In a groundbreaking ruling, a court has ordered the South African government to reduce air pollution in a coal-mining belt ranked by Greenpeace as the world’s most polluting cluster.
Mpumalanga, which borders Mozambique, is the hub of South Africa’s coal industry and boasts 12 coal-fired plants.
The air in that region is the most polluted in the world with record levels of nitrogen dioxide, according to global environmental charity Greenpeace.
Local environmental lobby groups groundWork and Vukani in 2019 hauled the South African government to court for “violating the constitutional right” of citizens to breathe clean air, in the so-called “deadly air” case.
They won the case with a Pretoria high court last week declaring air quality in the area “in breach of residents’… constitutional right to an environment that is not harmful to their health and well-being.” “The South African government is compelled to act to remedy the… breach declared by the high court,” the environmentalists groups’ lawyer Tim Lloyd told AFP on Tuesday.
Exposure to toxic materials emitted by coal plants including sulphur dioxide, mercury and fine particles, has resulted in an “epidemic” of asthma, bronchitis and lung cancer, the organizations said.
Air pollution caused between 305 and 650 premature deaths in the region in 2016, according to a study by a US atmospheric scientist, Andy Gray.
Government’s environmental affairs ministry in 2012 published an air management plan for the region, but it was never implemented.
Photo taken on Jan. 23, 2022 shows Komaggas coral aloes at the Karoo Desert National Botanical Garden in Worcester, South Africa.Photo:Xinhua