Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 53South Africa
Calderys South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Member of Executive Council Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development and Others (21/58720) [2024] ZAGPJHC 53 (23 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
23 January 2024
Headnotes
"[61] construed in the light of section 24 of the Constitution, NEMA, therefore, requires the integration of environmental protection and economic and social development. it requires that the interest of the environment be balanced with the socio-economic interest. Thus, whenever a development that may have a significant impact on the environment is planned, it envisages that there will always be a need to weigh considerations of development, as underpinned by the right to
Judgment
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## Calderys South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Member of Executive Council Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development and Others (21/58720) [2024] ZAGPJHC 53 (23 January 2024)
Calderys South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Member of Executive Council Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development and Others (21/58720) [2024] ZAGPJHC 53 (23 January 2024)
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sino date 23 January 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
.
: 21/
58720
1.
Reportable: No
2.
Of interest to other judges: No
- Revised: NoDate:
23/01/2024
Revised: No
Date:
23/01/2024
In
the matter between:
CALDERYS
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
And
MEMBER OF EXECUTIVE
COUNCIL
GAUTENG DEPARTMENT
OF AGRICULTURE AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL
MANAGEMENT INSPECTOR
GAUTENG DEPARTMENT
OF AGRICULTURE AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT
SEDIBENG
DISTRICT MUNICIPALITY
1
ST
RESPONDENT
2
ND
RESPONDENT
3
RD
RESPONDENT
Coram
:
Dlamini
J
Date
of Hearing
: 21
August 2023 – Courtroom 11F
Date
of delivery of judgment
: 23 January 2024
This
Judgment is deemed to have been delivered electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives via email and
shall
be uploaded onto the caselines system.
JUDGMENT
DLAMINI
J
[1]
This is a review application brought by the
applicant against the respondents in two parts, the first being a
review relief and
the second being a declaratory relief.
[2]
In the review relief, the applicant seeks to
review and set aside two impugned decisions – the issue of the
compliance notice
and the MEC’s decision to dismiss Caldery's
objection to the compliance notice. In the declaratory relief, the
applicant
seeks a declaration that its process of manufacturing of
ready- shape refractory castables, is not a process of ceramic
production
under sub-category 5.9 of the listing notice published
under GN 893 in GG 370 54 of 22 November 2013.
[3]
The applicant, Calderys is a company based in the
Vaal area, that manufactures ready-shape refractory castables, which
are solid,
heat-resistance parts used in industrial equipment
including aluminum furnaces and boilers.
[4]
The first respondent is the Member of the
Executive Council (
the MEC
)
of the Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development
(
GDARD
),
cited herein in his official capacity having decided on 10 March 2021
to dismiss an objection by the applicant to a compliance
notice
issued to it on 12 February 2020 in terms of section 31L of NEMA in
respect of the applicant's operations at its factory.
[5]
The second respondent is employed by the GDARD in
the Chief Directorate of Compliance and Enforcement and is an
environmental management
Inspector (the Inspector) and is cited in
her official capacity as having decided to issue the compliance
notice.
[6]
The third respondent is the Sedibeng District
Municipality, cited herein by reasons of the interest it has in this
application,
being the authority charged with implementing the
atmospheric emission licensing system in terms of section 22 of the
Air Quality
Act. No relief is sought against the Municipality.
CONSTITUTIONAL AND
STATUTORY FRAMEWORK
[7]
It is imperative at this stage to set out the
constitutional and statutory framework within which this application
is to be considered.
[8]
The legislative measures contemplated in section
24 of the Constitution lie at the heart of the dispute between the
parties.
[9]
In
Fuel
Retailers Association of Southern Africa v Director-General:
Environmental
Management,
Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Environment
,
Mpumalanga
Province and Others,
[1]
the
Constitutional Court held that "[61] construed in the light of
section 24 of the Constitution, NEMA, therefore, requires
the
integration of environmental protection and economic and social
development. it requires that the interest of the environment
be
balanced with the socio-economic interest. Thus, whenever a
development that may have a significant impact on the environment
is
planned, it envisages that there will always be a need to weigh
considerations of development, as underpinned by the right to
socio-economic development, against environmental consideration, as
underpinned by the right to environmental protection. In this
sense,
it contemplates that environmental decisions will achieve a balance
between environmental and socio-economic development
considerations
through the concept of sustainable development"
[10]
The critical piece of legislation to be considered
is the National Environmental Management: Air Quality Act 39 of 2004
(the
NEMAQA).
[11]
The stated objectives of the Act are to protect
the environment by providing reasonable measures for the following;-
(i)
The protection and enhancement of the quality of
air in the Republic;
(ii)
The prevention of air pollution and ecological
degradation,
(iii)
Securing ecologically sustainable development
while promoting justifiable economic and social development.
(iv)
Shall apply alongside all other appropriate and
relevant considerations, including the State’s responsibility
to respect,
protect, promote, and fulfill the social and economic
rights in Chapter 2 of the Constitution and in particular the basic
needs
of categories of persons.
[12]
Viewed holistically, the Act aims to strike a
balance of protecting the environment whilst at the same time
allowing for economic
and social development.
[13]
The Act provides that it must be read and that its
interpretation and application must be guided and dealt with in terms
of section
2 of the National Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998
(the NEMA).
[14]
The Act calls upon the Minister to publish a list
of activities that result in atmospheric emissions and which the
Minister reasonably
believes have or may have a significant
detrimental effect on the environment, including health, social
conditions, economic conditions,
ecological conditions, or cultural
heritage.
[15]
Section 21(3) provides that the listing notice
must establish minimun emission standards with respect to the
substance or mixture
of substances resulting from the listed activity
including the permissible amount, volume, emission rate, or
concentration of the
substance and the manner in which measurements
of such emissions must be carried out. The Act provides for
possibilities of investigations.
The section stipulates that the
Minister may at any time appoint one or more persons to assist either
him or her after consultation
with a Municipal Council or the MEC or
another national Minister in the evaluation of a matter relating to
the protection of the
environment by obtaining such information,
whether documentary or oral, as is relevant to such investigation.
[16]
Accordingly, the Act empowers the Minister to have
access to the assistance of independent experts to assist the
Minister or the
MEC in arriving at various decisions aimed at
protecting and enforcing the provisions of the Act.
[17]
The rationale behind these provisions is the
following;-
16.1
To ensure that activities that may have a
significant detrimental effect on the environment by reasons of their
emissions are licensed,
so they may be regulated in terms of the Air
Quality Act and,
16.2
To ensure that the level of emissions which a
single producer in respect of a listed activity is standardized
across all producers.
This results in equality of treatment and the
consistent control of emission levels associated with the listed
activities, instead
of an ad hoc basis through individual licences.
[17]
The Minister has to identify the activities that
result in atmospheric emissions, thereafter the Minister must
determine which of
those activities have or may have a significant
detrimental effect on the environment.
[18]
Once the Minister has made the determination, the
Minister must then publish a list of such activities. Thereafter the
Minister
must establish minimum emission standards in respect of each
of the listed activities and include these in the listing notice. It
is this listing notice that forms the backdrop to this
litigation.
BACKGROUND FACTS
[19]
The facts surrounding this dispute are largely
common cause.
[20]
The applicant testified that it manufactures
ready-shape refractory castables, which are solid, heat–resistant
parts used
in industrial equipment including aluminum furnaces and
boilers. The applicant says that these pre-cast shapes which are used
for
different industrial applications are achieved by allowing the
mixture and water to set in the moulds. Thereafter the hardened shape
can be removed from the mould and prepared for dispatch.
[21]
Calderys avers that it does not immediately
dispatch its castables because the bulk of its customers requires the
castables to be
pre-dried before being dispatched. According, to the
applicant, the drying process assists its customers in that they can
be immediately
installed in the customers’s process vessels.
The applicant says that if it did not dry out its castables in the
manner that
it does its customers would have to dry them on-site
before using them in their process vessels and subjecting them to
high temperatures.
[22]
This drying process, avers Calderys is not
necessary for the hardening of the refractory castable. Instead, it
is only necessary
for the removal of excess water for the convenience
of its customers. The applicant testified that it dries its castables
at around
300
0
C
to 350
0
C
as opposed to the typical firing of temperatures that range from
800
0
C
to 1150
0
C.
[23]
Having, set out its manufacturing process above,
Calderys testified that the process that it uses to manufacture its
products does
not fall within subcategory 5.9 but subcategory 5.2. fo
the listing notice. However, the respondents disagree.
[24]
On 12 February 2020, the Inspector issued a
compliance notice in terms of 31L of NEMA. The applicant lodged its
objection to the
Inspector’s notice.
[25]
On 10 March 2021, the MEC dismissed Caldersy's
objection. Feeling aggrieved by the MEC's decision, Calderys launched
this application.
ISSUE TO BE DECIDED
[26]
The nub of the issue between the parties is how to
classify the applicant’s production. Whether Calderys is
involved in ceramic
production by firing as stipulated in subcategory
5.9 or whether it merely dries its castables as contained in
subcategory 5.2.
Further, whether the respondent’s decision to
reject the applicant’s objection falls to be reviewed and set
aside.
[27]
The case made by Calderys is that its essential
manufacturing process features make it clear that it is only involved
in the activity
of "drying" as envisaged in subcategory 5.2
of the listing notice and not the activity of ceramic production as
specified
in subcategory 5.9 of the listing notice.
[28]
Calderys insists that it does not make ceramic
products and that it only manufactures ready-shape refractory
castables. That its
manufacturing process does not involve firing.
[29]
The applicant submit that its process does not
require require extreme heat to be applied to bond its refractory
castables. Calderys
says its castables are already bonded as a result
of the chemical reaction that occurs when water is added to the
mixture of graded-size
pre-fired aggregate and cement. Following this
process, the applicant avers that it uses lower temperatures of heat
to dry out
the castables to remove excess water.
[30]
To satisfy its customers, the applicant argues
that it does not immediately dispatch its castables because a number
of its customers
require the castables to be pre-dried before being
dispatched. Calderys, says it then first dries the castables as this
will assist
its customers as the castables can be immediately
installed in the customer’s process vessels.
[31]
The case made by the respondents is that the
process of drying/ thermal treatment is essential to the applicant's
business in that
it cannot in the course of its business advise its
customers to accept a wet brick and urge them to dry same at their
premises.
The respondents insist that it is the applicant's heating
operations that attracts the concerns of the respondents. According
to
the respondents, combustion by its nature is a reaction that
results in certain emissions/ pollutants to the atmosphere depending
on the type of fuel used. The various type of fuel insists the
respondents release certain chemicals into the atmosphere and it
is
this process that attracts the respondent's concern.
[32]
According to the respondents, once the applicant's
moulding is put in a combustion chamber or an oven, then the
respondents become
involved because the process now involves heating
/firing. During the heating process, there is moisture in the
product. Once there
is an incomplete combustion, the respondents say
the List is triggered. The respondents are adamant that the
applicant's argument
that it uses gas as fuel is irrelevant in the
application of the law under the relevant sub-category 5.9 of the
Listing Notice.
This is because no fire is 100% safe. That firing
produces pollutants and must thus be regulated.
[33]
It is apposite to set out the statutory framework
within which the application is to be considered. Part 3 of the
listing notice
contains a set of listed activities and the maximum
emission levels of those activities. The activities are then divided
into categories
and subcategories. In each activity there is a table
with three parts;-
(a)
A part headed Description, which contains a
description of the activity that is sort to be regulated;
(b)
A part headed Application, which contains a
description of the scale required for the process to qualify as a
listed activity; and
(c)
A part containing maximum emission standards of
substances and mixtures of substances associated with each activity,
which standards
may not be exceeded.
[34]
Relevant to this application is subcategory 5.9
Ceramic production.
[35]
The listed activity of ceramic production has
three elements;-
35.1 It
involves the production of ceramic products such as tiles, bricks,
refractory bricks, stoneware, or porcelain;
35.2
The production must involve the process of "firing";
35.3
The production output must be 100 tons or more per annum.
[36]
The point to be emphasized at this stage is that
all three above features must be present for an activity to fall
under sub-category
5.9
[37]
The next relevant activity is listed in
subcategory 5.2. Drying.
[38]
The listed drying subcategory has three features;-
38.1
It involves drying of minerals solids;
38.2
The drying process must involve the use of
combustion installations;
38.3
The production output must be 100 tons per month
or more.
[39]
The
principle of interpretation of contracts in our law is well
established and has been pronounced upon in a number of our court's
decisions. In
Firstrand
Bank LTD v
KJ
Foods
,
[2]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that in interpreting terms of
contract or legislation as the case maybe; the principles enunciated
in
Natal
Joint
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[3]
and
Norvatis
SA
(PTY)Ltd
v Maphil Trading (PTY) Ltd
[4]
find
application…..Furthermore, as was said in Endumeni, "
a
sensible meaning is to be preferred to the that leads to insensible
or unbusinesslike results
”
.
See also
International
Business Machines (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner of Customs and Excise
.
[5]
[40]
It appears to me that there is no dispute
regarding the manufacturing process of the applicant. The main
contestation between parties
occurs after Calderys claims its
castables are complete and ready to be handed over to its customers.
Once Calderys avers as it
has done that its castables are complete. A
businesslike and sensible interpretation of the listing notice is
this; The applicant
has in my view two choices. One, the applicant
must simply hand over the castable to its customers as is.
Alternatively, Calderys
must put the castables in the sun for the
castables to dry.
[41]
Any process that Calderys engages in after it
claims its castables are complete, in my view that process attracts
the provisions
of 5.9. This is so because on its own Calderys admits
that its drying process, does have minimal effect on the cold
crushing strength
of the material'. Furthermore, the applicant admits
that it drying process does cause the emissions of sulpher dioxide
and hydrogen
fluoride although, Caldery's claims that these emissions
are in general below the detection level is in my view irrelevant.
Also,
the applicant’s claim that its process involves heating
at a lower temperature is of no moment. It should follow therefore
as
it must, that Calderys heating process can only be classified as
firing in terms of category 5.9 and not drying as contained
in
category 5.2.
[42]
It is evidently insensible and unbusinesslike for
Calderys to allege that its castables are complete and ready for
delivery to its
customers whilst, in the same breath, the applicant
insists that it wants to engage in a further process to dry the very
same completed
castables.
[43]
It is
now a well-established principle of our law that the constitution
requires that judicial officers read legislation, where
possible, in
ways that give effect to its fundamental values. Consistently with
this, when the constitutionality of legislation
is in issue, they are
under a duty to examine the objects and purport of an Act and to read
the provisions of the legislation,
so far, as possible, in conformity
with the Constitution. See Investigating Directorate: Serious
Economic Offences and Others v
Hyundai Motor Distributors: In
Re
Hyundai
Motor
Distributors (PTY) Ltd and Others v Smit NO and Others
.
[6]
In my view, the constitutional rights of the people of the Vaal and
the protection of the environment far outweigh the narrow commercial
convenience of Caldery customers.
REVIEW UNDER LEGALITY
[44]
I now turn to deal with the question of whether
the respondent's decision to reject the applicant's objection falls
to be reviewed
and set aside.
[45]
Calderys submitted that its production process
involves the listed activity of drying under subcategory 5.2 and not
ceramic production
under subcategory 5.9, as a result, the applicant
was therefore erroneously classified by the respondents. According to
Calderys
if its production activity does not fall under 5.9, then in
that event the issue of and the confirmation of the compliance notice
are beyond the powers of the inspector and the MEC and therefore the
applicant seeks a declarator that Calderys process does
not
fall under subcategory 5.9 of the listing notice.
[46]
The applicant avers that the MEC’s decision
falls to be set aside under one or more of the following grounds
under PAJA;-
46.1 It
was taken because irrelevant considerations were taken into account
or relevant considerations were not
considered;
46.2
The decision was taken because of the unauthorised or unwarranted
dictates of another person or body and;
46.3
The decision contravened the law or was not authorised by the
empowering provision.
[47]
I have already made a finding above that the
applicant processing activities fall under category 5.9 of the
listing notice. I am
satisfied that the respondents acted fairly,
reasonably, and lawfully in assessing the applicant's manufacturing
process including
the respondent's assessments and dismissal of
Caldery's objection. It follows therefore that this court is
satisfied that the respondents
acted in accordance with the law. In
my view, the respondent's actions are not reviewable and are
compliant with the relevant legislation
including the PAJA and the
Constitution.
[48]
In all the circumstances that I have alluded to
above, it is my conclusion that the applicant has failed to discharge
the onus that
rested on its shoulders to prove that it is entitled to
the order that it seeks.
ORDER
1.
The application is dismissed with costs, including
the costs occasioned by the employment of a Senior Counsel.
DLAMINI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicant:
Kate
Hofmeyr SC
katehofmeyr@law.co.za
Aymone
du Toit
gadutoit@capebar.co.za
Instructed
by: Anel
de Meyer of Webber Wentzel
anel.demeyer@webberwentzel.com
for
the 1
st
& 2
nd
respondent: T
J Machaba SC
machaba@rsabar.com
Instructed
by: N
Sanda of the State Attorney
[1]
2007
(6) SA 4
(CC), para 61
[2]
(734/2015) [2015] ZASCA 50(26 April 2017).
[3]
(920/2010) [
2012] ZASCA 13
(15 March 2012)
[4]
(20229/2014)
[2015] ZASCA 111
(3 September 2015)
[5]
1985
(4) SA 852 (A) 863
[6]
[2000]
ZACC 12
;
2001 (1) SA 545
;
2000 (10) BCLR 1079
(CC) 22
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