Privatisation and Communities: The Consequences for ‘Old’ Copperbelt Mining Communities
Zambia Consolidated Copper Mines had historically provided a ‘cradle to the grave’ welfare policy for mine communities, through which employees and their families received housing and social services while in employment (see Larmer and Taylor, Chapter 12).
1 F. Cronjé, S. Reyneke and C. Chenga, ‘Corporate Social Responsibility in the Zambian Mining Sector: An Overview of Three Distinctive Operational Eras’, Koers 82, 1 (2017), pp. 1–18; Lungu, ‘Copper Mining Agreements in Zambia’, p. 404; R. Negi, ‘“You Cannot Make a Camel Drink Water”: Capital, Geo-History and Contestations in the Zambian Copperbelt’, Geoforum 45 (2013), p. 241. However, the infrastructure of the mining compounds had severely deteriorated by the time the industry was privatised in the late 1990s. By 1992, for example, the parks and gardens provided by ZCCM were dilapidated and ‘non-existent in most of the townships’.
2 ZCCM-IH, 19.4.9E, ‘Mine Township Maintenance and Development (Projects), Report on Mine Townships Maintenance and Development’ (1992), p. 1. Furthermore, water treatment facilities had severely deteriorated. Access to safe water was undermined by high concentrations of suspended solids that resulted from a drought that same year, and the consequent decline of water levels in the streams.
3 Ibid., pp. 2–3. To resolve these issues, the company encouraged community engagement in environmental management. This resulted from ZCCM’s realisation that its efforts alone were insufficient to ensure environmental safety within mining communities and that community members should be informed about the impact of mining-induced pollution on their environment. It was therefore important for communities to contribute to environmental protection through the rehabilitation of their surroundings by creating green parks and gardens and restoring water treatment facilities.
4 Ibid., pp. 5–6. Despite these efforts, the most significant mining-induced environmental challenges on the ‘old’ Copperbelt remained unresolved, and formed a central part of discussions regarding the privatisation of the industry.
5 For detailed information on the discussions regarding environmental issues during privatisation, see ZCCM-IH, METS, Volume 2.4, ‘Nkana Environmental Impact Assessment’ (2003), p. 2; ‘Project Summary Report’ (2005), p. ii.In fact, it was the Zambian Government, despite its own limited involvement in mining-related environmental protection in the decades preceding privatisation, that pointed out the dilapidation of the mine’s outside premises, arguing that infrastructure was generally poorly maintained. This was denied by ZCCM, who insisted on the effectiveness of their containment efforts.
6 ZCCM-IH, 4.2.3J, ‘Privatisation File July 1994 to March 1996, Comments on Strategic Options for the Privatisation of ZCCM Limited’, p. 9. The extent of pollution on the ‘old’ Copperbelt by the end of the 1990s highlights the severe impact of poor coordination between the Zambian Government and ZCCM on environmental safety on the Copperbelt, as well as its adverse consequences on mining communities.
Following privatisation, ZCCM was reduced to a holding company, Zambian Consolidated Copper Mines Investments Holding (ZCCM-IH), with minority shares in the privatised companies. In 2000, Nkana and Mufulira mines were purchased by the Swiss company Glencore, jointly forming Mopani Copper Mines (MCM) Plc.
7 S. Kangwa, ‘Report on the Privatisation of Zambia Consolidated Copper Mines’, Copperbelt University (2001), p. 13. As part of the privatisation negotiations, the Zambian Government was forced to accept responsibility for the environmental liabilities that had accrued during previous decades of mining. This was reflected in the development agreements (DAs) that were signed between the state and investors.
8 J. Lungu, ‘Socio-Economic Change and Natural Resource Exploitation: A Case Study of the Zambian Copper Mining Industry’, Development Southern Africa 25, 5 (2008), p. 544. Investors were exempted from both environmental liabilities and penalties on condition that the level of emissions did not exceed previous emission levels under ZCCM.
The DAs also included a stability clause granting investors exemptions of between 15 and 20 years, during which the state could neither alter nor terminate the provisions of the agreements.
9 Cuthbert C. Makondo, Sydney Sichilima, Matthews Silondwa, Richard Sikazwe, Lombe Maiba et al., ‘Environmental Management Compliance, Law and Policy Regimes in Developing Countries: A Review of the Zambian Case’, International Journal of Environmental Protection and Policy 3, 4 (2015), p. 80. This adversely affected environmental management within the mining industry, given the extensive length of time granted to investors to operate with limited controls over pollution and the fact that the state and ZCCM-IH bore responsibility for severe environmental liabilities, which have not been fully addressed to date.
10 In 2002, the Zambian Government founded the Copperbelt Environment Project (CEP). The initial timeframe for the completion of the CEP was 2008. However, when the project finally ended in 2011, some of the environmental liabilities taken on by the government and ZCCM-IH remained unresolved and remain so to date. See, ZCCM-IH METS, ‘Copperbelt Environmental Project’; P. Sinkamba, ‘Technical and Financial Proposal for Sustainability of the Copperbelt Environment Project in Zambia’ (MPhil Dissertation, University of Stellenbosch, 2007). This means there are still significant environmental challenges for communities on the ‘old’ Copperbelt, where current concerns encompass both ongoing and historical environmental issues. This highlights that environmental management was not prioritised by the Zambian Government during privatisation. These challenges are examined in the following sections.
Social Services
On the ‘old’ Copperbelt, privatisation and the consequent loss of social service provisions also contributed to deterioration among mining communities. During privatisation, the former ZCCM-owned houses were sold off to their sitting tenants. The provision of community services was also removed from mine company responsibility. Instead, this was handed to local municipal councils and the regional commercial utility companies.
11 ZCCM-IH, METS, CEP, C’ounterpart Environmental Management Plan 1’ (2003), p. 2. The resultant services are inadequate and contribute to local grievances. For example, irregular or non-existent refuse collection and inadequate water and sanitation (see Figures 9.1 and 9.2) result from the financial and capacity difficulties faced by local municipal councils. Community services are often supplemented by occasional CSR projects funded by private mine companies, though mining companies tend to exaggerate the positive impact of CSR projects on neighbouring communities. Furthermore, there are often disparities between the CSR strategies of mining companies and the needs of targeted communities.
12 A. Hilson, G. Hilson and S. Dauda, ‘Corporate Social Responsibility at African Mines: Linking the Past to the Present’, Journal of Environmental Management 241 (2019), pp. 341–2. Indeed, few of the CSR initiatives currently employed by MCM within mining communities address environmental rehabilitation. Although the need for environmental rehabilitation is partly fuelled by the mismanagement of urban waste, CSR strategies mostly do not address environmental rehabilitation in communities because Zambian laws do not strictly stipulate that investors must do so.
~
Figures 9.1 & 9.2 Water point in Kankoyo. A water point provided to residents in Kankoyo by MCM. Sanitation around the community is a significant challenge. Photographs by the author.
Nevertheless, the efforts made by MCM do augment otherwise limited government efforts to improve the state of mining communities. For example, to address water and sanitation needs within Kankoyo and Butondo, the company provides several water points within the compounds. The number of such points is, however, insufficient to meet community needs. Furthermore, the commercial utility companies are unable to provide safe running water throughout the day. According to community members, locals therefore rely on the polluted river that runs through part of the mine and the community.
13 Interviews, anonymised, Mufulira, 2 November 2018. Regular water quality tests are conducted by MCM to prevent contamination of public water bodies.
14 Interview, Mopani Copper Mines Environmental Department employee, Mufulira, 8 November 2018. Despite these efforts, contamination of public water sources remains an ever-present concern for both the mining company and residents.
The challenges in service provision are partly created by the failure of the national government to enact effective legislation to safeguard mining communities, or to maintain adequate service provision to communities. In their defence, Copperbelt municipal councils argue that effective service provision has been hindered by limited support from national leaders. Municipal councils also argue that the mushrooming informal settlements on the Copperbelt have increased pressure on already limited resources. In this regard, politicians reportedly contribute to this problem by permitting the legalisation of informal settlements in order to register additional voters for elections, at the expense of quality service provision.
15 ZCCM-IH, METS, Volume 2.5, Mufulira Environmental Impact Assessment (2003), p. 56. With regards to the severe mining-induced challenges on the Copperbelt, however, officials from Mufulira’s Department of Government Planning suggest that, despite the shared social responsibility that mine companies have for these communities, it is difficult to hold them to account due to the provisions of the legally enforceable DAs.
16 Interview, anonymised, Mufulira, 13 November 2018. Subsidence
The state of community infrastructure, including the now privately owned houses, has deteriorated significantly since privatisation. In Mufulira, for example, the houses located closest to the mine plant in Kankoyo have developed enormous cracks that reportedly result from mining-related tremors, occurring over several decades (see Figures 9.3 and 9.4). The worst hit homes are mostly located within a section of Kankoyo locally referred to as
Kuma spesho, translated as ‘the special area’. During the colonial era when these houses were constructed, the section housed skilled labourers and their families.
17 Interview, anonymised, Mufulira, 13 November 2018. In some cases, houses located in
Kuma spesho have literally collapsed due to long-term exposure to mining-induced tremors.
~
Figures 9.3 Cracked houses in Mufulira. Photographs by the author.
~
Figure 9.4 Cracked houses in Mufulira. Photograph by the author.
Today, individual homeowners are legally responsible for house maintenance. However, many residents appear not to agree with this, believing that MCM is partly responsible for their condition and renovation, owing to ongoing mining activities.
18 Interviews, Kankoyo residents, November 2018. One Member of Parliament (MP) suggested that the Ministry of Mines and Minerals Development should be involved in maintaining former townships alongside local councils in order to bridge the gaps in service provision.
19 National Assembly of Zambia, Parliamentary Debates for the First Session of the Ninth Assembly, 8 February 2001. This, however, was never implemented and the local municipal councils remained solely responsible for the former mine townships.
The regulation of some historical challenges on the ‘old’ Copperbelt draws from national legislation that does not directly relate to environmental protection within the mining industry. For example, collapsed houses in one of Mufulira’s mining communities benefitted from the Disaster Management Act of 2010. The Act provides strategies for the management of disaster situations, as determined by the Office of the Vice President of Zambia, and the organisation of relief and recovery from disasters. Through the Act’s provisions, the Office of the Vice President provided tents to Kankoyo residents whose homes collapsed from extreme mine-induced cracking.
20 Interview, anonymised, Mufulira, 2 November 2018. Although many have stayed in the tents for longer than planned, this measure has at least prevented victims from becoming homeless.
Environmental Pollution
Another significant concern for mine communities on the ‘old’ Copperbelt is environmental pollution. Mining-induced contamination of air, water and soil has been a significant concern in the region since the colonial period. Locals believe the location of African housing close to mining facilities was deliberate. Long-term residents who previously worked in the mines suggest that senior employees were aware of the environmental hazard of mining activities, purposefully situating Africans closer to the mines and whites further away. Meteorological evidence suggests that Wusakile experienced higher rates of air pollution because of the dominant wind direction from the smelter that blew in a north-east to south-west direction.
21 ZCCM-IH, METS, ZCCM ‘Copperbelt Environmental Project’, Volume 2.5, Mufulira EIA, p. 4. Likewise, Copperbelt mining communities, such as Kankoyo and Butondo in Mufulira and Bwacha in Kitwe, have been shown to be located within high-risk zones for air pollution.
22 Ibid., p. 56. Based on this evidence, it is clear that airborne pollution has been affecting Mufulira and Kitwe residents for many decades.
The privatisation of the mining industry highlighted the severity of pollution due to the exemptions granted to foreign investors, chief among them the exemption from penalties for pollution that did not exceed those emitted under ZCCM mines. One of the most severe environmental concerns on the ‘old’ Copperbelt is air pollution through the emission of sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere. Historically, air pollution has been of concern in both Kitwe and Mufulira.
23 ZCCM-IH, METS, ‘Copperbelt Environment Project, Counterpart Environmental Management Plan’, p. 38. Air pollution is particularly prevalent in Mufulira, where sulphur dioxide fumes, which locals call
senta, have had a particularly significant effect. In 2007, Mufulira residents pleaded with MCM to end hazardous
senta emissions.
24 Mopani Copper Mines Plc., ‘Mufulira Mine, Environmental Project Brief for the Smelter Upgrade Project’ (2004). Local schoolchildren wrote letters to Glencore, requesting that the investor address the problem.
25 Facing Finance, ‘Glencore: Severe Health and Environmental Damages’, 29 November 2011, www.facing-finance.org/en/database/cases/severe-health-and-environmental-damages-mopani-copper-mines-plcschwere-gesundheits-und-umweltschaeden-mopani-copper-mines-plc (accessed 14 October 2020). This campaign resulted in the construction of a new smelter by Mopani Mine, in the same year, that reportedly captured 50% of the emissions from the smelting process. However, community concern peaked in 2009, when ECZ reported that sulphur dioxide emissions from the mine were up to 70 times in excess of those stipulated by the World Health Organization.
26 Rob Davies, ‘Glencore Court Ruling in Zambia May Trigger New Pollution Claims’, The Guardian, 18 September 2016.Owing to local complaints and trade union action, pollution claims were investigated by ZEMA and the mining company’s mining licence was briefly suspended in 2012, although no severe measures followed.
27 Misheck Wangwe and Gift Chanda, ‘MUZ Challenges Mopani to End Leaching Mine Pollution’, The Post, 9 March 2012; Facing Finance, ‘Glencore: Severe Health and Environmental Damages’. In 2014, MCM constructed a sulphuric acid plant, close to Kankoyo. The plant captures approximately 97% of the sulphur dioxide previously emitted.
28 Facing Finance, ‘Glencore: Severe Health and Environmental Damages’. Representatives from the mine’s Environmental Department report a tremendous decrease in the level of sulphur dioxide fumes emitted. However, residents do not share these perceptions and suggest that pollution has in fact worsened because, although they can no longer see the ‘acid fumes’, they only realise that
senta has been released into the atmosphere when they experience the stinging sensation in their eyes and choking effect that is associated with it.
29 Interviews, residents of Kankoyo and Butondo, Mufulira, 2018. Reports of respiratory complications, unconsciousness and death have continued despite the construction of the acid plant. Among the most severe cases since the plant was built are the suffocation of seven people in 2014, and the death of a prominent local politician in 2016.
30 Government of the Republic of Zambia, High Court of Zambia Civil Jurisdiction Between Geofrey Elliam Mithi and Mopani Copper Mines Plc., 9 June 2016. The latter case particularly raised public attention. The victim’s widower sued Mopani when the post-mortem report indicated that her death was linked to acute respiratory failure resulting from inhalation of toxic fumes. Despite MCM’s attempt to cite the environmental indemnity agreements covering its operations, the court dismissed this on the basis that the sulphur dioxide emissions had exceeded legal limits. The deceased’s widower received K400,000 (then worth about £30,000) in compensation.
31 Ibid.; Facing Finance, ‘Glencore: Severe Health and Environmental Damages’.The ‘Black Mountains’
Environmental grievances on the ‘old’ Copperbelt also concern the enormous copper slag heaps known locally as ‘black mountains’. Kankoyo and Wusakile are located alarmingly close to these slag dumps, creating additional concerns about pollution. The presence of the dumps has created opportunities for small and large-scale ‘miners’ to process the slag and extract the remaining copper. In recent years, conflicts have arisen regarding the ownership of these deposits, which were not sold to MCM during privatisation.
32 Kankoyo Community Meeting, 10 November 2018; ZCCM-IH METS, ‘Copperbelt Environment Project, Environmental Management Plans’ (2003). Local communities have sought access to the slag heaps, resulting in both legal and illegal occupation of these deposits.
33 Interview, anonymised, Kitwe, 15 October 2017.In recent years, contestations have focused on the Kitwe dump, which is 90% owned by the Nkana Alloy and Smelting Company. However, disputes prevail over ownership of the remaining 10%. In 2013, illegal mining began operating on the premises and in 2018 the contested 10% stake was eventually granted to local small-scale miners known as
Jerabos.
34 Lusaka Times, ‘Mining at Kitwe’s Black Mountain Resumes’, 6 October 2018. In the same year, however, part of the Kitwe black mountain collapsed, resulting in the death of ten people and injuries to eight more.
35 National Assembly of Zambia, Statement by the Minister of Mines and Minerals Development, 21 June 2018; Business Day, ‘Subsistence Miners Die after Black Mountain Mine Dump Collapses in Zambia’, 20 June 2018; Zambia Daily Mail, ‘Black Mountain Accident National Disaster’, 23 June 2018.An additional eight people were injured in the accident. The incident was caused when surface excavators collapsed, blocking the escape of miners who were working underground. The incident was one of the worst in the Zambian mining industry since the Mufulira mine disaster of 1971 and was declared a national disaster.
36 Ibid.. In addition to such a direct threat to the lives of miners, the black mountain has contributed to air, soil and noise pollution and the cracking of houses in nearby Wusakile due to blasting operations.
37 Interviews with residents of Wusakile, Kitwe, 2018. Despite the blatant safety risk posed, the site remains operational.
The situation at the Mufulira ‘black mountain’ is different, given that ‘mining’ has not commenced there. However, similar conflicts have arisen concerning its ownership. In 2018, residents from various communities in Mufulira, particularly those located closest to the slag dump, marched to the municipal council offices to seek to determine the dump’s ‘rightful’ beneficiaries. Two weeks later, Kankoyo residents held a community meeting at which they asserted their ownership of the dump.
38 Kankoyo Community Meeting, 10 November 2018. Although the government has yet to decide on this issue, the conflict demonstrates the complexity of community responses to environmental issues on the ‘old’ Copperbelt. It highlights how residents affected by proximity to mine hazards respond to the perceived injustice of ‘outsiders’ benefitting from potential resources within their communities. According to Kankoyo residents, the air and soil pollution they experience as a result of the presence of the slag dump gives them the right to exploit the resource, which should not be shared by others, not even with other residents of Mufulira.