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Decades of toxic waste in KZN

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The remains of the dilapidated mercury-recycling plant at Thor Chemicals in Cato Ridge, where thousands of barrels of toxic mercury waste are piled up in a warehouse. Picture: Environmental Affairs Department

Decades after the first drums of toxic sludge began to pile up in SA, the government has failed to get rid of more than 3 000 tons of mercury waste stored at the old Thor Chemicals factory in KwaZulu-Natal.

Thousands of barrels of mercury waste remain in warehouses and sludge ponds at Cato Ridge, outside Durban, while in the valley below, medical researchers have found high levels of mercury in people’s hair and in fish and soil samples around Inanda Dam.

Thor is a British-based multinational which imported thousands of tons of mercury waste into SA after it was forced to shut down hazardous operations in the UK in the early 1980s.

Four years ago, researchers at the SA Medical Research Council collected hair samples from 86 people in the vicinity of Inanda dam, along with fish and soil samples.

Nearly 20 percent of the human hair samples had mercury levels above World Health Organisation (WHO) guidelines, half the fish samples were above WHO guidelines and 22 percent of soil samples were also problematic.

Mercury is a powerful neurotoxin which can lead to blurred vision, tremors, brain damage, coma and death.

While the government recommended an immediate ban on fishing at the dam, there is little evidence that it was ever enforced and, 18 months ago, medical researchers repeated their concerns about mercury pollution in the valley and called for “immediate attention and clean-up action”.

“It begs the question as to why action was not taken and who was responsible for such action,” researchers Professor Angela Mathee, Vathiswa Papu-Zamxaka and Trudy Harpham warned in the Journal of Environmental Management.

But the national Environmental Affairs Department could not explain the delay in cleaning up the Thor Chemicals stockpile.

Responding to questions from The Mercury, department spokesman Albi Modise said the final remediation plan had not been approved by the government, al- though the intention was to start cleaning up before September 2013.

Modise said the costs could exceed R100 million, but he did not spell out how this would be apportioned between the government and Guernica Chemicals (the new name of the Thor factory).

It emerged in court proceedings in the late 1990s that Thor’s parent company (Thor Chemicals Holdings) was in the middle of a demerger process in which almost £20 million was transferred to a new holding company.

Thor group chairman Des Cowley denied at the time that the demerger’s purpose was to shift assets to escape legal damages claims from sick workers in SA.

And while Guernica Chemicals is believed to have set aside about R110m for the Thor clean-up operation, it remains unclear whether this will be enough to meet the remediation costs. More recently, sources suggested that the Thor group and Guernica may have embarked on reorganisation of financial assets.

Cowley has not responded to queries on the issue, while Guernica director Neville Naicker said he preferred not to comment as he was due to meet government officials to discuss a number of issues.

Commenting on the reasons for the long delay, Bobby Peek of the environmental watchdog group groundWork said he suspected the cost might be a central factor.

“It would not surprise me if decisions are based on what is the best financial solution for the government and Thor Chemicals.”

Papu-Zamxaka, Harpham and Mathee expressed similar concern.

They note that while SA has fine legislation to prevent and clean up pollution, there is still a large gap between the law and what happens on the ground.

“This legislation is not being implemented, as the reality is that the drums of mercury waste are still stored at Thor Chemicals and were neither recycled nor disposed of in an environmentally sound manner.” - The Mercury

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Anonymous, wrote

IOL Comments
09:19am on 6 February 2012
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That is what happens when you appoint friends and deployees to highly technical positions. DEA has no clue how to move forward on this matter. Pitty the article did not mentioned how many lives have been lost due to this environmental injustice.

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Random Angler, wrote

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09:18am on 6 February 2012
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what a contradiction - environmental affairs dept and their flunky greenies were quick to ban honest anglers from accessing beaches but how inactive in such a horrific situation. i know! its easy to slap down ordinary citizens but greenies have no stomach for a fight with big business. give us our beaches back!!!

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Random Angler, wrote

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09:17am on 6 February 2012
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what a contradiction - environmental affairs dept and their flunky greenies were quick to ban honest anglers from accessing beaches but how inactive in such a horrific situation. i know! its easy to slap down ordinary citizens but greenies have no stomach for a fight with big business. give us our beaches back!!!

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badballie, wrote

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08:37am on 6 February 2012
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Doesn't surprise me in the least, Government old and new, were more concerned with profits and in the case of the new government how much can be stolen without having to declare bankruptcy. How many people die as a result of the profits made from foreign investors who for the most don't care about locals either means nothing in the realms of big business and corporate culture. Anyone in the country that works for an overseas concern is already aware that the foreign investors people cry so much about and which we sacrifice for are only concerned with profit and keeping their overseas shareholders happy. It is time for the true owners of this country, the ordinary citizens to hold government and big business accountable for the mess they make as well as for the consequences of their operations. If it costs more to do the clean up than was ever realized in profits so be it, they should have thought about that before they started operations.

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