Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 24South Africa
Adams and Others v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Others (1306/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 24 (1 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
1 March 2022
Headnotes
fortified SLR’s view and inclination. Only the commercial fishing sector was deemed to be worthy to be properly consulted. In a meeting with SLR, the commercial fishing sector were favoured with an overview of the project proposal and reconnaissance permit process, were presented with key findings from the draft EMP and were provided with an opportunity to raise questions or issues of concern. The importance of this consultation is captured by Robin Sutherland in the answering affidavit of Searcher where he said at para 79:
Judgment
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## Adams and Others v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Others (1306/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 24 (1 March 2022)
Adams and Others v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Others (1306/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 24 (1 March 2022)
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sino date 1 March 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: 1306/22
In the matter between
CHRISTIAN
JOHN ADAMS
FIRST
APPLICANT
STEENBERGS
COVE SMALL SCALE
SECOND
APPLICANT
FISHING
COMMUNITY
AUKATOW
SMALL SCALE FISHIRIES
HIRD
APPLICANT
COOPERATIVE
WILFRED
POGGENPOEL
FOURTH
APPLICANT
ROSEY
SHOSOLA
FIFTH
APPLICANT
COASTAL
LINKS LANGEBAAN
SIXTH
APPLICANT
SOLENE
SMIT
SEVENTH
APPLICANT
NORTON
DOWRIES
EIGHTH
APPLICANT
CAMELITA
MOSTERT
NINETH
APPLICANT
ANTHONY
ANDREWS
TENTH
APPLICANT
NICOLAAS
BOOYSEN
ELEVENTH
APPLICANT
REGAN
JAMES
TWELFTH
APPLICANT
GREEN
CONNECTION
THIRTEENTH
APPLICANT
WE
ARE SOUTH AFRICANS
FOURTEENTH
APPLICANT
AND
MINISTER
OF MINERAL RESOURCES AND ENERGY
FIRST
RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF ENVIRONMENT, FORESTRY
SECOND
RESPONDENT
AND
FISHERIES
SERCHER
GOEDATA UK LIMITED
THIRD
RESPONDENT
SEARCHER
SEISMIC (AUSTRALIA)
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
PETROLEUM
AGENCY SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
BGP
‘‘PIONEER’’
SIXTH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
delivered on 1
st
March 2022
THULARE J
[1]
The applicants sought a two part application. This judgment is in
respect of Part A wherein the applicant sought an order on
an urgent
basis interdicting the third, fourth and sixth respondents from
commencing, alternatively continuing their seismic survey
along the
West and South West Coasts of South Africa in terms of a
reconnaissance permit granted by the first respondent on 18
May 2021
in terms of section 74 of the Mineral and Petroleum Resources
Development Act, 2002 (Act No. 28 of 2002) (the MPRDA) pending
the
outcome of the applicants’ internal appeal against the grant of
the reconnaissance permit to the third and fourth respondents
in
terms of section 96 of the MPRDA and the outcome of part B of this
application. The applicants did not seek any relief against
the first
and second respondent in respect of Part A of the application.
[2] The applicants are
individual and collective formations of small scale fishers
[applicants 1-12], indigenous communities [applicants
1, 10 and 11]
an environmental organisation [applicant 13] and an organisation
established to enhance good governance [applicant
14]. Only the third
and fourth respondents (Searcher) delivered a notice of opposition.
The other respondents filed notices to
abide the decision of the
court.
[3] The subject is the
seismic survey on the West Coast of the Republic of South Africa in
the Western Cape Province. The issue
is whether an interim interdict
is to be in place pending the decision on Part B.
[4] The structure of the
judgment will start with the applicable law, and then continue to
deal individually with the points taken,
to wit, the alleged
unlawfulness of the permit, the illegality of the commencement of the
survey, irreparable harm, public interest
and the balance of
convenience, and will conclude with the remainder of the requisites
for an interim interdict.
[5] “
The Law of
South Africa,
second edition, volume II, Lexis Nexis, WA Joubert,
defines an interim interdict as follows at 401:
“
401
Definition An interim interdict is a court order preserving or
restoring the
status quo
pending
the final determination of the rights of the parties. It does not
involve a final determination of these rights and does
not affect
their final determination.”
At 403, the requisites
for an interim interdict are set out, and these are:
(a)
A
prima
facie
right;
(b)
A well-grounded apprehension of
irreparable harm if the interim relief is not granted and the
ultimate relief is eventually granted;
(c)
That the balance of convenience
favours the granting of an interim interdict; and
(d)
That the applicant has no other
satisfactory remedy.
403 then continued:
“
In view of
the discretionary nature of an interim interdict these requisites are
not judged in isolation and they interact.”
THE
LAWFULNESS OR OTHERWISE OF THE PERMIT
[6] Section 74(4)(a) of
the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act, 2002 (Act No. 28
of 2002) (MPRDA) provided that:
“
74.
Application for reconnaissance permit. –
(4) If the designated agency accept
the application, the designated agency must, within 14 days of the
receipt of the application,
notify the applicant in writing to –
(a) consult in the prescribed manner
with the landowner, lawful occupier and any interested and affected
party and include the result
of the consultation in the relevant
environmental reports required in terms of Chapter 5 of the National
Environmental Act, 1998;”
[7] The survey was a
subject in which the applicants were concerned and had an interest
and wanted involvement in. They wanted to
know about it because it
would have an effect on them that had the potential to make a
difference to and influence their lives.
They are the interested and
affected parties referred to in section 74(4)(a) of the MRPDA. The
small scale fishers and their communities
alleged that they were not
consulted.
[8] The mindset of Jeremy
Blood (Blood), an environmental consultant at SLR Consulting (SA) Ltd
who oversaw the consultation process
and prepared the environmental
management plan (EMP) on behalf of searcher, is worrying. According
to him, SLR and by extension
Searcher did not deem the small scale
fisheries along the West Coast as directly affected. SLR relied on
its own data base and
information received from Sara Wilkinson of
Capricorn Marine Environment (Pty) Ltd and Erik Botha in compiling an
interested and
affected party database for the survey. The database
was updated as parties register or provide comments during the
process. This
simply means only those who were already on the
database, known to Wilkinson and Botha or knew about SLR’s
activities were
consulted through this mode.
[9] The newspapers,
e-mail notifications, publication on the website and filing hard
copies at libraries clearly targeted those
with access thereto. This
was further limited to English and Afrikaans speakers who could read
and in other instances only those
with technological devices. The
IsiXhosa speaking, although the language is one of the three official
languages of the Western
Cape Province in terms of policy, were
simply disregarded. The illiterate and the poor were by design of the
methodology excluded.
SLR did not tell what local authorities and
ward councilors did to disseminate the notices SLR provided.
[10] The meeting that was
held fortified SLR’s view and inclination. Only the commercial
fishing sector was deemed to be worthy
to be properly consulted. In a
meeting with SLR, the commercial fishing sector were favoured with an
overview of the project proposal
and reconnaissance permit process,
were presented with key findings from the draft EMP and were provided
with an opportunity to
raise questions or issues of concern. The
importance of this consultation is captured by Robin Sutherland in
the answering affidavit
of Searcher where he said at para 79:
“
79. It
should be noted based on this engagement with the commercial fishing
sectors, Searcher amended its proposed survey plan by
removing the
southern inshore survey lines (except one small well tie-in) in order
to avoid the key “ring fenced” fishing
and spawning areas
in the south-east of the reconnaissance permit area (see Figure 8-2
in the EMP). Non well tie-in lines in the
northern key “ring
fenced” fishing area were also removed. The amended survey plan
further mitigates for the potential
impacts on commercial fishing
(specifically demersal trawl and tuna pole) and fish
spawning/recruitment.”
[11] A proper
consultation has significant material results for fishers. The
communication between the South African Deep Sea Trawling
Association
(SADSTIA) and SLR offered a glimpse. On 30 August 2021 Johan
Augustyn, SADSTIA Secretary wrote an email to SLR and
said:
“
In summary,
we have reason to believe that ultimately the seismic surveys and the
potential drilling in the site will have negative
impacts on the
marine environment and the fishing sector, with the disruption to
trawl grounds, disturbance to adult fish, and
impact on survival of
eggs and larvae and that these should be properly quantified through
research and mitigated where necessary.
Other impacts, some of which
are indirect, should also be considered and effectively mitigated.”
In reply, SLR said:
“
Any
potential and further or future activities would be subject to the
requisite environmental assessment and authorization process
under
NEMA, during which, the impacts related to these activities
(including a major well blow-out) will be assessed as part of
this
separate EIA process. This is typical of the lifecycle of a
development project.”
In simple terms, SLR told
SADSTIA, slow down, at the appropriate time we will get an
environmental impact assessment and an environment
authorization.
Searcher does not have an environmental impact assessment (EIA) or an
environmental authorization to date. I will
return to this point when
discussing the legality of the commencement of the survey. Earlier on
27 August 2021, Robert Landman,
and Insights Manager at Irvin &
Johnson (I&J), had already scored from SLR a concession on
avoiding “ring-fenced”
fishing areas, a revised survey
area, a revised survey plan and recommended mitigation amongst a
number of victories.
[12] Notwithstanding
SLR’s view that South Africa had a high level usage of cell
phone and that calls, SMS and Whatsapp were
available means, no
attempt was made to meet with small scale fishers of the West Coast.
Sutherland said at the end of para 78
of his affidavit:
“
78 …
Since the small-scale fishing sector was considered not to be
directly impacted by the proposed seismic survey, the
focus-group
meeting targeted commercial fishing sectors.”
[13] The applicants
alleged that they fish up to more than 30 km from the coastline and
that their main means of survival and livelihood
was snoek. In his
reply at the same paragraph 78, Sutherland said the small
scale-fishers are unlikely to range beyond 5.6 km (3nm),
that snoek
is sometimes caught 15 km from offshore and that a small number of
catches have been recorded out of the 55km. It must
be remembered
that in its EMP, in the paragraph that dealt with Social Context and
Human utilization, Searcher had said:
“
There is no
overlap with small-scale fishing sector, which is unlikely to range
beyond 3nm (5.6 km) from the coastline.”
In its conclusions the
EMP reads:
“
The majority
of the impacts associated with the normal operation of the project
vessels will occur in the vicinity of the 2D and
3D areas, which is
the offshore marine environment, more than 20km and 140 km offshore
for the 2D and 3D surveys, respectively,
removed from sensitive
coastal receptors (e.g. key faunal breeding/feeding areas and bird or
seal colonies.”
It is against this
background that the applicants argued that Searcher alleged that it
was under the impression that small-scale
fishers would not be
affected by the survey and therefore that it did not have an
obligation to consult them. The argument
further was that the offer
by Searcher to small scale fishers, during the proceedings, of 58.6
km offshore, amounts to a concession
that it was required to consult
with small scale fishers.
[14] The applicants
allege that the community radio stations is where most of the
applicants may have heard the notification, if
Searcher truly wanted
to ensure that they were included in the consultation process. It
could have advertised in IsiXhosa, English
and Afrikaans in both
commercial and community radio stations and in print media. Further,
that it could have called community
meetings. These were but some of
the multiple ways in which Searcher could have reasonably facilitated
the process of consultation
to make it meaningful. Searcher did none
of these. The applicants alleged that Searcher outsourced its
obligation to consult to
an NGO, simply ticked the box in an attempt
to get away with formal compliance with no regard to the substance of
the duty to consult.
The communities and individuals who were
impacted and were likely to be impacted by the survey had a right to
be consulted.
[15] What should be of
more concern is that most of those alleged to have been consulted by
SLR deny this. The seventh applicant,
Walter Steenkamp and Hilda
Adams, whose names appear on those allegedly consulted, denied this
under oath. Mr Jaffer of Masifundise
Development Trust denied
knowledge of the notification. What is more worrying is that Ms
Nangle of Masifundise Development Trust
alleged that she received
notification on 15 December 2021 that a reconnaissance permit was
granted but that the email was immediately
recalled. Nico Walden of
Abalobi, Roderick Souden and Carisa Souden who also appeared on the
table annexed to Blood’s affidavit
denied receiving
notification about the proposed blasting and the possibility of
commenting on the EMP. Furthermore, the 13
th
applicant
confirmed that it had never represented small scale fishers and has
never sought or received a mandate to do so. It had
a different
mandate. The notice sent to the 13
th
applicant went
unnoticed and was never distributed, besides that it did not have an
obligation nor did it agree to distribute the
information. According
to the 13
th
respondent, SLR never communicated its desire
nor sought the agreement of 13
th
applicant, for 13
th
applicant to distribute the notification to other parties.
[16] The applicants’
case was that the survey in the absence of consultation posed the
immediate risk to marine and bird life,
as well as to the communities
who relied on the ocean for their livelihoods and food sources. It
was further that the failure to
consult rendered Searcher’s
activities unlawful and called for immediate interdictory relief to
avoid the anticipated harm.
Section 75(1)(c) and (2) of the
MPRDA provided that:
“
75 Issuing
and duration of reconnaissance permit. –
(1)
Subject to subsection (4), the Minister must issue
a reconnaissance permit if –
(c) the reconnaissance will not result
in unacceptable pollution, ecological degradation or damage to the
environment and that the
environmental authorization is issued;
(2) The Minister must refuse to issue
a reconnaissance permit if the application does not meet all the
requirements contemplated
in subsection (1).”
[17] There must be
evidence that the proposed reconnaissance will not result in
unacceptable pollution, degradation or damage to
the environment, an
environmental authorization is mandatory and the Minister would act
unlawfully in granting a reconnaissance
permit where section 75(1)(c)
was not satisfied. It was not possible to establish that the seismic
survey blasting would not result
in unacceptable pollution,
degradation or damage to the environment without engaging
meaningfully with all interested and affected
parties. The
consultation process and its results were an integral part of the
fairness of the application process and the decision
to grant the
permit could not be fair if the Minister of Minerals and Energy did
not have full regard to precisely what happened
during the
consultation process in order to determine whether the consultation
was sufficient to render his granting of the permit
procedurally fair
[
Bengwenyama Minerals (Pty) Ltd and Others v Genorah Resources
(Pty) Ltd and Others
2011 (4) SA 113
(CC) at para 66].
THE
LEGALITY OF THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE SURVEY
[18] Section 5A of the
MPRDA provides:
“
5A
Prohibition relating to illegal act. –
No person may prospect for or remove,
mine, conduct co-operation operations, reconnaissance operations,
explore for and produce
any mineral or petroleum or commence with any
work incidental thereto on any area without –
(a)
An environmental authorization.”
In section 1 of the
MPRDA, “reconnaissance operation” means any operation
carried out for or in connection with the
search for a mineral or
petroleum by geological, geophysical and photo geological surveys and
includes any remote sensing techniques,
but does not include any
prospecting or exploration operation other than acquisition and
processing of new seismic data. In the
same section, “environmental
authorization” has the meaning assigned to it in section 1 of
the National Environmental
Management Act, 1998 (Act No. 107 of 1998)
(NEMA).
[19] In section 1 of
NEMA, “environmental authorization”, when used in Chapter
5, means the authorization by a competent
authority of a listed
activity or specified activity in terms of this Act, and includes a
similar authorization contemplated in
specific environmental
management Act. Chapter 5 of NEMA begins with the general objectives
in Section 23. It provides:
“
23.
General Objectives. –
(1)
The purpose of this Chapter is to promote the
application of appropriate environmental management tools in order to
ensure the integrated
environmental management activities.
(2)
The general objective of integrated environmental
management is to-
(a)
Promote the integration of the principles of
environmental management set out in section 2 into the making of all
decisions which
may have a significant effect on the environment;
(b)
Identify, predict and evaluate the actual and
potential impact on the environment, socio-economic conditions and
cultural heritage,
the risks and consequences and alternatives and
options for mitigation of activities, with a view to minimizing
negative impacts,
maximizing benefits, and promoting compliance with
the principles of environmental management set out in section 2;
(c)
Ensure the effects of activities on the
environment receive adequate consideration before actions are taken
in connection with them;
(d)
Ensure adequate and appropriate opportunity for
public participation in decisions that may affect the environment;
(e)
Ensure the consideration of environmental
attributes in management and decision-making which may have
significant effect on the
environment; …”
[20] Section 24 of NEMA
provides for environmental authorisations. Subsection (1) and 1(A)
read as follows:
“
24.
Environmental authorisations. –
(1)
In order to give effect to the general objectives
of integrated environmental management laid down in this Chapter, the
potential
consequences for or impacts on the environment of listed
activities or specified activities must be considered, investigated
assessed
and reported on to the competent authority or the Minister
responsible for mineral resources, as the case may be, except in
respect
of those activities that may commence without having to
obtain an environmental authorization in terms of this Act.
(1A) Every applicant must comply with
the requirements prescribed in terms of this Act in relation to –
(a)
Steps to be taken before submitting an
application, where applicable;
(b)
Any prescribed report;
(c)
Any procedure relating to public consultation and
information gathering;
(d)
Any environmental management programme;
(e)
The submission of an application for an
environmental authorization and any other relevant information; and
(f)
The undertaking of any specialist report, where
applicable.
[21] Section 24C(2A)
identified competent authorities for granting authorisations in
respect of applicable activities. It provides:
“
24C.
Procedure for identifying competent authorities. –
(2A) The Minister responsible for
mineral resources must be identified as the competent authority in
terms of subsection (1) where
the listed or specified activity is
directly related to-
(a)
Prospecting or exploration of a mineral or
petroleum resource; or
(b)
Extracting and primary processing of a mineral or
petroleum resource.”
Section 24(2)(a) and
24F(1)(a) provides that:
“
24. –
(2)
The Minister, or an MEC with the concurrence of
the Minister, may identify –
(a)
Activities which may commence without
environmental authorization from the competent authority;” …
24F. Prohibition relating to
commencement or continuation of listed activities. –
(1)
Notwithstanding any other Act, no person may –
(a)
Commence an activity listed or specified in terms
of section 24(2)(a) or (b) unless the competent authority or the
Minister responsible
for mineral resources, as the ace may be, has
granted an environmental authorization for the activity;”
[22] Searcher’s
application for a reconnaissance permit was submitted on 30 April
2021. On 18 May 2021 the application was
accepted on condition
Searcher developed an environmental management plan. The EMP was
submitted in September 2021. On 11 June
2021 the Department of
Environment, Forestry and Fisheries (DEFF) issued amendments to the
Environment Impact Assessment Regulations,
Listing Notice 1, Listing
Notice 2 and Listing Notice 3 of the
Environmental Impact Assessment
Regulations, 2014
in GN R517 Government Gazette 44701. In the new
Regulations, applicants for a reconnaissance permit submitted on or
after 11 June
2021 were required to obtain an environmental
authorization, issued in terms of
section 24
of NEMA and the 2014 EIA
Regulations. Searcher is correct that an application for a
reconnaissance permit made before 11 June 2021,
according to the new
Regulations, had to be finalized in terms of the law as it stood when
the application was made. The transitional
provision in the new
Regulations are clear that they relate to applications for the
permit.
[23] The applicants’
case was that Parliament had the law that no person shall commence a
seismic survey in South African
waters unless the Minister of
Minerals and Energy had granted such person an environmental
authorization for the activity [section
24F(1)(a) of NEMA and section
5A of the MPRDA]. The applicant’s case was that the law as it
stood at the commencement of
the survey on 24 January 2022, required
Searcher to have been granted an environmental authorization by the
Minister of Mineral
Resources and Energy, which Searcher does not
have. Searcher’s case rests on the procedural and substantive
effects of amendments
to the Regulations and their interpretation.
The basis upon which Searcher relied can ably be determined after
hearing Part B which
includes hearing the first, second and fourth
respondents who Searcher implicated and who have a right to be heard
before a pronouncement
is made.
IRREPARABLE
HARM
[24] The applicants’
apprehension of harm related to marine and bird life, food security,
their livelihoods and their cultural
rights. It has to be stated at
the outset that both parties on this aspect rely in the main on
expert opinions. What makes matters
more challenging is that the
independence and neutrality of most of the experts is in doubt. Some
of the experts for the applicants
work to promote the rights of small
scale fishers or work directly with them. Some of them are
signatories to the so-called open
letter dated 2 December 2021 to the
President of the Republic of South Africa, His Excellency Cyril
Ramaphosa, the Minister of
Minerals and Energy, the Honourable Gwede
Mantashe and the Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment,
the Honourbale
Barbara Creecy. It would have sounded better if the
learned authors had sought an audience with the two Ministers to
pursue their
concerns.
[25] The mode of
engagement, which is generally a “critical public emotional
outburst”, and the content thereof, suggest
that they may be
pursuing an agenda that amounts to elevating themselves to an
alternative monopolistic policy power house if not
some parallel
government for fauna and flora in South Africa. This is moreso if
regard is had to the position they advance, which
is that all planned
seismic surveys be halted. To their credit, they argue for seismic
surveys to be allowed if there are environment
management programmes
which underpin the granting of the permit by independent assessors
including those with marine biological
training, taking into account
new marine ecological and social impacts evidence, including to
species and systems in the marine
environment. On the other hand,
many of the experts relied upon by Searcher were part of the
development of Searcher’s EMP
and the survey that is in dispute
in this litigation, while others work for corporate-aligned entities
and not independent institutions.
They are in favour of, and in the
main make a living from, surveys and ancillary activities. The
challenges notwithstanding, individually
and collectively, to the
extent that they were helpful and could be relied upon, the court
appreciates the input of the experts.
[26] The cumulative
impact of seismic surveys has not been studied in South Africa.
Physical damage to marine animals has been directly
linked to the
kind and level of sound emitted during the nature of seismic survey
that Searcher is undertaking. This is the reason
why Searcher has to
mitigate the damage. Some species show physiological stress responses
and behavioural changes like moving away
rapidly and this increased
energy consumption and energy costs which reduced time for foraging
and the ability to protect itself.
There was a specific concern for
beaked whales who were particularly sensitive to anthropogenic noise.
The cumulative impact of
the explosion of explorations on the West
Coast was not considered. Searcher’s EMP did not explain how
the cumulative impacts
were assessed and did not specifically mention
other activities in the area. Since October 2021, thousands dead
seals have washed
up along the South and West Coasts. The cause was
unknown and additional stress at this time was not advisable. It is
not known
if this was linked to surveys.
[27] The impact on fish
assemblages was difficult to interpret and there was lack of research
on confounding effects and multiple
stressors were a key concern.
Marine Mammal Observers (MMO) efficiency was very low due to the
nature of offshore marine environmental
survey area particularly at
night. The PAM technology and MMO’s had “shortfalls”,
they were the industry practice
and the best way available. This
Passive Acoustic Monitoring technology worked primarily for cetaceans
and whales but did not detect
fish that did not emit sound whose
vocalisations were highly directional.
[28] In most cases it
reduced the risk of deliberate injury to marine mammals to negligible
levels. It was only undersea earthquakes
and volcanic eruptions that
were louder that a seismic airgun. Visual observers were relied upon
to add to technology monitoring
during the day as a mitigating
measure. They could not work at night. Searcher’s position is
that it would not be cost effective
not to work at night. The
mitigation measures that searcher had put in place were at best
partially effective and in certain circumstances
not effective at
all. Turtles, whales, dolphins, seals and elasmobranchs are species
that stabilize the ecosystem yet alarmingly
little is known about the
direct and indirect effects of the survey on them.
[29] Large pegalic fish
such as tuna and snoek followed distribution of their prey and these
behaviours were at risk of disruption
by the survey. Very little
information was provided in Searcher’s EMP on demersal fish
species, mainly hake and snoek. Hake
and snoek were both known to
habitat the survey area and to a depth of 500m well within the survey
depths. The EMP failed to interrogate
the secondary effects
associated with fish behavioural disruption. The EMP failed to
acknowledge that hake and snoek perform rhythmic
diel foraging
migrations off the seafloor at night and onto sea floor during the
day. This meant that they will be within distances
from the scurvey
that may expose them to direct injury and mortality impacts that the
EMP identified for other species.
[30] The West Coast was
one of the World’s most productive marine environments. The
region fertilized on a large scale and
almost continuous by transport
of water rich nutrients. It thus had several nursery grounds for
fishes and supported top predator
populations such as seabirds and
marine mammals. Just to focus on zooplankton which represents all
marine groups. It has life stages
from eggs, larvae, juveniles to
adults. Zooplankton was the reason the West Coast contained important
fish nursery grounds. As
a result, impacts on zooplankton could
propagate to other groups. Very little was known about the impact of
seismic surveys on
zooplankton. Existing observations suggested
damage to larval and juvenile lobsters of up to 500-1.2 km from the
survey sound source
and that zooplankton mortality increased up to
three-fold within the survey area.
[31] Snoek will be
impacted and the experts proposed no seismic survey there in late
summer early autumn. The EMP and Searcher reports
did not acknowledge
or interrogate the centrality of snoek to small scale fishers of the
West Coast and glossed over the potential
impact to them. Searcher’s
EMP understanding of the small scale fishers was flawed. There was a
wealth of recent data available
on the small scale fishers sector.
Searcher’s EMP was not based on the most recent available data.
Snoek was central to the
food security of the West Coast fishers,
including small scale fishers.
[32] Snoek was a source
of food for the impoverished communities of the West Coast, and also
provided an income to sustain the small-scale
communities. It was a
solution for food security and malnutrition. It had macro and micro
nutrients and was a source of protein.
It was vital for growth and
underdeveloped digestive systems of children who often could not
process staple food with more starch.
It was essential for human
health needs, including essential vitamins. The survey’s impact
on food security for the small
scale fishers was a regressive measure
in that it would diminish the existing enjoyment of the right to food
as envisaged in section
27(1)(c) of the Constitution.
[33] Very little is known
about the differential impact of seismic activity on young and
smaller fish, turtles and cetaceans and
this could impact fish
assemblages, abundances and availability. A precautionary approach
was necessary. The impact of behavioural
avoidance was understated
because the survey area of influence overlapped with forging habitat
of threatened seabird species. The
timing and duration of the survey
coincided with the onset of the breeding season which starts in
April/May and with the post-moult
periods in which they must regain
body condition. Many of the mitigation measures will be ineffective
in reducing the impacts as
the noise of the airguns themselves caused
the impacts. The surveys should not be conducted within the foraging
ranges of sensitive
seabird species.
[34] Searcher did not
contend that exceptional circumstances existed in this case to meet
the prohibition on regressive measures.
As things stand, the survey
will be at the expense of the livelihoods of impoverished communities
of small-scale fishers, which
Searcher had deliberately marginalized.
Climate change had changed the ability to catch fish and the survey
will further impact
the ability to catch and the small-scale fishing
will collapse. The heritage of fishing, from the Khoi and San
traditional communities
and later joined by the Malay slaves, had
been a definitive feature and part of the culture of the communities
on the West Coast.
The traditional “fish curry” during
Easter weekend, now adopted as a central tradition in the Western
Cape, is a proud
tradition of the indigenous communities of the West
Coast. Currently big business, including main chain stores like
Checkers, Pick
n’ Pay and others order and sell bulk fish
during this period. The advancement of this tradition has economic
spin-offs.
[35] The small scale
fisher families and communities live fishing. It is in their veins
and in their blood. Men go to fish, women
“vlek” the
snoek and the children are taught from a young age how to be
guardians of the marine resources. They know
each rock and reef. From
“vlekking” women can tell when the snoek run is coming
and if it os going to be a good run.
“
Ons het uit die see
gekom”
is their belief. For the Khoi and San communities,
who are reclaiming their identity from the apartheid classification
as “Coloured”,
the sea is not only important for their
food security and livelihood. They believe it to have healing powers
and it is also a spiritual
place for them. The applicants are of the
view that a meaningful consultation would address the issues that
have arisen in this
matter.
PUBLIC
INTEREST
[36] This matter has
drawn public interest, as the interests of the public was hugely
affected. It is not only the small scale fishers,
the indigenous
communities who draw their livelihood from the West Coast waters,
organisations involved in good governance especially
around our
waters and an environmental organization that have an interest in the
issues that the applicants have raised. As earlier
indicated in this
judgment, SLR in order to allay the fears and concerns of commercial
fishers, specifically told I&J on 27
August 2021, which SADSTIA
accepted as well on 30 August 2021, that an environmental impact
assessment and an environmental authorization
will, at the
appropriate time, be constructed and sought respectively.
[37] I understand that to
mean that I&J and SADSTIA labored under an impression that
Searcher would in accordance with section
24(1A)(e) of NEMA submit an
application for the environmental authorization to the Minister of
Minerals and Energy. The question
arises because in this application,
Searcher’s position is that no environmental authorization was
required alternatively
that its EMP constituted an environmental
authorization. Furthermore, in this application Searcher’s
position is that the
EMP over which it consulted I&J and SADSTIA
is in effect what it deemed to be an EIA. This is not what SLR told
I&J and
SADSTIA to get their buy-in into the survey. Having read
the issues raised by commercial fishers, I doubt if they would have
accepted
the case that Searcher now advanced, to wit, that the EMP
that they were discussing constituted both the environmental impact
assessment
and the environmental authorization for which they
specifically asked. It is clear that the environmental impact
assessment and
the environmental authorization are measures that
mitigate harm to the fishing industry. The survival of the industry
is a matter
of national importance. It must be borne in mind that
Searcher’s offer of 58.6 km still leaves the environmental
impact assessment
of the survey unattended.
BALANCE
OF CONVENIENCE
[38] The harm caused by
the infringements of constitutional rights cannot be quantified,
measured or weighed. The
status quo
ensures that the small
scale fishers have food security, livelihoods, and can enjoy their
cultural rights. The South African experts
on the other hand, warn
that without further research, an environmental impact assessment and
evidence of a proper environmental
management programme, the blasting
will result in the indignity of poverty, work, culture and the
indignity of being disregarded
in matters involving their rights for
small scale farmers. The harm is irreparable.
[39] As things stand, all
that the applicants were asking for was a proper identification,
prediction and evaluation of the actual
and potential impact of
Searcher’s survey on the environment, socio-economic
conditions, their cultural heritage, the risks
and consequences and
alternatives and options of mitigation of the survey, with a view to
minimize the negative impacts, maximizing
the benefits and compliance
with the principles of environmental management. They ask for no more
than what the principles applicable
in this business provide. They
are asking that the effects of the survey on the environment,
appropriate public participation in
decisions that may affect them
and their environment receive consideration as provided by law. In
essence, they are asking the
court to uphold the Rule of Law, and
bring to a screeching halt and force a u-turn by causing a cul-de-sac
for the Law by the Rulers.
The Afrikaans language expresses the
prayer better in simple terms: “Searcher, gaan terug.”
The drawing board and the
negotiation table is calling your name.
[40] There are sound
reasons why the courts had the period 15 December to 15 January
declared as a
dies non
in the Republic, inclusive both days,
except for urgent matters, in respect of court proceedings. This
period has for years been
a window for unscrupulous persons to become
highly active, well aware that the rest of commercial activity has
ceased and most
people are away from their work stations and on
holiday and will not access the information to intelligibly engage
with serious
matters that have an impact on their lives, sometimes
even changing their status.
[41] “
Uzenzile
akakhalelwa” (
self-inflicted harm deserves no sympathy). It
was Searcher’s choice to use the days on which no legal
business could be done
or which did not count for legal purposes, to
pursue consummation of its activities for the survey. Whilst warned
by the applicants
of the issues around its survey when the festive
season ended, Searcher made a conscious election to disregard the
applicants again
and sent the vessel, BGP Pioneer, into the sea and
commenced with its survey on 24 January 2022, without an
environmental authorization
in their hands, and having not consulted
with the small scale fishers. The applicants had warned Searcher
about the constitutional
implications of its conduct and the
apprehended impact that its conduct would have. Searcher refused to
not commence with the survey
until the issues raised by the
applicants were ventilated. Searcher cannot be heard to complain of
the labour pains of the birth
of the consequences of it not showing
approval of the applicants’ plea.
[42] Searcher took a
calculated risk for its operational costs, loss of profit and
possible contractual breaches if any. Be it as
it may, Searcher did
not set out any evidence to demonstrate how it arrived at its costs
and why it is classified as a cost. I
could not even estimate that
cost and I am unable to appreciate harm, if any, arising out of the
interdict, especially where there
is evidence that Searcher is
carrying out the survey in the West Coast outside the South African
waters contemporaneous with the
period of the interim interdict.
Searcher outsourced its responsibilities to SLR and it was the
decision of SLR not to consider
the small scale fishers as deserving
a proper consultation. It was a deliberate choice not to ensure a
proper environmental management
regime and not to secure an
environmental authorization before it commenced with the survey.
[43] Before I revert back
to the analysis of the other requisites on the law on interdicts, I
consider it necessary to refer to
the brief history of the matter for
the sake of completion. On 7 February 2022 the matter served before
me and only the applicants’
papers were filed. I was satisfied
about its urgency. Searcher was represented but had not filed its
answering papers. I was satisfied
that the harm that the applicants
apprehended would manifest if I did not intervene. It was within my
jurisdiction not to maintain
the apprehended harm caused by the
continued survey and to restore the
status quo
. I used my
discretionary powers and granted an interim interdict pending the
hearing of this Part A of the matter, and made an
order of court
including a timeframe which the applicants had provided, which
provided the 7
th
of March 2022 as the date of the hearing
of Part A of the application. Searcher prepared its answering
affidavit and approached
the court on 14 February 2022 to reconsider
its interim interdict including its order on time frames. I was
amenable to reconsider
the matter and heard the parties on the
reconsideration. I was not satisfied that there was reason for me to
set aside the interim
interdict, but I reconsidered the time frames
and made an order which included the date of the hearing of Part A on
24 February
2022.
[44] Rule 6(12)(a)
provides as follows:
“
6
Applications
(12) (a) In urgent applications the
court or a judge may dispense with the forms and service provided for
in these rules and may
dispose of such matter at such time and place
and in such manner and in accordance with such procedure (which shall
as far as practicable
be in terms of these rules) as it deems fit.”
[45] In
Republikeinse
Publikasies (Edms) Bpk v Afrikaanse Pers Publikasies (Edms) Bpk
1972
(1) SA 773
(A) at 782A-B it was said: (the following interpretation
is accepted from the Afrikaans version)
“
It is of
importance to state what the effect of this Rule is. In the case of
an urgent application, an applicant is permitted to
act by way of
notice of motion without taking into account the rules which are
usually applicable. The applicant is, in a certain
sense, taking into
account the circumstances of the case, permitted to make his own
rules but “as far as practicable: in
accordance with the
existing rules. Rule 6(12) therefore makes provision for a process
subject to rules different from the usual
and when an applicant
appears before the judge in such a procedural manner he must ask the
judge to disregard the rules applicable
to ordinary adjudication.”
At 782C-D it was said:
“
If an
applicant acts in terms of this Rule and informs the respondent that
he regards the application as urgent, it follows, in
my view, that
the respondent is obliged, in the sense that he runs the risk of an
order against him by default, and entitled to
provisionally accept
the rules which the applicant has Adopted. When the matter comes
before the Judge he can object, but in the
meantime, he dare not
ignore the Rules which the applicant has made for himself.”
THE
PRIMA FACIE
RIGHT
[46] If Searcher did not
consult with the small scale fishers, the indigenous communities,
Non- Governmental Organisations and other
interest groups and
individuals in the fishing sector in the West Coast, this would be
sufficient to conclude that there was no
adequate and appropriate
opportunity for public participation in decisions that affected the
public and the may affect the environment.
If Searcher failed to
construct an environmental impact assessment, this may lead to a
conclusion that Searcher failed to ensure
that the effects of its
activities on the environment, especially for snoek and other fish on
which the small scale fishers relied,
but on marine and bird life in
general, received adequate consideration of the impact of its
activitiy in South African waters.
The failure to obtain and
environmental authorization may mean that the Minister for Minerals
and Energy had no opportunity to
ensure the consideration of
environmental attributes in the management and decision making which
may have significant effects on
the environment.
[47] Central to this
case, is the Constitutionally guaranteed right to Equality as set out
in section 9(1), Chapter 2, Bill of Rights,
in the Constitution of
the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (Act 108 of 1996) which reads:
“
Equality
9. (1) Everyone is equal before the
law and has the right to equal protection and benefit of the law.”
The
audi alteram
partem
is a legal principle of our law which is at the core of
our principles of justice. This principle, which is accepted to mean
that
you listen to the other side or let the other side be heard as
well, enjoined SLR not to pass judgment that the small scale
fishers and communities of the West Coast were not interested or
affected persons without affording the fishers a fair hearing
in
which they were allowed to respond on the evidence upon which it
relied and afforded an opportunity to state their own case
on the
issue. In
Minister of Home Affairs v Scalabrini Centre
2013
(6) SA 421
(SCA) it was said at para 43:
“
[43] …
What also appears from those cases is that an obligation to consult
demands only that the person who is entitled to
be consulted be
afforded an adequate opportunity to exercise that right. Only if that
right is denied is the obligation to consult
breached.”
.
[48] Against the
background of these principles, informed by the writing of some of
the leading academics on the marine environment,
it is clear that an
adequate and appropriate consultation, especially around the
construction of the environmental impact assessment,
would have
enriched that report for the benefit of the Minister of Minerals and
Energy’s decision, and to bring into being
an informed
environment management regime upon which the environment
authorization would have been considered. A joint report by
the
experts and the appointment of a referee where they differed, is but
one avenue that would have enriched the Minister’s
process,
especially its leg on the environmental impact assessment studies.
The right to equal protection and benefit of the law,
assumes
compliance with prescripts by actors in any assignment and not
cynical disregard thereof. I deem it not necessary to discuss
the
right to food, livelihood and culture further than I have already
done in this judgment as in my view the rights of the applicants
are
perfectly clear. From my understanding of Searcher’s Heads of
Arguments at para 12, these rights are not contested. At
best it
contests
prima facie
rights as regards Part B (para 33 of its
Head of Arguments), which is not the subject of this judgment,
Suffice to state that the
apprehension of harm by the applicants is
well founded.
NO
ALTERNATIVE REMEDY
[49] There is an internal
appeal remedy provided for in section 96 of the MPRDA. Section 90
also provided for the suspension of
the permit. The applicants have
lodged an internal appeal. They are not the only party that has
lodged an internal appeal. The
Western Cape Provincial Government has
also lodged an internal appeal according to the papers. The time
periods provided by the
prescripts for the Minister to consider the
appeal outrun the period envisaged for the survey. This means that by
the time that
the Minister considered the appeal, the harm
apprehended by the applicants would have manifested. The appeal, as a
result, does
not meet the apprehended harm. It is an impractical
remedy as there are no adaptations for its use, and therefore
insensible to
rely on as it is impossible to provide the urgent
relief sought by the applicants.
[50] For these reasons I
make the following order:
1.
The third, fourth and sixth
respondents are interdicted from continuing the seismic survey of the
West and South-West Coast of South
Africa in terms of a
Reconnaissance Permit granted by the First Respondent on 18 May 2021
in terms of section 74 of the Mineral
and Petroleum Resources
Development Act, 2002 (MPRDA) pending-
1.1.
The outcome of the applicants’
internal appeal against the decision to grant the Reconnaisance
Permit to the third and fourth
respondents in terms of section 96 of
the MPRDA; and
1.2.
The outcome of Part B of this
application.
2.
The third and fourth respondents,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, to
pay the costs of Part A of
this application, including the costs of
three counsel.
3.
The third and fourth respondents,
jointly and severally, the one pay
paying
the other to be absolved, to pay the costs of 7 February 2022,
including the costs of three counsel.
4.
The third and fourth respondents,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, to
pay the costs of 14 February
2022, including the costs of three
counsel.
DM
THULARE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Counsel
for the Applicants:
Adv
Tembeka Ngcukaitobi SC
Adv
Michael Bishop
Adv
Jatheen Bhima
Adv
Nikki Stein
Adv
Letlhogonolo Mokgoroane
Adv
Tauriq Moosa
Instructed
by:
Ms
Wilmien Wicomb (Legal Resources Centre)
Mr
Johan Lorenzen (Richard Spoor Incorporated)
Counsel
for Respondents:
Third
and Fourth Respondent:
Adv
Jeremy Gauntlett SC QC
Adv
Andrian Friedman
Adv
Laurane Crow
Instructed
by:
Mr
Roy Barendse (Cliffe Dekker Hoffmeyr)
Counsel
for the Fifth Respondent:
Adv
Ismail Jamie SC
Adv
Piet Olivier
Instructed
by: Mr Lionel Egypt (Webber Wentzle)
sino noindex
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