Ermelo – Darkness enveloped a disused mine in South Africa’s Mpumalanga province as a pick-up truck left the site’s entrance and drove off into the night, loaded with coal.
Informal miner Bonginkosi Mhlanga threw a pickaxe over his shoulder and descended back below ground, where he would remain until daybreak.
Locally known as “zama zamas” — “those who try and try” in the Zulu language — Mhlanga and his counterparts scrape a living by chipping away at abandoned mine shafts previously exploited by mining conglomerates.
There are thousands of informal miners in South Africa, according to the National Association of Artisanal Miners (NAAM).
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Many were left jobless when mining companies moved on, struggling to find new work in a country of 59 million people where unemployment stood above 30% even before coronavirus hit.
Mhlanga, 31, skidded down 82 slippery steps bringing him back down into a narrow tunnel just 1.60 metres high.
The air grew thick as he made his descent, walls and floor dripping with humidity.
Bent-over figures brushed past, barely visible in the darkness as they lugged bulging sacks of coal up to the surface.
The ceiling lowered as Mhlanga made his way forward, passing patches of fungus, until he reached a black vein in the rock some two metres wide.
“Here is my spot,” he told AFP.
“I take care of it, I keep it clean, and no one is supposed to touch it.”
Using a headlamp, Mhlanga lifted his pickaxe and plunged it repeatedly into the rock with all his strength.
Black fragments flew out and fell at his feet.
He would later gather the raw coal with his bare hands and stuff it into old polypropylene sacks to sell for a meagre R500 ($35) per tonne.
Mining is an important source of revenue for South Africa, raking in around 8% of GDP.
“Zama zamas” operate in around 6000 disused mines across the country, NAAM estimates.
Lack of maintenance and the unmonitored use of explosives can cause ageing tunnels to collapse, burying miners with them.
“When you go down there you never know whether you’ll be back,” Mhlanga said, reluctant to talk about past incidents.
“If it happens, you have to run and leave everything behind.”
Pollution hub
Mining groups “come, extract and just leave”, said NAAM spokesman Zethu Hlatshwayo, with little regard for workers left “in bad shape with debts” and sickness.
Environmental groups and NAAM claim mining causes significant water and air pollution, although official figures are hard to come by.
Mpumalanga, South Africa’s coal mining hub, was dubbed the world’s largest air pollution hotspot by Greenpeace in 2018.
The province’s fertile grassland houses a fleet of 12 coal-fired power stations owned by South Africa’s embattled state power utility Eskom.
Those towering concrete columns cause 2,239 deaths per year attributable to respiratory illness, heart disease, lung cancer and stroke, according to South African environmental group groundWork.
In the former coal mining town of Ermelo, residents continue to dig into disused shafts, degrading their health in order to put food on the table.
They hope the government will grant them legal access to the sites, as with 800 artisanal diamond miners in the central city of Kimberley in 2018 — a move meant to formalise and regulate the activity.
‘Suffering now’
Thick grey smoke hovered over the sprawling townships surrounding Ermelo, seeping out of corrugated iron roofs and filling the late afternoon air with the nauseating smell of combustion.
Almost every household heats and cooks with coal.
“It’s all we have around here,” said Wesselton township resident Buhle Nkosi.
Seven months pregnant, Nkosi lives in a makeshift home with no toilet, running water or electricity. Her only source of power is a small coal stove.
More than 80% of South Africa’s power is generated by coal, which is also exported to China and Europe.
Renewable energy accounts for less than 2% of electricity output in a country ranked the world’s 12th-largest greenhouse gas emitter by Bloomberg this year.
The government has vowed to reduce coal-generated electricity production by 59% by 2030.
But “such things take time and we are hungry today,” Hlatshwayo noted.
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Back at the abandoned mine shaft, Mhlanga dragged his last bags of coal back up the 82 steps.
He has made just R250 ($17) for a 12-hour night shift.
As dawn broke, informal miner Eddie Malaga arrived for his turn and lit a joint. Like many others, he smokes marijuana before descending into the abyss.
“The pollution doesn’t hit us as much as hunger,” said the 37-year-old, dragging on his spliff.
“Sorry for the next generation, but we are suffering now.”
Claire Doyen
from The Citizen https://ift.tt/2Rd6Ruf
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