SDGs framework as the blueprint for climate change action and sustainable development in Africa: Role of law and parliamentarians

SDGs framework as the blueprint for climate change action and sustainable development in Africa: Role of law and parliamentarians

Authors MT Ladan

ISSN: 2616-8499
Affiliations: Professor of law, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Nigeria
Source: South African Journal of Environmental Law and Policy 2016, p. 159 – 207

Abstract

The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) aim at tackling key systematic barriers to sustainable development such as inequality, poverty, unsustainable consumption and production patterns, inadequate infrastructure and lack of decent jobs. The SDGs provide useful guidance for shaping law, policy and practice for implementation of effective and ambitious climate change action. Specifically, they exhort nations to share innovation and prosperity, promote global cooperation and solidarity, and ensure that equality and Climate Justice are promoted and attained. It is against this background that this paper seeks to establish a significant nexus between the SDGs, human rights and climate change; examine the role of law and parliaments in the progressive realization of the SDGs; and to conclude with some viable options for Africa.

The regulation of offshore seismic surveys for petroleum resources in South Africa’s maritime realm

The regulation of offshore seismic surveys for petroleum resources in South Africa’s maritime realm

Authors Vishal Surbun

ISSN: 2616-8499
Affiliations: Lecturer, School of Law, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban; Attorney and Notary Public of the High Court of RSA
Source: South African Journal of Environmental Law and Policy 2016, p. 129 – 157

Abstract

Advances in technology are transforming the way oil is found and extracted, and this has opened up the vast energy potential of South Africa’s maritime realm. In this regard, specialist hydrographic survey vessels explore the sub-sea geological formations for potential oil and gas reserves. This article considers the environmental impact of these surveys on marine ecosystems and examines the legislative framework for regulating seismic surveys under the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act of 2002 (MPRDA). It then examines, in detail, the change in the legislative regime to bring the environmental authorisations — in terms of the MPRDA — to the system under the National Environmental Management Act, 1998 (NEMA), and its practical application to seismic surveys. Finally, the 2012 Amendment Bill to the MPRDA and the consequences with regard to seismic surveys, are discussed.

The impact of the precautionary principle on civil and criminal liability: A French perspective on South African law

The impact of the precautionary principle on civil and criminal liability: A French perspective on South African law

Authors Jonas Knetsch, Romain Ollard

ISSN: 2616-8499
Affiliations: Professor of Civil and Comparative Law, University of Reunion Island (France); Professor of Criminal and Civil Law, University of Reunion Island (France)
Source: South African Journal of Environmental Law and Policy 2016, p. 103 – 128

Abstract

French law and South-African law are among the few legal systems in the world which have constitutionally enshrined the precautionary principle (principe de précaution). Under this principle, public authorities are required to take into account the limits of current knowledge in order to secure an ecologically sustainable development. This paper discusses whether the precautionary principle is likely to have an impact on civil and criminal liability rules. The outcomes of this research are intended to provide further input for a broader debate on the influence of the Constitution on the concept of liability.

Colonial era practices of eminent domain and state-community contestation for mineral-resource ownership in postcolonial Nigeria: The search for a sustainable synergy

Colonial era practices of eminent domain and state-community contestation for mineral-resource ownership in postcolonial Nigeria: The search for a sustainable synergy

Authors Ikechukwu Umejesi

ISSN: 2616-8499
Affiliations: Senior Lecturer, Department of Sociology, University of Fort Hare, East London
Source: South African Journal of Environmental Law and Policy 2016, p. 75 – 102

Abstract

Different countries often exercise eminent domain — the power to appropriate private properties for public good. The exercise of this power by the state over properties belonging to individuals and collectives within the state is as old as the state. This paper examines how the colonial state used eminent domain principle to acquire coal-rich land in Enugu-Ngwo, Southeast Nigeria, and its implications for both the postcolonial state and the community. Evolving dynamics in the coal mining sector since the early 1990s, such as, privatization program and its impact on landownership have reignited old animosity and poisoned state-community relations in Enugu-Ngwo. These new dynamics indicate that the coal-rich community may yet become another frontier in resource-related conflict in Nigeria. Relying on the cultural theory of plural rationality, the paper explores a synergy in which actors in the conflict — state, mining companies and the local community — can find expressions in a plural framework that emphasizes justice and fairness. The paper draws on ethnographic data collected from the Enugu-Ngwo community.

Aspects of insurance for environmental damage claims: Some issues raised by proposed hydraulic fracturing

Aspects of insurance for environmental damage claims: Some issues raised by proposed hydraulic fracturing

Authors Birgit Kuschke

ISSN: 2616-8499
Affiliations: Associate Professor of Law, University of Pretoria
Source: South African Journal of Environmental Law and Policy 2016, p. 45 – 73

Abstract

Hydraulic fracturing or fracking can cause immeasurable damage to the fragile Karoo ecosystem and its water resources. The old adage that where damage goes, insurance is certain to follow, most certainly applies. Insurance against environmental damage such as that which will result from fracking poses unique challenges, for both property and liability insurance. Years often pass between the polluting conduct, the eventual manifestation of the damage and the eventual submission of a claim by an insured against his insurer. Damage is often progressive and the health of victims deteriorates over time. This will no doubt be the situation in the Karoo, as past experience in other countries such as the United States has shown that the true extent of environmental damage caused by fracking activities only manifests in future. The purpose of this contribution is to sensitise potential insurers and potential insureds of the risks and complexities of insurance claims against long-term environmental damage. Different insurance trigger events that activate insurance cover follow the different phases of polluting events or conduct and the resulting detrimental consequences. Insurance claims for loss or damage can vest on an act-committed basis, where the insurer who provided cover at the time at which the polluting act occurred incurs liability to pay out under the policy. The insurer remains liable even where the eventual loss only manifests in future. In this case an insured has a claim against a historical insurer, which can prove to be to his disadvantage if the insurance company has ceased to exist, policy limits are insufficient or policy provisions are outdated. Where a policy is issued with a loss-occurrence or loss-manifestation trigger, the loss may be claimed when the loss or damage caused by the pollution becomes evident, irrespective of when it was caused. In the case of insurance with a claims- made trigger, the policy that is in force at the time when the insured has suffered and assessed his loss and is able to submit an insurance claim, provides cover. It is irrelevant when the polluting event occurred or when the loss became evident. Insurance issued on a claims-made basis leads to retroactivity where an insurer inherits older historical claims, which can be prejudicial for insurers. Where an insured changes insurers and changes from a claims-made to a loss-occurrence trigger, and a loss occurs yet manifests only in future, the insured may not enjoy coverage at all. Risk managers, policyholders, brokers and agents must launch due diligence investigations to determine the scope and extent of insurance coverage by evaluating the effects of these specific trigger events.

What are the instrumental roles of the introduction of environmental tax in the realisation of the polluter-pays principle in Ethiopia?

What are the instrumental roles of the introduction of environmental tax in the realisation of the polluter-pays principle in Ethiopia?

Authors MT Gebregiorgs

ISSN: 2616-8499
Affiliations: Tilburg University, Mekelle University
Source: South African Journal of Environmental Law and Policy 2016, p. 3 – 43

Abstract

This research examines the instrumental roles of the introduction of environmental tax in the realisation of the polluter-pays principle under the federal jurisdiction of Ethiopia. It is a single country case-oriented comparative research design, and data triangulation is the method used to establish its validity. It first shows the recognition of polluter-pays as a principle, rule and policy to reach the idea of sustainable development. Secondly, it verifies the degradation/pollution-based redistributive, preventive and curative functions of the polluter-pays principle. Thirdly, it indicates the variations of the threshold-bound distributive and incentive bases of environmental tax according to the functions of the polluter-pays principle. Fourthly, it demonstrates the instrumental roles of: (1) Municipal and treated hazardous solid wastes, sludge, and sewer charges in covering the cost of their collection, transportation, treatment and disposal; (2) Effluent charges in restoring authorised water resources degradation; (3) Carbon tax and cap-and-trade in restoring authorised air degradation; (4) Consumption taxes in reinforcing an environmentally friendly pattern of consumption; (5) Royalties in encouraging rational use of scarce natural resources. Finally, it implies that the polluter-pays principle is contingent on setting up a range of legally viable and administratively feasible environmental taxes.

Keeping the rhino (debate) alive: Swaziland’s proposal at CITES CoP17 in 2016

Keeping the rhino (debate) alive: Swaziland’s proposal at CITES CoP17 in 2016

Authors Laurenne Coetzee, Ed Couzens

ISSN: 2616-8499
Affiliations: Masters Env. Law candidate, University of Sydney Law School; Associate Professor, University of Sydney Law School
Source: South African Journal of Environmental Law and Policy 2017, p. 217 – 254

Abstract

Rhinoceros poaching is currently at crisis levels, particularly in South Africa — the country having lost more than 7,000 animals in the last decade from a population of approximately 25,000. One of the most successful conservation programmes of all time, the recovery of the rhinoceros, is now seriously threatened. No single measure at present seems capable of preventing poaching, given the strength of the criminal networks driving the illegal trade and the capacity of the market which the illegal trade is supplying. At the 17th Conference of the Parties to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), in 2016, Swaziland put forward a proposal to open a legal market for rhino horn — a proposal which Swaziland must have known was doomed to fail, given the current strength of international concern over the poaching crisis. That Swaziland still thought it worth putting the proposal forward probably indicates that the country wished to keep its sustainable use philosophy ‘on the agenda’. If a legal trade is to provide part of the eventual solution, then it is unlikely that it will ever do so on its own, however — what is therefore needed is for the proponents of a legal market to demonstrate how exactly it would complement, supplement and support other efforts. South Africa, following a Committee of Enquiry’s recommendation that such an integrated approach be adopted, did not put forward a proposal at CITES CoP 16 and is now moving toward greater integration of strategies. Ultimately, it may be that a legal trade will be an element in a successful suite of management options; and for that reason Swaziland’s proposal, insofar as it kept this option in the public eye and reminded Parties of the an interest that needs to be accommodated, is worth considering and locating within the complicated overall context.

A note on licences as property: Some implications for the South African water regulatory regime

A note on licences as property: Some implications for the South African water regulatory regime

Authors Germarié Viljoen

ISSN: 2616-8499
Affiliations: Senior Lecturer in Law, North West University
Source: South African Journal of Environmental Law and Policy 2017, p. 195 – 216

Abstract

A completely new water law dispensation, amounting to a regime change, was introduced with the National Water Act 36 of 1998. With the legal transformation, the traditional exclusive private law ownership-object approach to water resources evolved into a rights-based approach. As South Africa is regarded as one of the most water scarce countries in the world, where water restrictions are being imposed on inter alia farmers and industries due to the lingering drought, the importance of investigating the nature of water use rights within the new water regulatory regime is self-evident. This article seeks to determine whether the regulatory regime for the sale of liquor in the Eastern Cape, as deliberated upon in Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Limited v Member of the Executive Council for Economic Development, Environmental Affairs and Tourism 2015 (6) SA 125 (CC), may provide insight into implications for licence holders in the new water regulatory regime of South Africa.

Protected areas law, mining and the principle of non-regression – a South African perspective

Protected areas law, mining and the principle of non-regression – a South African perspective

Authors Alexander Paterson

ISSN: 2616-8499
Affiliations: Professor, Institute of Marine and Environmental Law, Faculty of Law, University of Cape Town
Source: South African Journal of Environmental Law and Policy 2017, p. 142 – 194

Abstract

Protected areas provide numerous essential ecological, climatic, cultural, social and economic functions. Not surprisingly, the international community has set targets for both protected areas coverage and management effectiveness, crucially reflected in Aichi Target 11 agreed to by parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity in 2010. South Africa is some way off meeting its domestic contribution towards the attainment of these targets by the 2020 deadline. The government can ill afford to allow the current coverage or management effectiveness of its protected areas to regress in any manner. However, if recent events are anything to go by, the above reality is not shared by all sectors of the South African government. The past few years have seen the controversial grant of prospecting and mining rights within or in close proximity to several of South Africa’s protected areas. These mining activities hold significant potential to regress the conservation objectives of protected areas. This notion of regression is subject to increasing attention of legal scholars, advocating for recognition of the principle of non-regression as a new principle of environmental law; and highlighting the key role it could play in both halting the ‘systematic regression’ of biodiversity laws and promoting the attainment of global and domestic biodiversity targets, including Aichi Target 11. Within this context, the article explores the extent to which the principle of non-regression has, or perhaps could further, influence the form, content, interpretation and application of South Africa’s protected areas legislation with a view to precluding the regressive impact of mining activities on the country’s terrestrial protected areas.