Enhancing the environmental rule of law and the interplay between the disclosure of incriminating information and enforcement

AuthorHall, J.
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.47348/TSAR/2021/i4a1
Published date20 September 2021
Date20 September 2021
Citation2021 TSAR 631
Pages631-655
[ISSN 0257 – 7747] TSAR 2021 . 4
631
https://doi.org /10.47348/ TSAR /2021/i4a1
Enhancing the environmental rule of law
and the interplay between the disclosure of
incriminating information and enforcement
JE NN Y H AL L*
SAMEVATTING
DIE VERSTERKING VAN DIE OPPERGESAG VAN DIE REG MET BETREKKING
TOT DIE OMGEWING EN DIE WISSELWERKING TUSSEN BEKENDMAKING VAN
INKRIMINERENDE INLIGTING EN AFDWINGING
Om gevolg te gee aan die op pergesag van die reg m et betrekk ing tot omgewingswet gewing, wat
noodsaak lik is om die talle wêreldwye omgew ingskrisisse die hoof te bied , moet regerings nakoming
monitor en hand hawing verseker. Voor 1994 het Suid-Afrik a dit nie gedoen nie. Plaaslike wetgewi ng
het nie tred gehou me t internasionale tende nse nie, en selfs waar daa r regulering was, het d ie regering
om ’n aantal redes m in belangstelling da arin getoon om afdwin ging ernstig op te nee m.
Die huidige Suid-Af rikaans e regsraamwerk ver teenwoordig dus ’n dr astiese verande ring van
’n historiese bena dering tot omgew ingsmoniter ing en –hand hawing wat veel te wense o orgelaat
het. Hierdie nuwe regsr aamwerk bied ’n goeie basis vi r die uitvoeri ng van die nakomi ngs- en
handhawin gsfunksies . Bekendmaki ng van inligt ing vorm ’n integrale d eel van die nakomi ngs- en
handhawin gstelsel. Dit is ’n waardevolle hu lpmiddel, aangesie n dit die potensiaa l het om nie net die
nakomings- e n handhawings pogings van die rege ring meer doelt reffend te maak n ie, maar ook om
die onvermydelike be perkings op d ie regering se ver moëns te bekamp. D it is veral belangr ik in die
konteks van omgewi ngsoortre dings, aanges ien inligti ng van besondere bela ng is in die konteks va n
omgewingsbest uur. In teenstelling met baie an der misdade ka n omgewingsoor tredings po tensieel ’n
negatiewe impak hê o p ’n wye verskeiden heid mense, soos werknemers e n gemeenskappe, ver verby
die fabriekshei ning. Bekendmaking s wat inkrimine rend is, kan egter potensie el teenstrydig wees met
die grondwetli ke regte van beskuldigd es, veral die reg teen self-in kriminasie.
Met hierdie bydra e ontleed die outeur die dr yfvere agter die he rvormde benader ing van die regering
ten opsigte van d ie afdwinging van omgewingswetgew ing. Die outeur ondersoek ook die rol wat d ie
bekendmak ing van ink riminere nde of potensieel in krimin erende inlig ting kan speel i n verbeterde
en geoptimal iseerde handh awing van omgewi ngswetgewing ten op sigte van besoed eling asook
afvalbest uur-verwante oor tredings deu r maatskappye. So mmige van die vra e wat ontstaan u it die
wisselwerking t ussen die omgewingsreg, d ie reg op inligting en die re gte van beskuldigdes, word o ok
oorweeg en bespree k veral ten opsigte van die reg teen selnkr iminering. Suid Afr ikaanse howe het tot
dusver nog nie die geleen theid gehad om uitspraa k te lewer op verskeie van hierdie v rae nie.
Die artikel slu it af met die opmerking dat d ie benadering tot d ie bekendmaking va n inligting waa rde
het, maar dat d aar ook struikelblokke is w anneer omgewingsregte en s trafprosesregteli ke waarborge
almal ter spr ake is, wat die mate wa artoe daa rop staatgema ak kan word effens b eperk. Daar word
voorgestel om met die da arstelling van ’n adm inistratiewe boet estelsel sommige van hier die knelpunte
aan te spreek .
1 Introduction
As governments across the world grapple with nd ing consensual approaches
to regulating the u nprecedented environ mental challenges that we are faci ng,
they also need to have the appetite and capacity to ensure that environmental
legislation is complied with, or enforced where it is not. Sadly, many do not. In its
Environmental Rule of Law: First Global Assessment Report, the United Nations
* Senior Lecturer, University of Johannesburg.
2021 TSAR 631
© Juta and Company (Pty) Ltd
TSAR 2021 . 4 [ISS N 0257 – 7747]
632 HALL
https://doi.org /10.47348/ TSAR /2021/i4a1
Environment Programme notes that: “[t]oo often, implementation and enforcement
of environmental laws and regulations falls far short of what is requ ired to address
environmental challenges”.1 In some cases the reason for this relates to a lack of
capacity. In others, the underlyi ng cause is a lack of political will. In relation to this
the Environmental Rule of Law repor t notes that passing legislation is one challenge,
but that
“the real chal lenge arises whe n these laws are implem ented throug h regulations, p olicies,
and actions that dire ctly affect stakeholders’ livelihood s, l ands, properties, and prot s. Of ten
environme ntal rule of law falters at th is critical junctu re because of a lack of political wil l to stand
behind impleme ntation of the law throug h clear regulations and p olicies that are enforce d equitably
and consistently.”2
Lack of political will was cert ainly the case in South Africa pr ior to the democrat ic
dispensation. Economic, political and institutional factors all played a role in
contributing to a culture of tolerated non-compliance. W hile highly polluting
parastatals were specically excluded from the regulatory net of many environmental
obligations, countless environmental transgressions in the private sector – which
was regulated – went vir tually unchecked.3
A key reason for this is that dur ing the period of sanctions, government pr ioritised
the generation of foreign currency over the enforcement of serious environmental
contraventions. As a result, many of the most polluting mining and i ndustrial
operations were not held accountable becau se they generated signicant foreig n
currency.4 However, even where indu strial players were not sig nicant economic
contributors, ofcials displayed a reluctance to take hard enforcement measures. The
infamous situation at Thor Chemicals in which mercur y waste processing resulted
in sever al worker deaths and w idespread water cont amination, for example,
revealed not only a chaotic, or absent, approach to t he co-ordination of enforcement
for environmental cr imes across the various departments having jurisdiction, but a
lack of enthusiasm for taking ac tion.5 In the rare instances when en forcement action
did take place, it often resulted in absurd ly low nes as is illustrated by the R600
ne which Sappi received for a spill into a watercourse near its plant in 1989 t hat
resulted in the death of approximat ely a 100 tons of sh, as well as other for ms of
animal life, and ravaged the ecosystems of the Elands and Crocod ile Rivers in the
Eastern Transvaa l (as it was then).6
Given this context, govern ment’s ongoing environmental law reform process
since 1995 is to be welcomed. It h as signicantly overhauled pre-democr atic
legislation by providi ng both an expanded body of substantive rules as well as
an impressive array of compliance mon itoring, administrative enforcement and
criminal enforcement mechanisms that a re designed to optimise government’s
ability to secure compliance and en forcement. However, expanding tradit ional
1 UNEP Environmental Rule of Law First Global Assessment Report (2019) vii.
2 UNEP (n 1) 79.
3 Steyn “Industry, pollution and the apartheid state in South Africa” 2008 History Teaching Review
Yearbook 67 70.
4 Steyn “The lingering environmental impact of repressive governance: the environmental legacy of the
apartheid-era for the new South Africa” 2005 Globalizations 391.
5 See Butler “Lessons from Thor Chemicals: the links between health, safety and environment” in
Bethlehem and Goldblatt (eds) The Bottom Line Industry and Environment in South Africa (1991)
194-212 for a fuller discussion on this issue.
6 Koch, Cooper and Coetzee Water, Waste and Wildlife The Politics of Ecology in South Africa (1990)
10; Steyn (n 3) 67.
© Juta and Company (Pty) Ltd

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