Long suffering communities of Sharpeville and Bophelong have gathered outside ArcelorMittal South Africa Ltd’s (AMSA’s) main plant in Vanderbijlpark to protest against ongoing pollution, non-compliance, failure to engage meaningfully with fenceline communities and unclear plans to decarbonise its operations.
The protest follows AMSA’s annual shareholders meeting held on 19th May 2022, community groups were refused permission to protest at the time of the AGM due to the 2-week long AMSA worker strike led by the National Union of Metal Workers of South Africa (NUMSA) over inadequate wages. Despite AMSA’s revenue being two-thirds higher than in 2020, it reduced its environmental spend from R151 million to R64 million in the last financial year. This is a worrying trend given AMSA’s history of pollution and environmental non-compliance.
Shareholder activists from VEJA (Vaal Environmental Justice Alliance), groundWork and the Centre for Environmental Rights attended the AGM to ask questions related to AMSA’s ongoing environmental non-compliance, including soil and water contamination as well as air pollution; lack of meaningful community engagement; and its insufficient and opaque climate commitments. The AGM was held on a virtual platform and shareholders were limited to asking written questions with no opportunity for follow up on the vague and dismissive answers provided by the outgoing chairman of the board, Mpho Makwana.
Even though AMSA made commitments in its Environmental Social Governance (ESG) report to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 25% by 2030, the company failed to show how it plans to achieve this and explain why it is unable to deploy cleaner technologies such a green steel at the pace and scale enough to reduce carbon emissions and climate risk. AMSA has failed to align with its holding company in Luxembourg, the ArcelorMittal Group, by failing to comply with a number of environmental standards and has continuously postponed compliance with minimum emission standards for air pollution.
Historically, in a hard-hitting judgement handed down on 26 November 2014, the Supreme Court of Appeal ordered AMSA to release environmental records to VEJA, and to pay for legal costs. AMSA remains South Africa’s third worst greenhouse gas emitter responsible for 3% of the country’s emissions. The steelmaker has a long history of toxic air pollution, land and water contamination and a dismal record of engagement with communities and workers affected by the company’s violations.
AMSA has refused to engage meaningfully with communities and has not made any attempts to rehabilitate its unacceptable underground water pollution and waste disposal sites. To date there is no transparency on air quality and water quality including borehole monitoring, and a much needed environmental stakeholder forum with quarterly environmental compliance reporting is lacking. The VEJA, Vukuzenzele, Justice and Peace, Letshabile Letsatsi, Zamdela Air Quality Monitoring Committee, Botle Ba Tlhaho Environmental Group and affected communities will hand over a Memorandum of Demands to AMSA Management to clean up their act.
QUOTES
“ AMSA must be transparent and has to report their actual environmental compliance and monitoring records to the communities. They cannot continue to hide information that has an impact on people’s health and livelihoods” – Kenny Matili, Vukuzenzele
“ We need clean air and a clean environment. AMSA needs to respect our needs and to stop polluting the air and water” – Tlabole Masike, Lechabile Letsatsi.
RESOURCES:
Tackling Climate Change: The Role of Green Steel Industry in South Africa.
https://bit.ly/3lmsGmW.
RESOURCES:
Tackling Climate Change: The Role of Green Steel Industry in South Africa.
https://bit.ly/3lmsGmW.
CONTACTS:
Samson Mokoena – Vaal Environmental Justice Alliance:
+27 84 291 8510.
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Tsepang Molefe – groundWork, Friends of the Earth South Africa:
+27 74 405 1257.
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