Case Law[2024] ZASCA 143South Africa
African Centre for Biodiversity NPC v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and Others (934/2023) [2024] ZASCA 143; 2025 (2) SA 31 (SCA) (22 October 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
22 October 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Genetically Modified Organisms Act 15 of 1997 – application for a permit to conduct activities in respect of genetically modified organisms – s 5(1)(a) – failure by decision-makers to determine whether applicant must submit an assessment in accordance with the relevant provisions of the National Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998 – approval of application set aside – application referred back to decision-makers for reconsideration.
Judgment
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## African Centre for Biodiversity NPC v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and Others (934/2023) [2024] ZASCA 143; 2025 (2) SA 31 (SCA) (22 October 2024)
African Centre for Biodiversity NPC v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and Others (934/2023) [2024] ZASCA 143; 2025 (2) SA 31 (SCA) (22 October 2024)
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sino date 22 October 2024
FLYNOTES:
ENVIRONMENT – Genetically
modified organisms –
Permit
approval –
Precautionary principle and
possible environmental harm –
Genetically Modified Organisms
Act 15 of 1997
– Application for permit to conduct
activities in respect of genetically modified organisms –
Section 5(1)(a)
– Failure by decision-makers to determine
whether applicant must submit an assessment in accordance with the
relevant
provisions of the
National Environmental Management Act
107 of 1998
– Approval of application set aside.
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 934/2023
In
the matter between:
AFRICAN
CENTRE FOR BIODIVERSITY
NPC
APPELLANT
and
MINISTER
OF AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY
AND
FISHERIES
FIRST RESPONDENT
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT OF
AGRICULTURE,
FORESTRY AND FISHERIES
SECOND RESPONDENT
EXECUTIVE
COUNCIL FOR GENETICALLY
MODIFIED
ORGANISMS
THIRD RESPONDENT
APPEAL BOARD,
GENETICALLY MODIFIED
ORGANISMS
FOURTH RESPONDENT
MONSANTO SOUTH AFRICA
(PTY) LTD
FIFTH RESPONDENT
BAYER (PTY)
LTD
SIXTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
African
Centre for Biodiversity NPC v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and
Fisheries and Others
(934/2023)
[2024]
ZASCA 143
(22 October 2024)
Coram:
MOLEMELA P and PONNAN and NICHOLLS JJA and KOEN
and COPPIN AJJA
Heard
:
19 September 2024
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website, and release to SAFLII. The date for hand
down is deemed to be 22 October 2024
at 11h00.
Summary:
Genetically Modified Organisms Act 15
of 1997
– application for a permit to conduct activities in
respect of genetically modified organisms –
s 5(1)
(a)
–
failure by decision-makers to determine
whether applicant must submit an assessment in accordance with the
relevant provisions of
the National Environmental Management Act 107
of 1998 – approval of application set aside – application
referred back
to decision-makers for reconsideration.
ORDER
On
appeal from
:
Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria (Tolmay J, sitting as court of first instance):
a
The appeal is upheld with costs including those of two counsel to be
paid by the respondents
jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved.
b
The order of the court
a quo
is set aside and replaced with
the following order:
‘
1
The application succeeds with costs including those of two counsel to
be paid
by
the respondents jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved.
2
The following decisions are reviewed and set aside:
2.1
The fourth respondent’s approval during or about June 2015, of
the fifth respondent’s application
for the general release of
MON87460;
2.2
The third respondent’s decision of 1 September 2016, dismissing
the appeal lodged by the appellant
against the fourth respondent’s
approval of the fifth respondent’s application for the general
release of MON87460;
and
2.3
The first respondent’s decision of 2 December 2016, confirming
the dismissal of the appeal lodged
by the appellant against the
fourth respondent’s approval of the fifth respondent’s
application for the general release
of MON87460.
3
The fifth respondent’s application for the approval of the
general release of
MON87460 is referred back to the fourth respondent
for re-consideration.’
JUDGMENT
Ponnan
JA (Molemela P and Nicholls JA and Koen and Coppin AJJA concurring):
[1]
The
use of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in South Africa is
regulated by the Genetically Modified Organisms Act 15 of 1997
(the
Act) and, the Regulations framed thereunder, the Genetically Modified
Organisms Regulations (the Regulations).
[1]
The purpose of the Act and the Regulations is, inter alia, to promote
the responsible development, production, use and application
of GMOs
within the framework of the Constitution and the National
Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998 (NEMA).
[2]
The
Act establishes an Executive Council for Genetically Modified
Organisms (the Executive Council) (s 3), and an Advisory Committee
(the Advisory Committee) (s 10). A permit is required for the release
of GMOs.
[2]
Whether or not a
permit is granted falls to be determined by the Executive Council in
consultation with the Advisory Committee.
[3]
The process envisaged is a fact and science-based investigation into
whether there are any risks posed by the release of a particular
GMO
into the environment and whether these risks can be effectively
managed. To enable this, the Advisory Committee evaluates the
scientific components of applications for permits and reports to the
Executive Council, which ultimately decides whether to approve
the
application, and issue a permit.
[3]
An
application for a permit: (a) must be advertised and any interested
party may submit comments to the Executive Council in respect
of the
application;
[4]
(b) must include
a scientifically based risk assessment in respect of the potential
adverse effects of the GMO on the environment
as well as human and
animal health and safety;
[5]
and, (c) requires an assessment in terms of NEMA or any other
applicable laws, if this is called for by the Executive Council,
[6]
or if there is reason to believe that the release of the GMO would
pose a threat to an indigenous species or the environment.
[7]
In considering whether a permit should be granted, the Executive
Council and Advisory Committee are required to determine whether
a
proposed activity poses a risk to human and animal health or the
environment.
[8]
[4]
On 14 July 2014, the fifth respondent, Monsanto South Africa (Pty)
Ltd (Monsanto), applied to
the Executive Council for a permit for the
general release of a genetically modified variety of maize, described
as MON87460. MON87460,
according to Monsanto, has been genetically
modified to reduce yield loss in water limited conditions. Monsanto
asserts that:
‘
The
reduced yield loss of maize containing MON 87460 is achieved by the
expression of the inserted
Bacillus
subtilis
cold
shock protein B (“CSPB”). This protein has been
extensively studied and is known to facilitate adaptation to
environmental
stress (such as water scarcity) by binding secondary
RNA structures thus helping to preserve normal cellular function.
Maize containing
MON 87460 also expresses the neomycin
phosphotransferase II (“NPTII”) protein derived from
Escherichia
coli
.
The NPTII protein in MON 87460 confers resistance to Kanamycin
antibiotic. The purpose of inserting the gene encoding for the
NPTII
protein was so that there was an effective method for selecting cells
after transformation (in other words so that there
was a way of
selecting plant cells which contain the CSPB gene during early
product development).’
[5]
Monsanto submitted both confidential and non-confidential versions of
the application, which included
an assessment of the risks relating
to human and animal health, toxicology, allergenicity and nutrition.
It was advertised in the
Rapport, Business Day and Beeld newspapers
during March and April 2014. Interested and affected parties were
invited to comment
or object. No comments or objections were received
in response to the advertisements. The Advisory Committee, having
considered
the application, issued a recommendation on 17 December
2014 that the application be approved. On the strength of the
Advisory
Committee’s recommendation, the Executive Council
granted a permit to Monsanto on 12 June 2015 for the general release
of
MON87460.
[6]
On 7 August 2015, the appellant, the African Centre for Biodiversity
NPC (ACB), a non-governmental
advocacy organisation, with a focus on
biosafety and agricultural biodiversity, appealed in terms of s 19 of
the Act against the
approval granted by the Executive Council to
Monsanto for the general release of MON87460. Monsanto submitted a
response to ACB’s
appeal on 13 July 2016. The Appeal Board, by
a majority, dismissed the appeal on 1 September 2016, and the
Minister of Agriculture,
Forestry and Fisheries (the Minister)
confirmed the Appeal Board’s decision on 2 December 2016.
[7]
In April 2017, ACB applied to the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria (the high court),
for the following relief:
‘
1.
the following decisions are reviewed and set aside:
1.1.
the Fourth Respondent’s [Executive Council’s] approval
during or about June 2015,
for the general release of MON87460;
1.2.
the Third Respondent’s [Appeal Board’s] decision of 01
September 2016, dismissing
the appeal lodged by the Applicant against
the Fourth Respondent’s approval for the general release of
MON87460;
1.3.
the First Respondent’s [Minister’s] decision of 02
December 2016, confirming the
dismissal of the appeal lodged by the
Applicant against the Fourth Respondent’s approval for the
general release of MON87460
by the;
2.
the Fifth Respondent’s [Monsanto’s] application for the
approval
for the general release of MON87460 is referred back to the
Fourth Respondent for reconsideration with such guidelines as this
Honourable Court deems fit;
.
. .’
[8]
The Minister, the Director-General: Department of Agriculture,
Forestry and Fisheries, the Appeal
Board and the Executive Council
(collectively referred to as the State respondents) were cited as the
first to fourth respondents,
respectively. Monsanto was cited as the
fifth respondent in the application. After the launch of the
application, Bayer (Pty) Ltd
(Bayer) acquired ownership of Monsanto
and, as a result of the permits and licences relevant to MON87460
having been transferred
to it, Bayer came to be joined as the sixth
respondent to the proceedings.
[9]
The high court (per Tolmay J) dismissed the application on 27 June
2023, but granted leave to
ACB to appeal to this Court.
[10]
The thrust of the appellant’s case is that the State
respondents accepted, at face value, the claims
made by Monsanto and
failed to independently and critically evaluate Monsanto’s
application to satisfy themselves that the
health and safety risks
associated with the general release of MON87460 had been properly
addressed. The appellant contends that
the expert evidence that
served before the State respondents, ought to have triggered the
application of the precautionary principle
enshrined in s 2 of NEMA.
This, for two main reasons: first, there was a lack of scientific
data from which conclusions about the
safety of MON87460 could be
drawn; and second, the data that had been made available supported
concerns about health risks arising
from the use of MON87460.
Accordingly, so the contention proceeds: (a) the Executive Council
accepted the data submitted by Monsanto
without any consideration of
the veracity, accuracy and completeness thereof; (b) the Appeal Board
did not engage with the grounds
of appeal and the expert evidence,
but simply rubber-stamped the decision made by the Executive Council;
and, (c) the Minister
further rubber-stamped the Appeal Board’s
decision by way of a confirmation letter that furnished no reasons at
all.
[11]
Parenthetically, it is perhaps necessary to touch (albeit briefly) on
the precautionary principle, given
its centrality to the debate. The
precautionary principle, in essence, requires that where there exists
evidence of possible environmental
harm, decision-makers ought to
adopt a cautious approach and are compelled to take protective and
preventive measures before the
anticipated harm materialises. Whilst
there has been reference to the precautionary principle since at
least the 1970s, it has
more recently firmly taken root and has been
referred to in almost every recent international environmental
agreement, including
the 1992 Rio Declaration on Environment and
Development (informally described as the Earth Summit) (the Rio
Declaration), the 1992
UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
(Article 3(3)), the June 1990 London Amendments to the Montreal
Protocol on Substances
that Deplete the Ozone Layer (Preamble, para
6) and the 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity.
[9]
[12]
Principle 15 of the Rio Declaration provides:
‘
In
order to protect the environment, the precautionary approach shall be
widely applied by States according to their capabilities.
Where there
are threats of serious or irreversible damage, lack of full
scientific certainty shall not be used as a reason for
postponing
cost-effective measures to prevent environmental degradation.’
[13]
The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety to the Convention on Biological
Diversity reaffirmed the precautionary
approach contained in
Principle 15 of the Rio Declaration. The objective of the Protocol is
set out in Article 1 as follows:
‘
In
accordance with the precautionary approach contained in Principle 15
of the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, the
objective
of this Protocol is to contribute to ensuring an adequate level of
protection in the field of safe transfer, handling
and use of living
modified organisms resulting from modern biotechnology that may have
adverse effects on the conservation and
sustainable use of biological
diversity, taking into account risks to human health, and
specifically focusing on transboundary
movements.’
South Africa ratified the
Cartagena Protocol in August 2003 and it is included as an Annexure
to the Act for information purposes.
[14]
In
Fuel
Retailers
,
the Constitutional Court, in examining the duties imposed on
environmental authorities (such as the State respondents in this
case), emphasised that the approach adopted in our environmental
legislation (a reference in that case to NEMA) is one of
risk-aversion
and caution, which entails ‘taking into account
the limitation on present knowledge about the consequences of an
environmental
decision’.
[10]
The Court held that the precautionary principle ‘is applicable
where, due to unavailable scientific knowledge, there is uncertainty
as to the future impact of the proposed development’.
[11]
[15]
In
WWF
South Africa v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and
Others
,
[12]
faced with a challenge to the determination of fishing quotas, the
court (per Rogers J) made clear that the determination ought
to have
been informed by binding principles of environmental protection,
conservation and sustainability, including the precautionary
principle. Any decision taken therefore could only lawfully be taken
with regard to all of these objectives and principles.
[13]
Indeed, the failure by the decision-maker to apply the precautionary
principle – and the fact that the decision ultimately
taken was
at odds with the precautionary principle – were cited as
grounds upon which the determination was found to be unlawful,
resulting in a declaration of invalidity.
[14]
[16]
In the course of the judgment, where reference is made to several
comparable international jurisdictions,
[15]
Rogers J observed:
‘
The
risk-averse and precautionary approach mandated by NEMA and MLRA also
has a bearing on this aspect of Ms Ndudane’s reasoning.
The
precautionary principle features widely in environmental legislation
around the world. It entails that where there is a threat
of serious
or irreversible damage to a resource, the lack of full scientific
certainty should not be used as a reason for postponing
measures to
prevent environmental degradation (Jan Glazewski
Environmental
Law in South Africa
19-20;
cf
Space
Securitisation (Pty) Ltd v Trans Caledon Tunnel Authority &
others
[2013]
4 All SA 624
(GSJ)
paras 45-48)’.
[16]
[17]
The Constitutional Court adopted a similar approach in
Fuel
Retailers
,
[17]
which was concerned with the review of a decision to grant
authorisation for the construction of a filing station. In outlining
the duties of decision-makers in that context, the Court held:
‘
Before
concluding this judgment, there are two matters that should be
mentioned in relation to the duty of environmental authorities
which
are a source of concern. The first relates to the attitude of Water
Affairs and Forestry and the environmental authorities.
The
environmental authorities and Water Affairs and Forestry did not seem
to take seriously the threat of contamination of the
underground
water supply. The precautionary principle requires these authorities
to insist on adequate precautionary measures to
safeguard against the
contamination of underground water. . . In these circumstances one
would have expected that the environmental
authorities and Water
Affairs and Forestry would conduct a thorough investigation into the
possible impact of the installation
of petrol tanks in the vicinity
of the borehole, in particular, in light of the existence of other
filling stations in the vicinity.
The environmental authorities did
not consider the cumulative effect of the proliferation of filling
stations on the aquifer.’
[18]
[18]
The high court’s rejection of the appellant’s reliance on
the precautionary principle was based
on its finding that the
precautionary principle does not find direct application in review
proceedings. However, such an approach
disregards the fundamental
role that the precautionary principle plays in directing
decision-makers in the exercise of their discretion.
The current
state of knowledge and uncertainty, the potential for serious or
irreversible harm and the adoption of a cautious approach
is clearly
consistent with the subject-matter, scope and purpose of the Act. In
Director-General National Parks & Wildlife Service v
Shoalhaven City Council
, Stein J observed that:
‘
In
my opinion the precautionary principle is a statement of common sense
and has already been applied by decision-makers in appropriate
circumstances prior to the principle being spelt out. It is directed
towards the prevention of serious or irreversible harm to
the
environment in situations of scientific uncertainty. Its premise is
that where uncertainty or ignorance exists concerning the
nature or
scope of environmental harm (whether this follows from policies,
decisions or activities), decision makers should be
cautious.’
[19]
[19]
Delineating the role of the courts in circumstances such as this, the
Constitutional Court stated:
‘
The
role of the courts is especially important in the context of the
protection of the environment and giving effect to the principle
of
sustainable development. The importance of the protection of the
environment cannot be gainsaid. Its protection is vital to
the
enjoyment of the other rights contained in the Bill of Rights;
indeed, it is vital to life itself. It must therefore be protected
for the benefit of the present and future generations. The present
generation holds the earth in trust for the next generation.
This
trusteeship position carries with it the responsibility to look after
the environment. It is the duty of the Court to ensure
that this
responsibility is carried out.’
[20]
[20]
The experts, who provided opinions in support of the appellant,
highlighted several fundamental concerns,
all of which were
articulated in the appeal document that served before the Appeal
Board. Those concerns include:
(a) When regard is had to
the Cartagena Protocol, which requires that claims of scientific
certainty be substantiated with evidence
to prove lack of potential
for scientific hazards; Monsanto’s risk assessment was
inadequate in identifying plausible hazards;
(b) Monsanto’s
claims of lack of allergenicity are unsubstantiated;
(c) Monsanto itself
identified a fragment of the protein used in MON87460 (cspB) that was
resistant to pepsin digestion, meaning
that it is not fully
digestible by gastric juices, further experimentation (such as serum
analysis or animal testing) was thus
required to assess potential
allergenicity;
(d) The data that
Monsanto had included in its application showed high expression of
cspB in pollen, but Monsanto has not conducted
any studies on the
potential and likelihood of allergenic responses to pollen;
(e) There is no history
of the safe use of MON87460 in the form in which it is expressed
inasmuch as the data submitted by Monsanto
in support of its safety
claims were based on fermented and digested forms of the product;
(f) There was no evidence
in the record before the Executive Council, the Appeal Board and the
Minister on the effects of food processing
and the safety of human
exposure via cooked MON87460 in South African diets, the only data
included was summaries of the following
–
(i) A chicken feeding
study in which raw maize was fed to chickens;
(ii) An acute toxicity
study on the effects on mice of a bacterially derived isolated
protein, which has limited application to
human exposure and is in
any event not a study of all proteins associated with MON87460;
(iii) A rat feeding
study;
(iv)
A broiler chicken study, which was concerned with food quality
standards and not with any adverse impacts on health; and,
(v)
Aggregated field trial summaries, which contain insufficient
information to interpret and apply the findings to the application
for approval for the general release of MON87460.
[21]
These are the precise circumstances, so contends the appellant, that
ought to have triggered the application
of the precautionary
principle by the Executive Council, the Appeal Board and the
Minister. Instead of adopting the prescribed
cautious approach and
requiring Monsanto to address the safety concerns that had been
identified, each of the State respondents
proceeded to accept the
say-so of Monsanto without any further consideration of safety risks.
The precautionary principle ought
to have guided the decisions taken
by the Executive Council, the Appeal Board and the Minister. To the
extent that they did not
have regard to the precautionary principle
and took decisions that were at odds with its prescripts, so the
contention proceeds,
their decisions are liable to be reviewed and
set aside. However, as interesting a discussion that a consideration
of these issues
is likely to generate in the light of the competing
contentions by the respondents, for the present, they need hardly
detain us.
This, because a further complaint by the appellant, that
the State respondents had failed to comply with s 5(1)
(a)
of
the Act, appears to have gone unanswered.
[22]
Section 5(1)
(a)
of the Act provides that the Executive Council
shall:
‘
[W]here
an applicant applies in the prescribed manner for a permit to conduct
activities in respect of genetically modified organisms
determine
whether that applicant must, in addition to his or her application,
submit an assessment in accordance with the relevant
provisions of
[NEMA], of the impact on the environment and an assessment of the
socio-economic considerations of such activities’.
This provision, which is
framed in peremptory terms, places an obligation on the Executive
Council to make a determination as to
whether or not an applicant
must submit an assessment in accordance with NEMA.
[23]
The Rule 53 record contains no express evidence of any determination
by the Executive Council as contemplated
by s 5(1)
(a)
. The
argument advanced at the bar was that it would be safe to infer that
the Executive Council had indeed determined that Monsanto
did not
have to submit such an assessment. However, such evidence, as there
is, points in the opposite direction. The dissenting
voice on the
Appeal Board recorded:
‘
Environmental
Impact Assessment (EIA): There are no
Indications/evidence/information to show that Monsanto was requested
to submit
an assessment of the impact on the environment and
socio-economic considerations’.
That recordal strongly
suggests that, at the time that the Executive Council assessed the
application for a permit for the general
release of MON87460, it
failed to consider or determine whether an environmental impact study
in terms of NEMA was necessary.
[24]
The high court conflated the obligation arising from section 5(1)
(a)
of the Act with the applicability of the precautionary principle,
finding that an environmental impact study would only be required
in
the event of the precautionary principle being triggered. First, as
addressed above, the precautionary principle was triggered
and ought
to have been applied. Second, whether the Executive Council, as a
matter of fact, complied with section 5(1)
(a)
by considering
the necessity of an environmental impact study to ascertain the
impact on the environment of the proposed general
release of
MON87460, was a separate and distinct inquiry from whether the
precautionary principle was triggered and should have
been applied.
It ought to have been a relatively simple and straightforward matter
for the State respondents to have adduced evidence
that a
determination, one way or the other, had been made. They did not. The
ineluctable conclusion is that the Executive Council
failed to comply
with a mandatory statutory prescript contained in section 5(1)
(a)
.
This means that the Executive Council’s decision cannot stand.
Nor, for that matter, it must follow, can the decisions by
the Appeal
Board or the Minister.
[25]
In the result:
a
The appeal is upheld with costs including those of two counsel to be
paid by the respondents
jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved.
b
The order of the court
a quo
is set aside and replaced with
the following order:
‘
1
The application succeeds with costs including those of two counsel to
be paid by the
respondents jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved.
2
The following decisions are reviewed and set aside:
2.1
The fourth respondent’s approval during or about June 2015, of
the fifth respondent’s application
for the general release of
MON87460;
2.2
The third respondent’s decision of 1 September 2016, dismissing
the appeal lodged by the appellant
against the fourth respondent’s
approval of the fifth respondent’s application for the general
release of MON87460;
and
2.3
The first respondent’s decision of 2 December 2016, confirming
the dismissal of the appeal lodged
by the appellant against the
fourth respondent’s approval of the fifth respondent’s
application for the general release
of MON87460.
3
The fifth respondent’s application for the approval of the
general release of
MON87460 is referred back to the fourth respondent
for re-consideration.’
V M PONNAN
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
K
Pillay SC with N Stein
Instructed
by:
Legal
Aid South Africa, Johannesburg
Legal
Aid South Africa, Bloemfontein
For
the first to fourth respondents:
J Rust
SC
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney, Pretoria
For
the fifth and sixth respondents:
The
State Attorney, Bloemfontein
Instructed
by:
P
Lazarus SC with I Learmonth
Webber
Wentzel, Johannesburg
McIntyre
Van Der Post, Bloemfontein
[1]
GNR
120 of 26 February 2010.
[2]
Section
5 read with Regulation 2.
[3]
Section
5(1)
(b)
.
[4]
Regulations
9(1), 9(5)
(f)
and
9(6).
[5]
Regulation
3(3)
(a)
.
[6]
Regulation
3(3)
(d)
.
[7]
Section
78
of the
National Environmental Management: Biodiversity Act 10 of
2004
.
[8]
Regulations
3
,
4
and
7
.
[9]
Director-General
National Parks & Wildlife Service v Shoalhaven City Council
[1993]
NSWLEC 191
(
Shoalhaven
)
at 15-16.
[10]
Fuel
Retailers Association of Southern Africa v Director-General:
Environmental Management, Department of Agriculture, Conservation
and Environment, Mpumalanga Province and Others
2007
(6) SA 4
(CC) (
Fuel
Retailers
)
para 81.
[11]
Ibid
para 98.
[12]
WWF
South Africa v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and
Others
[2018]
ZAWCHC 127
;
[2018] 4 All SA 889
(WCC);
2019 (2) SA 403
(WCC) para
104.
[13]
Ibid
para 83.
[14]
Ibid
para 117.
[15]
Ibid
para 101–104. See also J Glazewski and L Plit [2015] ‘Towards
the Application of the Precautionary Principle
in South African Law’
(2015) 26(1)
Stellenbosch
Law Review
at
190.
[16]
Ibid
100.
[17]
Fuel
Retailers
fn
10 above.
[18]
Ibid
paras 98-99.
[19]
Shoalhaven
fn
9 above.
[20]
Fuel
Retailers
fn
10 above para 102.
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