Title: NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT: AIR QUALITY BILL
1NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT AIR QUALITY
BILL
- A paradigm shift from limited, source-based
emission control to ambient air quality management
2The need for new air quality management
legislation
- Everyone has a right to air quality that is not
harmful to health and well-being APPA is not
effective in protecting this right. - Everyone has the right to have air quality
protected through legislative and other measures
APPAs best practicable means approach does
not prevent pollution effectively. - The burden of health impacts associated with
polluted air falls most heavily on the poor
APPA does not effectively take land-use into
account.
3The need for new air quality management
legislation (Cont.)
- Sustainable development requires the integration
of social, economic and environmental factors in
the planning, implementation and evaluation of
decisions to ensure that development serves
present and future generations APPA does not
provide for this integrated planning. - Air pollution carries a high social, economic and
environmental cost that is seldom borne by the
polluter APPA is difficult to enforce and
penalties for non-compliance are low. - Many South Africans live and work in areas where
the air is harmful to their health and well-being
APPA has allowed the development of air
pollution hotspots.
4The need for new air quality management
legislation (Cont.)
- Economic growth in certain areas of the country
with high growth potential is being hampered by
the poor quality of air in these areas APPA has
allowed the development of air pollution
hotspots. - Atmospheric emissions of ozone depleting
substances, greenhouse gases and other modern
pollutants have a deleterious effect on the
environment both locally and globally APPA is
old and does not recognise these problems. - Contaminated air cannot be remedied and, thus,
pollution minimisation is the only sustainable
means by which air quality can be improved APPA
provides little incentive for a move to cleaner
production.
5The need for new air quality management
legislation (Cont.)
- Ambient air quality standards define public air
that is not harmful to health and well-being
APPA sets no standards. - Everyone has a right to
- participate in air quality management
- Access air quality related information and
- Fair administration APPA is non-participatory,
non-transparent and open to unfair administrative
practices. - In Summary, APPA is outdated and not
constitutional.
6The new approach to air quality management
guidance and constraints
- The Constitution
- Environment falls within the functional area
listed in Part A of Schedule 4 to the
Constitution a functional area of cooperative
national and provincial governance - Air pollution falls within the functional area
listed in Part B of Schedule 4 to the
Constitution a functional area of exclusive
local governance. - The Integrated Pollution and Waste Management
Policy (IPWM, 2000) - Governments IPWM policy provides a clear
framework on how air quality must be managed. The
Bill is fully informed by this policy and, thus,
the new Bill will provide government with the
powers and means to implement this policy.
7Chapter 1 Interpretation and fundamental
principles
- Definitions.
- Objectives
- to protect the environment by providing
reasonable measures for - (i) the protection and enhancement of the quality
of air in the Republic - (ii) the prevention of air pollution and
ecological degradation and - (iii) securing ecologically sustainable
development while promoting justifiable economic
and social development and - (b) generally to give effect to section 24 (b) of
the Constitution in order to enhance the quality
of ambient air for the sake of securing an
environment that is not harmful to the health and
well-being of people. - General duties of the State.
- Application.
- NEMA.
- Conflicts with other legislation.
8Chapter 2 National Framework and national,
provincial and local standards
- Air quality standards provide the 'backbone' of
the Bill as, in the case of ambient air quality
standards, these standards define air quality
that is not harmful to health and well-being. - Not only is environmental management through
standard setting international best practice, it
is also required by the IPWM policy and is fully
compatible to a media-based approach. - So far, the Water Act provides water quality
objectives, this Bill provides for air quality
standards, and perhaps a future soil
contamination and remediation Bill will provide
soil quality standards the quality of all
environmental media will be defined for effective
management.
9Chapter 2 National Framework and national,
provincial and local standards (Cont.)
- Standards will ensure that
- Phrases like significant pollution (NEMA s.28)
or serious damage (ECA s.31A) will no longer be
subjective and open to interpretation - What constitutes air that is not harmful to
health and well-being (Bill of Rights s.24) will
be defined - The goals, objectives, targets and/or milestones
for all air quality management plans and EMCAs
will be clearly defined - The efficacy of all plans, strategies,
regulations and other air quality related
interventions can be measured against a defined
yardstick - Undesirable processes can be identified and
outlawed if necessary - Cleaner production will be encouraged and
- The state of the environment with respect to
air can be easily measured and reported.
10Chapter 2 National Framework and national,
provincial and local standards (Cont.)
- Part 1 National Framework
- Provides for the establishment of national norms
and standards for, among others emission
controls monitoring planning information
management compliance strategies etc. - In effect, the national framework will provide
the road map and implementation manual for
the rollout of the Bill in ensuring effective air
quality management. - Part 2 National, provincial and local standards
- Provides for the prioritization of pollutants and
the setting of ambient and emission standards for
these pollutants at national and provincial
levels and for emission standards at the local
level.
11Chapter 2 National Framework and national,
provincial and local standards (Cont.)
- Part 3 General
- Provides for the establishment of norms and
standards in respect of the measurement of actual
ambient and emission conditions for comparison
against standards.
12Chapter 3 Institutional and planning matters
- Provides for the establishment of a national
multi-stakeholder forum on air quality management
the National Air Quality Advisory Committee. - Provides the governance focal points in all
spheres of government the national, provincial
and municipal air quality officers. - Provides for the inclusion of air quality
management plans as components of existing
planning regimes at national, provincial and
local levels. - Details the contents of these plans as well as
progress reporting.
13Chapter 4 Air Quality Management Measures
- This section of the Bill provides government with
the tools to ensure progressive compliance with
ambient air quality standards. - Part 1 Priority Areas
- This tool takes into account current capacity
constraints by allowing limited resources to
concentrate on unacceptable pollution hotspots. - This tool also provides for the cutting-edge
air quality management approach known as
air-shed management.
14Chapter 4 Air Quality Management Measures
(Cont.)
- Part 2 Listing of activities resulting in
atmospheric emissions. - As with APPA, this tool provides for command and
control management of identified polluting
industries through a licensing regime the
atmospheric emission license. - Furthermore, the licensing decision making
process is directly linked to the environmental
impact assessment process. - There is also provision for the setting of
minimum emission standards for identified
polluting industries.
15Chapter 4 Air Quality Management Measures
(Cont.)
- Part 3 Controlled Emitters
- This tool provides for the control of classes
of polluting appliances that would be impractical
to control through a licensing regimes (e.g.
motor vehicles). - Once identified, all controlled emitters must
conform to specified emission standards.
16Chapter 4 Air Quality Management Measures
(Cont.)
- Part 4 Other Measures
- This section provides for the drafting and
implementation of pollution prevention plans in
respect of identified priority pollutants by the
polluter. - Provision is made for the submission of
atmospheric impact reports by specific polluters. - It also provides for recognition programmes that
acknowledge best industrial practice.
17Chapter 4 Air Quality Management Measures
(Cont.)
- Part 5 Measures in respect of dust, noise and
offensive odours - Provides for prescriptive dust control measures.
- Early warning for mines that are about to close.
- Norms and standards in respect of noise.
- The control of offensive odours.
18Chapter 5 Licensing of listed activities
- The licensing authority (designated through
Schedule 4B of the Constitution) - Metros and district municipalities are the
licensing authorities unless - They have delegated this function to province in
terms of s.238 of the Constitution - Province has intervened in terms of s.139 of the
Constitution or - A municipality is the licence applicant.
- This chapter provides detailed direction for
licence applications, licensing decisions,
contents of licences, transfers, reviews,
variations and renewals.
19Chapter 5 Licensing of listed activities (Cont.)
- Provision is also made for processing fees with
a view to cost recovery. - Licenses may be very detailed and account for the
polluter-pays principle in respect of
monitoring. - Compliance is encouraged through non-compliance
penalties. - Industry focal points may be identified the
emission control officer. - Fly by night operators are controlled through a
fit and proper person review.
20Chapter 6 International air quality management
- This section provides the Minister with the means
to be a good neighbour.
21Chapter 7 Offences and penalties
- This section provides the teeth of the Bill by
providing for offences and penalties that can
serve as a deterrent, encouraging compliance. - Furthermore, the penalties will ensure that the
punishment fits the crime by ensuring that a
judge considers - The severity of the offence in terms of health,
well-being, safety and the environment - The monetary or other benefits derived through
the commission of the offence and - The polluters overall contribution to ambient
pollution.
22Chapter 8 General matters
- Part 1 Regulations
- This section details what regulations may be made
by the Minister and MECs as well as how these
regulations are to be made. - Part 2 Consultative process
- Sections under this part detail both the
intergovernmental and civil society consultative
processes that must be adhered to when - Making regulations
- Developing the national framework
- Setting standards
- Declaring priority areas
- Listing activities and
- Declaring controlled emitters.
23Chapter 8 General matters (Cont.)
- Part 3 Delegations and exemptions
- Sections under this part provide for delegations
and exemptions from the application of the
provisions of the Bill.
24Chapter 9 Miscellaneous
- The Bill repeals APPA.
- Notwithstanding the repeal of APPA, the Bill
provides for a number of transitional
arrangements, including - The rollover of APPA Registration Certificates as
provisional atmospheric emission licences - The rollover of APPAs scheduled processes as
interim listed activities and - The use of APPAs ambient air quality guidelines
as transitional ambient air quality standards.
25Thank you for your attention