Green
scorpions sting ferro-polluters
The "Green scorpions" found
significant contamination of groundwater
at the Highveld Steel and Vanadium Corporations
vanadium plant, Vanchem, in August this
year.
The
groundwater was contaminated because of
an unlined and unpermitted hazardous waste
dump on site (hazardous primarily because
it contains the heavy metal vanadium)
as well
as the lack of separation of storm and
process water on site.
Non-compliances with environmental legislation
and permits include:
Excessive emissions of sulphur dioxide
from the plants processes - between
40 and 60 tonnes of SO2 are emitted by
the plant every day.
Serious exceedances of permit emissions
limits for ammonia (up to 15 times the
limit) and particulates (dust) (up to
27 times the limit).more

Water
Affairs threatens council with legal action
The
Witbank News reported on Thursday 27 September
2007 that the local branch of the Department
of Water Affairs sent a letter to the
Emalahleni city council reprimanding it
about the sewerage spills in the municipality.
"The
municipality is dragging its feet in addressing
pollution in its area of jurisdiction,"
reads a letter sent to Mr Anias Langa,
municipal manager, by the Department of
Water Affairs and Forestry (DWAF) on September
17. In this letter Emalahleni DWAF stated
that the pollution of water resources
is impacting negatively on the health
of the public. It continues: "The municipality
therefore leaves the department with no
choice but to take the issues up with
higher authority (legal department)."
Full article

The Witbank dam on 16 August 2007.
The photograph was not touched up in any
way. Note the dark colour of the water
in the dam. There are relatively few birds
in the neighbourhood on the other side
of the dam.
The
dam is the only source of raw water for
Witbank, Phola and Ogies. The current
raw water demand is approximately 120ML
per day. The future raw water demand is
estimated to be 170Ml per day by 2020.
The dam has a volume of 104Mm and an assured
yield of abstraction of 75ML per day.
The current over abstraction is only sustainable
during relatively wet seasons and if it
persists during future dry seasons without
augmenting, water shortages will occur.
(Source: Emalahleni 2007 Integrated Development
Plan (IDP) 15)
Pollution
causing environmental havoc
Fourteen
tons of dead mud fish have been removed
in a week from the Loskop dam, north of
Middelburg, reported Beeld newspaper on
Saturday 18 August 2007. At that stage
there were fears that the dam might have
turned toxic within a few days.
More