Friday, September 12, 2014

South Africa’s coal-fired power stations carry heavy health costs

 
 
South african locals working in a coal field

In the settlement of Masakhane near the Duvha plant, residents wear masks to avoid breathing in the coal dust.
South Africa’s dependence on coal to generate 85% of its electricity is taking a substantial toll on human health, according to environmental groups. A report from Greenpeace (pdf) in February estimates that up to 2,700 premature deaths are caused every year by emissions from the country’s 16 coal-fired power plants.
Greenpeace released the report in the wake of an application by Eskom, South Africa’s public power utility, to postpone compliance with new minimum emissions standards aimed at reducing the damaging health impacts of air pollution.
These new standards are particularly vital for the country’s north-eastern Mpumalanga province where 12 coal-fired power plants are clustered on the western high-altitude side of the Highveld. They pump out sulphur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide and particulate matter (PM) at levels often more than double the maximum recommended by the World Health Organisation (WHO). As a result, levels of air pollution in Mpumalanga’s Highveld are the highest in the country and among the highest in the world, according to news reports.
Thursday is “coal day” at Masakhane, an informal settlement 15km east of eMalahleni (formerly Witbank) in Mpumalanga. Locals line up with wheelbarrows to collect their weekly allotment of free coal delivered by a neighbouring mine. The smoking stacks of Duvha power station are clearly visible on the near horizon.
Looming above the settlement are pylons supporting power lines that deliver thousands of megawatts of electricity to other parts of South Africa – but not to this collection of several hundred shacks and crumbling brick dwellings.
It is a windy, late winter’s day and some residents wear masks to prevent coal dust blowing into their mouths and nostrils. But the dust is unavoidable; it coats everything in a fine, gritty layer – and that is just the stuff you can see. It is the invisible pollutants emanating from Duvha’s stacks that health and environmental experts are more concerned about, but that Masakahane’s residents are largely unaware of.
Catherine Mahlangu, 68, developed asthma soon after moving here 10 years ago. So did her husband and daughter. “My husband can’t work any more. Sometimes he gets dizzy and falls over,” she said, in between bouts of coughing. “I think it’s the air we breathe around here, the dust and the coal we use to cook.”
Their shack is a short distance from where their neighbours are collecting coal, but Mahlangu and her daughter stay away for fear of aggravating their asthma. “I’ve been in bed the last three weeks and I’m coughing a lot; so much I vomit,” said Mahlangu.
The WHO describes outdoor air pollution as a major environmental health problem estimated to cause 3.7m premature deaths worldwide in 2012. While nitrogen dioxide has been linked to reduced lung function and sulphur dioxide causes numerous respiratory problems, it is particulate matter that affects people more than any other pollutant, according to the WHO.

The bottom dotted red line shows WHO’s recommended standard for PM2.5 annual emissions. The line above it shows South Africa’s standard to be implemented from 2016 while the solid line above shows the current standard. The place names correspond to priority areas for air quality in Mpumalanga.

Chronic exposure increases the risk of developing respiratory and cardiovascular diseases as well as lung cancer. Children are particularly at risk because of their developing systems and the fact that they tend to spend more time outside. People with compromised immune systems, such as those with HIV, are also especially vulnerable.
According to the WHO, there is no such thing as a safe concentration of PM. While it has set its guideline limits at an annual average of 20 micrograms per cubic metre of air volume for PM10 and 10mg for PM2.5, South Africa’s standards are significantly laxer. Concentrations of PM2.5 are allowed at 25mg, but are due to be lowered to 20mg by January 2016. Local municipalities are responsible for monitoring ambient air quality, but often lack capacity to do so.
Although the government designated Mpumalanga’s Highveld region a priority area for air quality in 2007, pollution levels have continued to increase as Eskom has returned three mothballed coal-fired power stations to service. Even the current relatively weak standards for levels of PM are regularly exceeded (see graph), particularly in the winter months when there is less hot air rising to disperse pollutants.

Catherine Mahlangu has suffered from asthma since moving to Masakhane 10 years ago.Photograph: Kristy Siegfried/IRIN
In 2010, the department of environmental affairs (DEA) published new standards for industrial emissions aimed at reducing pollution levels in line with the country’s Air Quality Act. Eskom was given until April 2015 to bring its power plants into compliance, and until 2020 to comply with stricter standards. However, in December 2013, Eskom applied to the DEA for rolling postponements to comply with the minimum standards. The utility argued, among other things, that the benefits of compliance did not justify the R200bn ($18.6bn) cost of retrofitting its plants with the necessary filters and technologies and the need for plant downtime while they were installed.
In a document (pdf) listing its rationale for applying for postponements for individual power stations, Eskom admits that three of its units at Duvha are not compliant with the existing limit for PM emissions, but notes that “since emissions from Duvha seldom impact on eMalahleni [the closest city], there is little benefit to be derived from achieving the new plant limits … A postponement of the existing and new plant PM limits is thus applied for until April 2024.”
Environmental groups representing communities in Mpumalanga have opposed Eskom’s applications, which have yet to be granted by the DEA. They argue that not only has Eskom been aware that it would need to meet stricter emissions standards since 2005 and failed to act, but it has greatly overestimated the costs of compliance and failed to take into consideration the health and social costs of non-compliance.
“Our clients argue that, while Eskom considers the installation of emission abatement processes too costly, the future effects on health, the environment and water resources as a result of coal-fired power stations and coal mining may be extremely costly for the country as a whole,” said Sylvia Kamanja, a lawyer with the Centre for Environmental Rights which has submitted detailed objections to Eskom’s applications.
The Greenpeace report projected that Eskom’s continued non-compliance with minimum emissions standards would result in approximately 20,000 premature deaths over the remaining life of its power plants. In a statement, Eskom responded that “the claim that people could perish every year from illnesses related to air pollution … is based on some incorrect assumptions, and has not taken into account measures that Eskom has and will be implementing to mitigate emissions from its power stations”.
Communities like Masakhane also face significant indoor air pollution caused by having to burn coal and wood in their homes because they lack access to affordable electricity. Most of the residents interviewed blamed persistent coughs and sinus problems on inhaling smoke while cooking and, indeed, this is the line Eskom has consistently taken in defending its contributions to poor air quality.
“It is well established that the brunt of poor air quality in South Africa … are borne by people who burn coal and wood in their homes for cooking and heating,” Eskom said in a statement responding to the Greenpeace report. It continues: “The best way of improving this poor air quality is through the provision of affordable electricity.”
However, a July 2014 report by local environmental justice NGO groundWork (pdf) found that in Mpumalanga’s Highveld area, the health risks related to outdoor air pollution resulting from Eskom’s emissions were three times higher than those associated with burning coal indoors. The report also found that 51% of all hospital admissions and deaths in the area due to outdoor air pollution could be attributed to emissions from Eskom’s power stations.
Eskom, which has struggled in recent years to supply the country with adequate power, has not made public a decommissioning schedule for its ageing power plants. Currently, it is building two power stations. One, called Kusile, is being built in Mpumalanga and, when completed, will be the largest coal-fired power station in the world.

The Guardian

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