Daniel Pienaar (left) explains the history of his community as Bobby
Peek translates. The community lives on this hill which is lower than the
incinerator stack seen in the background.
The Enviroserve leachate pond receives leachate from a closed unlined
hazardous waste site (Aloes I) and pumps it into Aloes II which is close
to capacity. In two months time, Aloes II will be full and Enviroserve
is exploring three unviable options to deal with the waste. The vapours
from the ponds along with the lateral movement of the leachate are cause
for concern.
Extremely hazardous waste is stored in drums and then encapsulated
in cement. On this day, the workers has no protective clothing. Most of
these workers are casual workers.
When we visited the site the next day for an official tour, we found
that the workers had gasmasks and yellow protective suits.
Another view of the leachate pond. Note the white foam on the top from aeration of the waste. |
Daniel Pienaar takes us for a walk around the perimeter of the site and points to the community concerns. |
The leachate ponds pump straight into Aloes II which is close to capacity.
Bobby Peek and Denny Larson explain the bucket to Daniel Pienaar and the community as local organizers Frank Muller and Joan Couldridge (left top) look on. |
The community gets into their new air sampling device. |
Denny Larson hands Daniel Pienaar a Bucket Brigade t-shirt. |
The bucket is handed over to local organizer Frank Muller and Joan Couldridge. |
The struggle for environmental justice for the Aloes community continues.
They are living under atrocious conditions and have asked to be relocated.
While the new site has already been allocated, the Port Elizabeth Municipality
is dragging its feet to implement the relocation. A strong campaign is
underway so please contact us for more information.
Stay tuned for further updates from Cape Town.
If you want to contact us on the road, please email us at: hkalan@igc.org