Abstract

The environmental impact assessment (EIA) regulations published in terms of the National Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998 (NEMA) have extended an unprecedented degree of environmental oversight into the domain of agricultural decision-making. However, threatened Cape flora occurring in remnants of less than three hectares in extent will be denied such protection pending their incorporation in a national list of threatened ecosystems. Until such listing, unresolved legal questions that inhibited the effective consideration of biodiversity in agricultural decision-making prior to the promulgation of the NEMA EIA regulations are likely to persist—to the detriment of a globally imperilled biodiversity. This contribution sets out to identify some of the key issues that inhibited mainstreaming of biodiversity in agri-environmental decision-making in the Western Cape. It also attempts to show that the NEMA EIA dispensation has inherited some problems in respect of cultivation that would result in the transformation or removal of less than three hectares of vegetation in Critically Endangered and Endangered ecosystems—which, until listed in terms of biodiversity law, will have no legal protection. Lastly, the contribution provides an analysis of, and suggest a number of options for ensuring that biodiversity is given its appropriate due in the issuing of cultivation permits that otherwise may contribute to the further degradation and loss of some of the most threatened elements of the globally unique Cape flora.

Highlights

  • Agriculture has had the single greatest impact on habitat loss across SouthAfrica

  • There is effectively no difference between the current status quo and the situation that prevailed in the Western Cape under the ECA EIA regulations with respect to applications for the cultivation of virgin soil in terms of CARA

  • The central theme of this paper is that environmental decision-making about the biodiversity aspects of the cultivation of new lands continues, notwithstanding important reforms introduced by the NEMA EIA regulations, to be hamstrung by problems peculiar to the interpretation and implementation of the former ECA EIA regulations in the Western Cape

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Summary

Introduction

There is effectively no difference between the current (that is NEMA) status quo and the situation that prevailed in the Western Cape under the ECA EIA regulations with respect to applications for the cultivation of virgin soil in terms of CARA. It attempts to show that the NEMA EIA dispensation has inherited most of these problems in respect of cultivation that would result in the transformation or removal of less than three hectares of vegetation in Critically Endangered and Endangered ecosystems—which, until listed in terms of section 52 of NEMBA, will have no protection in law. Affairs and Forestry, and CapeNature. 23 ‘Agri-environmental’ decision-making refers to situations in which both agricultural and environmental authorisations must be obtained in order to undertake an agriculture-related activity such as the cultivation of virgin soil

Legal and administrative context
The constitutional dimension
NEMA and the cultivation of virgin soil
The NEM Second Amendment Act and cultivation
The NEMA EIA regulations
The National Environmental Management
Memorandum of Agreement on the cultivation of new agricultural fields
Cultivation permits
Environmental and biodiversity comments: an untidy juggling act
The ‘pre-NEMA EIA’ period
Issues arising from case studies
Options for integrating biodiversity considerations into cultivation permits
Authorisation
Evaluation
Conclusion
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