Close Menu
TechCentralTechCentral

    Subscribe to the newsletter

    Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.

    Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
    WhatsApp Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
    TechCentralTechCentral
    • News
      Digital authoritarianism grows as African states normalise internet blackouts

      Digital authoritarianism grows as African states normalise internet blackouts

      19 December 2025
      Starlink satellite anomaly creates debris in rare orbital mishap

      Starlink satellite anomaly creates debris in rare orbital mishap

      19 December 2025
      TechCentral's South African Newsmakers of 2025

      TechCentral’s South African Newsmakers of 2025

      18 December 2025
      Malatsi buries Post Office's long-dead monopoly

      Malatsi buries Post Office monopoly the market ignored

      18 December 2025
      China races to crack EUV as chip war with the West intensifies

      China races to crack EUV lithography as chip war with the West intensifies

      18 December 2025
    • World
      Trump space order puts the moon back at centre of US, China rivalry - US President Donald Trump

      Trump space order puts the moon back at centre of US, China rivalry

      19 December 2025
      Warner Bros slams the door on Paramount

      Warner Bros slams the door on Paramount

      17 December 2025
      X moves to block bid to revive Twitter brand

      X moves to block bid to revive Twitter brand

      17 December 2025
      Oracle’s AI ambitions face scrutiny on earnings miss

      Oracle’s AI ambitions face scrutiny on earnings miss

      11 December 2025
      China will get Nvidia H200 chips - but not without paying Washington first

      China will get Nvidia H200 chips – but not without paying Washington first

      9 December 2025
    • In-depth
      Black Friday goes digital in South Africa as online spending surges to record high

      Black Friday goes digital in South Africa as online spending surges to record high

      4 December 2025
      Canal+ plays hardball - and DStv viewers feel the pain

      Canal+ plays hardball – and DStv viewers feel the pain

      3 December 2025
      Jensen Huang Nvidia

      So, will China really win the AI race?

      14 November 2025
      Valve's Linux console takes aim at Microsoft's gaming empire

      Valve’s Linux console takes aim at Microsoft’s gaming empire

      13 November 2025
      iOCO's extraordinary comeback plan - Rhys Summerton

      iOCO’s extraordinary comeback plan

      28 October 2025
    • TCS
      TCS+ | Africa's digital transformation - unlocking AI through cloud and culture - Cliff de Wit Accelera Digital Group

      TCS+ | Cloud without culture won’t deliver AI: Accelera’s Cliff de Wit

      12 December 2025
      TCS+ | How Cloud on Demand helps partners thrive in the AWS ecosystem - Odwa Ndyaluvane and Xenia Rhode

      TCS+ | How Cloud On Demand helps partners thrive in the AWS ecosystem

      4 December 2025
      TCS | MTN Group CEO Ralph Mupita on competition, AI and the future of mobile

      TCS | Ralph Mupita on competition, AI and the future of mobile

      28 November 2025
      TCS | Dominic Cull on fixing South Africa's ICT policy bottlenecks

      TCS | Dominic Cull on fixing South Africa’s ICT policy bottlenecks

      21 November 2025
      TCS | BMW CEO Peter van Binsbergen on the future of South Africa's automotive industry

      TCS | BMW CEO Peter van Binsbergen on the future of South Africa’s automotive industry

      6 November 2025
    • Opinion
      Netflix, Warner Bros deal raises fresh headaches for MultiChoice - Duncan McLeod

      Netflix, Warner Bros deal raises fresh headaches for MultiChoice

      5 December 2025
      BIN scans, DDoS and the next cybercrime wave hitting South Africa's banks - Entersekt Gerhard Oosthuizen

      BIN scans, DDoS and the next cybercrime wave hitting South Africa’s banks

      3 December 2025
      Your data, your hardware: the DIY AI revolution is coming - Duncan McLeod

      Your data, your hardware: the DIY AI revolution is coming

      20 November 2025
      Zero Carbon Charge founder Joubert Roux

      The energy revolution South Africa can’t afford to miss

      20 November 2025
      It's time for a new approach to government IT spend in South Africa - Richard Firth

      It’s time for a new approach to government IT spend in South Africa

      19 November 2025
    • Company Hubs
      • Africa Data Centres
      • AfriGIS
      • Altron Digital Business
      • Altron Document Solutions
      • Altron Group
      • Arctic Wolf
      • AvertITD
      • Braintree
      • CallMiner
      • CambriLearn
      • CYBER1 Solutions
      • Digicloud Africa
      • Digimune
      • Domains.co.za
      • ESET
      • Euphoria Telecom
      • Incredible Business
      • iONLINE
      • IQbusiness
      • Iris Network Systems
      • LSD Open
      • NEC XON
      • Netstar
      • Network Platforms
      • Next DLP
      • Ovations
      • Paracon
      • Paratus
      • Q-KON
      • SevenC
      • SkyWire
      • Solid8 Technologies
      • Telit Cinterion
      • Tenable
      • Vertiv
      • Videri Digital
      • Vodacom Business
      • Wipro
      • Workday
      • XLink
    • Sections
      • AI and machine learning
      • Banking
      • Broadcasting and Media
      • Cloud services
      • Contact centres and CX
      • Cryptocurrencies
      • Education and skills
      • Electronics and hardware
      • Energy and sustainability
      • Enterprise software
      • Financial services
      • Information security
      • Internet and connectivity
      • Internet of Things
      • Investment
      • IT services
      • Lifestyle
      • Motoring
      • Public sector
      • Retail and e-commerce
      • Satellite communications
      • Science
      • SMEs and start-ups
      • Social media
      • Talent and leadership
      • Telecoms
    • Events
    • Advertise
    TechCentralTechCentral
    Home » Sections » Energy and sustainability » The cost of coal in South Africa: Dirty skies and sick children

    The cost of coal in South Africa: Dirty skies and sick children

    By Tim Cocks4 November 2021
    Twitter LinkedIn Facebook WhatsApp Email Telegram Copy Link
    News Alerts
    WhatsApp

    In 2019, scientists working for South Africa’s government completed a study on the health impacts of pollution from the country’s sprawling coal industry.

    The researchers for the CSIR had been assured by government authorities that their years-long study would be published, according to three people familiar with the matter.

    So far, it has not seen the light of day.

    The study, a copy of which was reviewed by Reuters, showed more than 5 000 South Africans die annually in the nation’s coal belt because the government has failed to fully enforce its own air quality standards. It also revealed that nearly a quarter of households in the region, where 3.6 million people live, have children with persistent asthma. That’s double the national rate.

    Governments, businesses and local residents often see coal as an economic lifeline

    South Africa’s government has since 2015 granted waivers from emissions limits to its indebted state power and fuel companies, Eskom and Sasol, allowing them to save money.

    That kind of continuing government support highlights an issue in many coal-dependent nations, from Australia to Indonesia, that is hobbling the transition to cleaner energy. In producing countries, governments, businesses and local residents often see coal as an economic lifeline.

    South Africa’s coal industry, the world’s fifth largest, employs 90 000 miners, generates 80% of the country’s electricity, and supplies the feedstock for about a quarter of the country’s liquid fuel for vehicles, all at a time of soaring unemployment and frequent blackouts.

    Smog and ash

    The costs of a mammoth coal industry are also high, and not just for the climate. South Africa’s coal belt is blanketed in smog and coal ash; the stink of sulphur pervades. The area east of Johannesburg is among the world’s most polluted, experts say, rivalling Beijing and New Delhi.

    In 2017, British air pollution expert Mike Holland calculated that the health impacts from Eskom’s emissions alone cost South Africa US$2.37-billion every year.

    Environment minister Barbara Creecy, whose department commissioned the 2019 coal health study, declined to say why it remains unpublished. She said the government still intends to release it at some point.

    “We understand that there are serious health challenges facing communities,” she said, adding that the government considers improving air quality “absolutely imperative”.

    Temperatures in Southern Africa are rising twice as fast as the global average, according to the International Panel on Climate Change

    But Creecy’s department of fisheries, forestry & the environment has publicly defended its lax enforcement of pollution regulations as an economic necessity in court battles with activists. In a recent filing, it said its main challenge is addressing pollution without hurting “the poor, who are desperate for job opportunities”.

    As the United Nations’ climate conference, Cop26, in Glasgow gets under way this month, coal is in the crosshairs of a global push to replace it with cleaner fuels.

    South Africa is the world’s 12th largest greenhouse gas emitter, according to the non-profit Global Carbon Atlas. This water-stressed country also stands to be one of the big losers from climate change. Temperatures in Southern Africa are rising twice as fast as the global average, according to the International Panel on Climate Change, pushing the region’s north-western deserts south.

    In an effort to secure foreign investment, Eskom is pitching a $10-billion plan to shut most of its coal-fired plants by 2050 and embrace renewables like wind and solar, with financing from wealthy nations. The US, Britain, France, Germany and the European Union on Tuesday provided that effort a big boost, offering $8.5-billion to help South Africa transition off coal.

    ‘Economic suicide’

    Eskom’s green push, however, has put the company in conflict with energy minister Gwede Mantashe, who has called ditching coal “economic suicide”.

    Mantashe represents a powerful constituency within the ruling ANC that includes workers’ unions on whose support the party depends to win elections. Those unions, like Mantashe, are concerned about job losses.

    “We should not collapse our economy because they are greedy for green funding,” Matashe told a South African mining conference in October. He has previously said switching off the nation’s coal plants would allow South Africans to “breathe fresh air in the darkness”.

    Mantashe declined to comment for this story.

    Darkness is already a familiar experience in the coal belt. Power cuts are a daily reality for the shanties threaded between the mine shafts and cooling towers of towns like Emalahleni — “The Place of Coal” in isiZulu.

    “Mr Coal” … energy minister Gwede Mantashe. Image: GCIS

    If people stay, it is for the chance of a job.

    Mbali Matabule and her partner were high school students when they swapped phone numbers on a dirt track in Vosman, a township outside Emalahleni. After graduation, her partner found work in Sasol’s Secunda plant, which transforms coal into liquid fuel for cars. The following year, Matabule bore their first child, Princess.

    His salary allowed them to feed and clothe their daughter and buy trappings of middle-class life: a TV, microwave, fridge and electric cooker to put in their shack at her parents’ compound.

    Then, in May 2018, as she approached her fourth birthday, Princess started struggling to breathe. They rushed her to the hospital, where a doctor put a mask on Princess’s face attached to a nebuliser.

    “They said she had asthma,” Matabule said. “I was thinking: Why? She was not born with asthma.”

    We know air pollution from coal causes lung problems, cardiac diseases

    Towards the end of that year, they had a second child, Asemahle, who soon also developed breathing problems. “Her chest was rasping,” Matabule said.

    Hospital visits became routine, and the medical costs started to mount. Without health insurance, the couple was spending R2 500/month on medical bills for their kids, nearly half Mbali’s partner’s salary.

    Smog released from burning coal is laced with chemicals like sulphur and nitrogen oxides, mercury and lead, and radioactive elements like uranium and thorium.

    “We know air pollution from coal causes lung problems, cardiac diseases. It impairs cognitive development of children,” said Mohammed Tayob, a doctor in Middelburg, one of the worst affected towns in the coal belt.

    Choking to death

    The 2019 CSIR study obtained by Reuters concluded that 5 125 lives could be saved every year in the coal belt by enforcing national air quality standards on soot.

    The air in Emalahleni, it said, contains around 20% more particulate matter than the nation’s limit of 40 micrograms per cubic metre, and more than three times more than recommended by the World Health Organisation.

    The region’s sulphur dioxide levels, meanwhile, are off the charts. The non-profit Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air this month found Eskom alone emits more SO2 than the entire power sector of the US and China combined.

    Clearing up the air would require a crackdown on polluting industries.

    Eskom environmental manager Deidre Herbst said the government waivers allowing his company to exceed pollution limits were an economic necessity: It would cost R300-billion and take 10-15 years to fully meet national SO2 standards, leading to prolonged outages in the meantime.

    “It’s impossible for us to become immediately compliant,” she said, and South Africa can’t simply switch off all its coal plants.

    Sasol spokeswoman Matebelo Motloung said the company’s emissions were permitted under its operating licences and that the company hoped to embrace cleaner technologies in the future.

    Matabule had not imagined the haze in her neighborhood was behind her childrens’ illness until she attended a local meeting about air pollution and heard the stories of neighbours.

    I became so angry because nobody was doing anything, and people were sick and dying

    “I became so angry because nobody was doing anything, and people were sick and dying,” Matabule said.

    But, like her husband who relies on coal for a pay cheque, many in her community are wary of a transition to cleaner energy.

    Vosman resident Valentia Msiza, 33, said her family has done well since her husband got his job in the coal mines. They worry a transition could leave them behind.

    They, too, have a child with respiratory problems – and they can’t pay for his care without the husband’s salary and health insurance. The family is seeking a medical specialist to treat their toddler’s lung disease.

    “That’s our last hope now,” Valentia said.  — Reported by Tim Cocks, (c) 2021 Reuters



    Barbara Creecy CSIR Eskom Gwede Mantashe Sasol
    Subscribe to TechCentral Subscribe to TechCentral
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Email Copy Link
    Previous ArticleMicrosoft downplays metaverse ‘hype’
    Next Article RUT950 routers offer top-class reliability and security – use cases unpacked

    Related Posts

    Ramokgopa bullish on energy outlook as new projects get green light - Kgosientsho Ramokgopa

    Ramokgopa bullish on energy outlook as new projects get green light

    15 December 2025
    Eskom unveils four-subsidiary structure for future South African grid

    Eskom unveils four-subsidiary structure for future South African grid

    10 December 2025
    Nersa plan ushers in major shift in South Africa's electricity market

    Nersa plan ushers in major shift in South Africa’s electricity market

    8 December 2025
    Company News
    Why TechCentral is the most powerful platform for reaching IT decision makers

    Why TechCentral is the most powerful platform for reaching IT decision makers

    17 December 2025
    Business trends to watch in 2026 - Domains.co.za

    Business trends to watch in 2026

    17 December 2025
    MTN Zambia launches world's first 4G cloud smartphone solution - Huawei

    MTN Zambia launches world’s first 4G cloud smartphone solution

    17 December 2025
    Opinion
    Netflix, Warner Bros deal raises fresh headaches for MultiChoice - Duncan McLeod

    Netflix, Warner Bros deal raises fresh headaches for MultiChoice

    5 December 2025
    BIN scans, DDoS and the next cybercrime wave hitting South Africa's banks - Entersekt Gerhard Oosthuizen

    BIN scans, DDoS and the next cybercrime wave hitting South Africa’s banks

    3 December 2025
    Your data, your hardware: the DIY AI revolution is coming - Duncan McLeod

    Your data, your hardware: the DIY AI revolution is coming

    20 November 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.

    Latest Posts
    Digital authoritarianism grows as African states normalise internet blackouts

    Digital authoritarianism grows as African states normalise internet blackouts

    19 December 2025
    Starlink satellite anomaly creates debris in rare orbital mishap

    Starlink satellite anomaly creates debris in rare orbital mishap

    19 December 2025
    Trump space order puts the moon back at centre of US, China rivalry - US President Donald Trump

    Trump space order puts the moon back at centre of US, China rivalry

    19 December 2025
    TechCentral's South African Newsmakers of 2025

    TechCentral’s South African Newsmakers of 2025

    18 December 2025
    © 2009 - 2025 NewsCentral Media
    • Cookie policy (ZA)
    • TechCentral – privacy and Popia

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Manage consent

    TechCentral uses cookies to enhance its offerings. Consenting to these technologies allows us to serve you better. Not consenting or withdrawing consent may adversely affect certain features and functions of the website.

    Functional Always active
    The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
    Preferences
    The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
    Statistics
    The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
    Marketing
    The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
    • Manage options
    • Manage services
    • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
    • Read more about these purposes
    View preferences
    • {title}
    • {title}
    • {title}