisions
of Section 21 of AQA
and is aimed at the regulation and prevention of
air pollution. Non-compliance in the form of conducting a listed
activity without
the necessary AEL therefore attracts sanctions under
the provision of AQA.
ARE THE DECISIONS REVIEWABLE?
[27] Applicant seeks
to review the following:
[27.1]
The decision to issue the Compliance Notice;
[27.2]
The decision to dismiss the Applicant’s objection to the
Compliance
Notice;
[27.3]
The decision to introduce the comma and words “
bulk handling
and/or use in manufacturing”
into the listing notice in
section 7, sub-category 7.2 of GN893 of 22 November 2013.
Considering the effect of the order
referred to
infra
, it is
not necessary to deal with this ground of review.
[28] The issue of
the Compliance Notice as well as the dismissal of Applicant’s
objection to the Compliance
Notice has a direct and external legal
effect on the Applicant and falls squarely within the definition of
administrative action
in terms of Section 1 of
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
. When the Minister decided
to amend the listing notice by way of Government Notice No. 893 of 22
November 2013 the Minister
purported to do so by way of a decision in
terms of
Section 21(1)(b)
of AQA and such amendment had a direct and
external legal effect on Applicant as a result of which the decision
to amend also squarely
falls within the definition of administrative
action in terms of the provisions of
Section 1
of PAJA.
[29] Administrative
action is subject to judicial review under various grounds as set out
in
Section 6
of PAJA, and Applicant relied on the following grounds
for review of PAJA to review and set aside the aforesaid decisions
namely:
[29.1]
Section 6(2)(a)(i)
in that the Minister was not authorised by the
empowering provision,
Section 21(1)(a)
to include the activity
introduced by the impugned words in the listing notice;
[29.2]
Section 6(2)(b)
in that the mandatory conditions prescribed by
Section 21(1)(a) of the Air Quality Act, were not complied with;
[29.3]
Section 6(2)(d) in that the decisions were materially influenced by
an error
of law (i.e. an incorrect interpretation of Section 21(1)(a)
of the Air Quality Act);
[29.4]
Section 6(2)(e) in that the decisions were taken because irrelevant
considerations
were taken into account and relevant considerations
ignored;
[29.5]
Section 6(2)(f)(i) in that the decisions were not authorised by the
empowering
provisions (i.e. Sections 21(1)(a) of the Air Quality Act;
[30] In support of
the relief claimed by Applicant, a certain Mr. Dladla who is the Mill
Manager of Applicant’s
Meyerton Mill, deposed to an affidavit
wherein the process followed by Applicant in using hydrochloric acid
is explained.
Mr. Dladla is the holder of a National Diploma:
Microbiology and also holds a Bachelor of Technology degree in
Biotechnology.
Mr. Dladla is qualified to describe the chemical
processes in which Applicant is engaged, his evidence was supported
by the affidavits
of a chemical engineer and an air emissions and air
pollution expert.
[31] Mr. Dladla
explained the relevant operations of Applicant as follows:
“
6
At its Meyerton Mill, it uses hydrochloric acid as a reagent to
modify maize starch molecules
in the production of modified starches
and to convert maize starch into acid glucose. Ingrain and its
predecessor have been
involved in this form of agri-processing for
over 50 years.
7
Both the modified starches and the acid glucose are organic
compounds. Ingrain
is not involved in the inorganic chemicals
industry. It is not involved in the production of hydrochloric,
hydrofluoric,
nitric or sulphuric acid or any other inorganic acid.
Despite its name, acid glucose is not an acid.
8
The manner in which Ingrain utilises hydrochloric acid does not
result in atmospheric
emissions under normal operating conditions.
There is no specific point in its food production process where
atmospheric
emissions are ordinarily released.”
[32] The emission
thresholds linked to the activity under sub-category 7.2 (production
of acids) under category
7 (in organic chemical industry) clearly
relates to activities which are classed as the “
production
of acids
”. The Applicant does not produce or
manufacture hydrofluoric, hydrochloric, nitric or sulphuric acid.
The activity
in which the Applicant is involved namely the production
of food exempt the Applicant from the listed activities. The
fact
that such acids are used in the production of food does not fall
under the category of activity that can be classed as “
production
of acids”.
It follows therefore that the issue of the
impugned notice and decision to dismiss the Applicant’s
objection are reviewable
and falls to be set aside in terms of
Section 6(2)(d) and 6(2)(e) and 6(2)(f)(i) of PAJA.
CONCLUSION:
[33] Considering the
aforesaid, the agreement entered into between the parties embodied in
the draft order in
terms whereof the impugned decisions are reviewed
and set aside is sanctioned by this court and the draft order marked
“X”,
initialled and dated by me is made an order of
Court.
P A VAN NIEKERK
ACTING JUDGE OF THE GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NUMBER: 8555/2022
HEARD ON: ON PAPERS
FOR
THE APPLICANT:
ADV.
A. DODSON SC
ADV.
L. ZIKALALA
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Cullinan
& Associates
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
06/07/23
[1]
Airports
Company South Africa v Big Five Duty Free (Pty) Ltd and Others
2019
(5) SA 1
(CC) par. [2]
[2]
Airport
Company South Africa (supra)
par
[1]
[3]
Constitution
of the Republic of South Africa Act No 108 of 1996
[4]
NEMA
Section 31L
[5]
AQA
Sections 21 and 22 and Chapter 5
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