PODCAST | State, Eskom and Sasol are on the hook for ‘Deadly Air’
13 June 2019 - 10:32
by Mudiwa Gavaza
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
In this edition of Business Day Spotlight, we focus on the environmental legal saga, aptly dubbed the “Deadly Air” case.
Our host Mudiwa Gavaza is joined on the line by Bobby Peek, executive director at groundWork, a nonprofit environmental justice service and developmental organisation.
Environmental activists have launched a lawsuit to force the government to reduce air pollution in the coal-rich Highveld, a landmark case that threatens to add R300bn to debt-saddled Eskom’s spending plans and also turns the spotlight on energy giant Sasol.
The case is being spearheaded by groundWork together with the Centre for Environmental Rights and Vukani Environmental Justice Movement In Action.
Peek says the country cannot continue to ignore such an important issue that is slowly causing irreversible damage to the health and welfare of many South Africans.
The discussion also looks at how decisions about SA’s coal energy production have had far-reaching consequences beyond the simple act of turning lights on and off.
Listen in to hear thoughts around these and other questions:
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
PODCAST | State, Eskom and Sasol are on the hook for ‘Deadly Air’
In this edition of Business Day Spotlight, we focus on the environmental legal saga, aptly dubbed the “Deadly Air” case.
Our host Mudiwa Gavaza is joined on the line by Bobby Peek, executive director at groundWork, a nonprofit environmental justice service and developmental organisation.
Environmental activists have launched a lawsuit to force the government to reduce air pollution in the coal-rich Highveld, a landmark case that threatens to add R300bn to debt-saddled Eskom’s spending plans and also turns the spotlight on energy giant Sasol.
The case is being spearheaded by groundWork together with the Centre for Environmental Rights and Vukani Environmental Justice Movement In Action.
Peek says the country cannot continue to ignore such an important issue that is slowly causing irreversible damage to the health and welfare of many South Africans.
The discussion also looks at how decisions about SA’s coal energy production have had far-reaching consequences beyond the simple act of turning lights on and off.
Listen in to hear thoughts around these and other questions:
Subscribe: iono.fm | Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Player.fm
Business Day Spotlight is a MultimediaLIVE Production.
PODCAST | Business Day Spotlight
PODCAST | Business Day Spotlight: Huawei unpacks its plan
PODCAST | SA consumers are going through the most
PODCAST | Business Day Spotlight — Consumers are fed up with Telcos
PODCAST | The DA didn’t win the 2016 election, as much as the ANC lost it
Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.
Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.
Most Read
Related Articles
Deadly Air case could add R300bn to Eskom spending
Landmark pollution case threatens to add R300bn to Eskom’s spending
Eskom's Dongfang deal did not meet empowerment requirements, says B-BBEE ...
Published by Arena Holdings and distributed with the Financial Mail on the last Thursday of every month except December and January.