2016 Oct Exam Memo
2016 Oct Exam Memo
2016 Oct Exam Memo
Environmental Law
LCP4805
Semester 2
BARCODE
LCP4805/201
CONTENTS
Dear Student
This tutorial letter is the last one for this semester. It contains comments on the assignments,
guidelines for the forthcoming examination and a previous examination paper with suggested
answers.
Before you read our comments on the assignments, make sure that you understand the
importance of the assignment mark and how the assignment mark affects your final mark for
this module. See Tutorial Letter 101 in this regard.
Assignment 01
1. NEMA is the environmental framework legislation for South Africa. One of the
characteristics of framework legislation is that it includes “broad-based environmental
policy and principles”. Discuss the environmental principles as set out in section 2 of
NEMA. (10)
Feedback on question 1
(Refer to pages 100–101 in the study guide, which are partly cited here.)
In terms of section 2(1), all actions of organs of state that may significantly affect
the environment have to be in line with the principles set out in subsections (2), (3)
and (4). Section 2(1) states further that these principles must: (a) apply alongside
all other appropriate and relevant considerations; (b) serve as the general
framework for environmental plans; (c) serve as guidelines by reference to which
any organ of state must exercise any function when taking a decision in terms of
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NEMA or any other Act concerning the environment; (d) serve as principles by which
a conciliator must act; and (e) “guide the interpretation, administration and
implementation of this Act, and any other law concerned with the protection or
management of the environment”.
Sections 2(2) and 2(3) contain principles dealing with sustainable development,
and a further 18 principles ((a)–(r)) are set out in subsection (4).
(4) (a) Sustainable development requires the consideration of all relevant factors,
including the following:
(i) That the disturbance of ecosystems and loss of biological diversity are avoided,
or, where they cannot be altogether avoided, are minimised and remedied;
(ii) that pollution and degradation of the environment are avoided, or, where they
cannot be altogether avoided, are minimised and remedied;
(iii) that the disturbance of landscapes and sites that constitute the nation’s cultural
heritage is avoided, or where it cannot be altogether avoided, is minimised and
remedied;
(iv) that waste is avoided, or where it cannot be altogether avoided, minimised and
re-used or recycled where possible and otherwise disposed of in a responsible
manner;
(v) that the use and exploitation of non-renewable natural resources is responsible
and equitable, and takes into account the consequences of the depletion of the
resource;
(vi) that the development, use and exploitation of renewable resources and the
ecosystems of which they are part do not exceed the level beyond which their
integrity is jeopardised;
(vii) that a risk-averse and cautious approach is applied, which takes into account
the limits of current knowledge about the consequences of decisions and
actions; and
(viii) that negative impacts on the environment and on people’s environmental rights
be anticipated and prevented, and where they cannot be altogether prevented,
are minimised and remedied.
(b) Environmental management must be integrated, acknowledging that all
elements of the environment are linked and interrelated, and it must take into
account the effects of decisions on all aspects of the environment and all people
in the environment by pursuing the selection of the best practicable
environmental option.
(c) Environmental justice must be pursued so that adverse environmental impacts
shall not be distributed in such a manner as to unfairly discriminate against any
person, particularly vulnerable and disadvantaged persons.
(d) Equitable access to environmental resources, benefits and services to meet
basic human needs and [to] ensure human well-being must be pursued and
special measures may be taken to ensure access thereto by categories of
persons disadvantaged by unfair discrimination.
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… Note that some of the “principles” do not fit easily into the categories of
environmental principles you encountered in earlier study units. The reason for this
is that some of the “principles” relate to the administration of NEMA (that is, in line
with the provisions of s 195 of the Constitution, the principles “prescribe” how officials
should act in performing their functions or executing their powers. In other words, the
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principles serve as “guidelines” in terms of which any organ of state must exercise
any function or take any decision pertaining to the environment.)
An urgent meeting to discuss the ‘increasing obnoxiousness’ of the smell emanating from the
Lucky Fish factory in Hout Bay has been called for this week, amid renewed claims from
concerned residents that their health is being affected.
Discuss the meaning of the terms “health” and “wellbeing” with reference to case law in this
context and indicate whether the residents’ right, as provided for in section 24(a) of the
Constitution, has been infringed. (10)
Feedback on question 2
Health: A particular environment may be damaging to a person’s health yet does not infringe
that person’s right of access to healthcare services (s 27). For example, in instances where
air and water pollution causes serious risks to people’s health, a challenge will be brought
under section 24(a) and not section 27. In the Verstappen case, an interdict was sought on
the ground that dumping of waste by a local authority affected the applicant’s health. Air and
water pollution and the placement of waste disposal sites have serious health consequences.
Therefore, health is unarguably a component of environmental concern and falls within the
ambit of section 24(a).
Well-being: The second aspect dealt with in section 24(a) is people’s well-being ie aspects of
the environment having an inherent worth and that are deserving of conservation for their
intrinsic value. What constitutes “well-being” is relative to the nature and personality of the
person and will be decided on the facts of a particular case. It encompasses the essence of
environmental concern – namely a sense of environmental integrity, that is, the protection of
St Lucia for its “sense of place”.
Arguably the right to “well-being” is potentially limitless and is also relevant in the pollution
context. In the Hichange case, Judge Leach found that “One should not be obliged to work in
an environment of stench and, in my view, to be in an environment contaminated by H2S is
adverse to one’s ‘well-being’.”
Conclusion: Apply the above information to the given facts and reach a conclusion.
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Assignment 02
(1) biocentrism
(2) environmental management
(3) resource conservation and utilisation
(4) resource exploitation and utilisation
2. Indicate which one of the following does NOT represent a category of problems
emanating from environmental damage.
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6. Criminal measures refer to various measures, based on criminal law, which can be
used to ensure compliance and enforcement of environmental legislation. According
to Kidd, these criminal measures have the following inherent weakness:
(1) empowerment
(2) sustainable development
(3) environmental education
(4) international cooperation
[10]
Note that you may be asked to provide reasons for your answers to multiple-choice
questions in the examination.
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Bear in mind that you must study all the study material. You must be able to integrate the
content of the reader with the relevant content and context of the study guide. You should treat
this tutorial letter as part of your course material and study it.
We recommend that you gather all the information (i.e. from South African law, international
law and foreign law, where applicable) on important topics (or themes) of the work and prepare
essays on them. When marking an essay-type answer, we look not only at the factual content
of your work (i.e. how many facts you included), but also at the way in which you present
(discuss and explain) the work. Make sure that you present a properly structured answer
consisting of an introduction, a body and a conclusion. You must also give your own views
and refer to relevant sources, where necessary, to substantiate your answer.
Students often use a few pages of their examination books to prepare an outline or a structure
for their answers to essay-type questions. This approach may help you to prepare a logical
and balanced answer. You will most certainly earn marks for a well-structured and well-
considered answer, and preparing such an answer should not take longer than five minutes.
Shorter, discussion-type questions may also be asked on specific subsections of the topic.
The examination paper may contain questions similar to those in your assignments.
Take note of the mark allocation for each question and adjust the time you spend on a
particular question accordingly.
You must study all the work and the feedback on the assignments.
The following examination paper will give you an idea of the types of questions that may be
asked, the mark allocation and the amount of time you should spend on each question. Work
through the questions and try to answer them on your own.
QUESTION 1
1.1 According to the authors Birnie and Boyle, sustainable development contains
substantive and procedural elements. Discuss the following elements of sustainable
development: (Briefly explain the elements and then set out how these elements are
incorporated and applied in South African law.)
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The principle has been adopted in South Africa in a number of policy documents, including
the White Paper on Environmental Management Policy for South Africa. The White Paper is
devoted to the principle and states:
Those responsible for environmental damage must pay the repair costs both to the
environment and human health, and the costs of preventive measures to reduce or prevent
further pollution and environmental damage.
The White Paper on a Minerals and Mining Policy for South Africa specifically assigns the
polluter pays principle a key role in the mining and other industries, stating that
NEMA includes the polluter pays principle in the following terms in section 2(4)(p):
The National Environmental Management Act (NEMA) 107 of 1998 was promulgated as the
framework legislation giving effect to section 24(b). This Act makes provision for integrated
environmental management (IEM) to ensure that the environmental consequences of
developments are understood and adequately considered in the planning process through an
environmental impact assessment (EIA) process. The IEM policy of 1984 now constitutes the
core elements of South Africa’s new environmental management system set out in Chapter 5
of NEMA. The general objective of the national environmental management system created
by NEMA, that is, integrated environmental management, is described in section 23 and
provides the context (or background) for the environmental authorisations described in section
24.
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Against this backdrop, these authorisations must consider the potential impact of particular
“listed activities” on the environment before an authorisation can be granted to commence
such activities. Through IEM, the relevant authorities are empowered to conduct EIAs.
Therefore, an EIA gives effect to (is an important mechanism to achieve) IEM, because it
provides for informed decision-making, accountability for decisions taken and an open,
proactive and participatory approach. It encompasses the procedural elements of sustainable
development (environmental assessment, access to information and public participation in
decision-making). These provisions are aimed at the achievement of sustainable
development.
1.2 Discuss the role of “soft law” in the development of international environmental law.
(10)
Threats to our environment, to the very survival of our planet, call for a concerted, cooperative
effort that draws on existing rules of customary international law and the treaty as a legislative
instrument but that, at the same, time employs new methods for securing international
cooperation. This cooperative enterprise is international environment law, a blend of “hard
law”, in the form of customary rules and treaties, and “soft law”, comprising conference
resolutions, guidelines and programmes of action.
Soft law is found in many branches of international law but there is no doubt that it plays a
greater role in environmental law than any other branch of law. The “softness” of
environmental law is illustrated by three instruments that expound the basic principles of
environmental law: the 1972 Stockholm Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the
Human Environment, the 1992 Rio Declaration on Environment and Development and the
2002 Declaration of the Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development. All are
broadly phrased expositions of principles that make no attempt to employ the language of
obligation found in treaties. This is part of a deliberate cooperative strategy. Treaties take long
to draft and even longer to ratify. Moreover, there is always the likelihood that the states most
likely to cause environmental damage will not ratify a treaty at all. Conference declarations
premised on broad consensus rather than consent do not impose obligations on states;
instead, they reflect a set of principles or standards to guide states in relation to a violation for
which they may be held politically, albeit not legally, accountable.
Soft law instruments are not enforceable. However, there is little difference in enforceability
between Principle 1 of the Stockholm Declaration, which declares that “[m]an has the
fundamental right to freedom and equality and adequate conditions of life, in an environment
of a quality that permits a life of dignity and well-being, and he bears a solemn responsibility
to protect and improve the environment for present and future generations”, and article 24 of
the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, which declares, in a legally binding treaty,
that “[all] peoples shall have the right to a general, satisfactory environment favourable to their
development.”
Nor, one may add, are such declarations different in legal effect from those found in
constitutional instruments, such as South Africa’s Bill of Rights.
Much of environmental law, in both international and national systems, is non-justiciable and
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unenforceable. However, it is much better to have standards and policy guidelines in place
now than to wait until states have ratified multilateral treaties that translate aspiration into
obligation.
The “hard law” of the environment is to be found largely in the customary law rules of state
responsibility and in a growing body of multilateral treaties that seek to protect different
features of the environment. These rules, together with “soft law” principles derived from
conference declarations, General Assembly resolutions and guidelines laid down by
international organisations, provide a comprehensive if not a coherent body of law. Of the
international institutions charged with the task of environmental protection, the most important
is the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), based in Nairobi, which has done
much to develop and to promote programmes of action and guidelines.
Furthermore, the general principles of state responsibility provide an inadequate legal system
for the enforcement of international standards of environmental protection. Interstate claims
premised on wrongful acts, some degree of fault and proof of actual damage are no substitute
for environmental regulation. There is a need for a community response that focuses on
prevention and regulation rather than reparation and adjudication, and that focuses on the
control and avoidance of environmental harm and the conservation and sustainable
development of natural resources. This explains why the emphasis of international
environmental law is on the development of supervised treaty regimes to protect the
environment. The basis for these treaty regimes is to be found in guidelines, standards and
principles expounded at international conferences, of which the 1972 Stockholm Declaration
of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment, the 1992 Rio Declaration on
Environment and Development, and the 2002 Johannesburg Declaration on Sustainable
Development are the most important.
[25]
QUESTION 2
Below are ten questions. Each question contains a number of options as possible answers.
Only one option or statement in each question is correct. You must, therefore, identify the
correct option and write the option number next to the question number. You also have to
state why you have chosen a particular option; in other words, give reasons for your
answers.
2.2 According to Glazewski, the scope of environmental law includes the following:
(1) biocentrism
(2) environmental management
(3) resource conservation and utilisation
(4) resource exploitation and utilisation
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2.3 Which one of the following statements displays the content or purport of the right of
access to information (s 32 of the Constitution)?
(1) It stipulates that the Constitution is the supreme law of the Republic.
(2) The Promotion of Administrative Justice Act gives effect to section 32 of the
Constitution.
(3) Section 32 of the Constitution safeguards the democratic values of participation
and accountability.
(4) The inclusion of the right of access to information does not conform to international law
trends.
2.4 Which of the following statements does not reflect sustainable development?
(1) the integration of social, economic and environmental factors into environmental
decision-making
(2) the cessation of socio-economic development
(3) inter-generational equity
(4) the balancing of the interests of the environment with socio-economic interests
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2.9 Which one of the following concepts is not included in the right to an environment as
provided for in section 24(b) of the Constitution?
2.10 NEMA is the framework legislation for environmental management in South Africa,
which means that it ____.
QUESTION 3
3.1 Discuss the objectives of integrated environmental management (IEM), as set out in
section 23 of NEMA. (7)
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 the mitigation of activities, with a view to minimising negative impacts,
maximising benefits and promoting compliance with the principles of environmental
management set out in section 2
Against this backdrop, environmental authorisations must consider the potential impact of
particular “listed activities” on the environment before an authorisation can be granted to
commence such activities. Through IEM, the relevant authorities are empowered to conduct
EIAs.
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3.2 The local municipality of Madibeng wants to establish a cemetery of 2 600 square
metres. Indicate to the municipality whether an environmental authorisation is required
and, if so, identify the procedure that must be followed. (3)
You have to determine whether the activity is an activity listed in either Government Notice
R983 or Government Notice R984. The activity described is, in fact, listed in GN R983, which
requires a basic assessment as set out in Environmental Impact Assessment Regulations
Listing Notice 1 of 2014. Therefore, the activity does require an environmental authorisation.
3.3 What are the consequences of commencing a listed activity without an environmental
authorisation? (6)
3.4 The purpose of NEMA is, amongst others, to provide for institutions and procedures
that will promote cooperative governance to coordinate environmental functions.
3.4.1 List any four (4) of these institutions and procedures. (4)
3.4.2 Explain why, in your opinion, it is necessary to make provision for cooperative
governance and the coordination of environmental functions. (5)
Chapter 3 of the Constitution describes the national, provincial and local spheres as distinctive
but interdependent and interrelated (s 40). All spheres and all organs of state are bound by
the principles of cooperative government and intergovernmental relations (s 41).
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The national and the provincial spheres of government exercise concurrent powers (Schedule
4) in the administration of indigenous forests, the environment, nature conservation
(excluding, for example, national parks), pollution control, and so on. This means that these
spheres of government must cooperate. In the event of conflict over concurrent matters,
national legislation prevails over provincial legislation. The national government acts in a
coordinating manner by means of NEMA, giving uniform norms and standards throughout.
This means that the relevant national and provincial departments must cooperate in
coordinating their diverse and overlapping functions into an integrated environmental
management framework. These overlapping functions refer to concurrent (or shared) powers.
In terms of NEMA, institutions and bodies are established and procedures and mechanisms
put in place to coordinate and to align the environmental functions exercised by all spheres of
government and to resolve uncertainties or conflict that may arise.
[25]
QUESTION 4
4.1 Discuss how a directive under section 28 of NEMA can be used to address the
situation. (15)
Refer to pages 178–181 in the study guide. You have to make a comprehensive summary of
section 28 of NEMA; you also have to refer to case law.
4.2 List and briefly indicate whether other administrative measures (other than a
directive) can be used to address the pollution as set out in the newspaper
reports. (5)
Abatement notice: Certain statutes give power to an administrative official or some organ of
state to order a member of the regulated community to do something in order to abate (stop
or halt) a nuisance, pollution or some other situation that is problematic. Such an order is
referred to as an abatement notice. According to Winstanley (in Paterson & Kotzé (eds)
2009:236), notices of this nature apply in more specific circumstances than directives. The
author adds (2009:236–237):
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The category of competent authorities empowered to issue them is ordinarily small, and
the remedies that may be prescribed are often very specific. As a result, abatement notices
will only be useful tools for achieving compliance in particular cases, and the value of many
of them may have been superseded by the broad directive powers contained in NEMA and
the NWA.
Administrative penalties: Administrative penalties are fines that are imposed by the
regulator on the regulated community as some form of sanction against engaging in prohibited
conduct.
4.3 Is the right of neighbouring farmers, as provided for in section 24(a) of the
Constitution, being threatened or infringed by the pollution caused by the
mines? Discuss by explaining the content of the terms “health” and “well-
being” with reference to case law. (10)
Health: A particular environment may be damaging to a person’s health yet does not infringe
that person’s right of access to healthcare services (s 27). For example, in instances where
air and water pollution causes serious risks to people’s health, a challenge will be brought
under section 24(a) and not section 27. In the Verstappen case, an interdict was sought on
the ground that dumping of waste by a local authority affected the applicant’s health. Air and
water pollution and the placement of waste disposal sites have serious health consequences.
Therefore, health is unarguably a component of environmental concern and falls within the
ambit of section 24(a).
Well-being: The second aspect dealt with in section 24(a) is people’s well-being ie aspects
of the environment having an inherent worth and that are deserving of conservation for their
intrinsic value. In the Hichange case, Judge Leach found that “One should not be obliged to
work in an environment of stench and, in my view, to be in an environment contaminated by
H2S is adverse to one’s ‘well-being’.”
Conclusion: Apply the above information to the given facts and reach a conclusion.
[30]
TOTAL: 100
©
UNISA
2017
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