Department of water and sanitation confirms groundwater exceedances at Thirsti bottling plant in KZN
Environmental justice groups have questioned the legality of groundwater abstraction at bottled water producer Thirsti ‘s KwaZulu-Natal facility, alleging that the company has for years extracted water beyond the limits of its existing authorisation while awaiting the outcome of a water use licence application. The allegations, made by the Sisonke Environmental Justice Network (SEJN) and All Rise Attorneys for Climate and Environmental Justice , centre on Thirsti’s bottling o
Environmental justice groups have questioned the legality of groundwater abstraction at bottled water producer Thirsti ‘s KwaZulu-Natal facility, alleging that the company has for years extracted water beyond the limits of its existing authorisation while awaiting the outcome of a water use licence application. The allegations, made by the Sisonke Environmental Justice Network (SEJN) and All Rise Attorneys for Climate and Environmental Justice , centre on Thirsti’s bottling operation in Normandien near Newcastle and have prompted calls for the department of water and sanitation (DWS) to investigate. All Rise and the SEJN argued that Thirsti’s existing general authorisation permits abstraction of only 36 000 cubic metres of groundwater a year from a single borehole. “It does not cover any of the other seven boreholes or the total abstraction volume of 281 371 m³ per year,” they said. The groups allege only about 13% of current use falls within the authorisation, with the remainder unlawful. They further claim the authorisation excludes boreholes within 500m of a wetland and that Thirsti’s own reports show all eight boreholes fall within that buffer zone. They also allege wastewater is discharged within 500m of a wetland and into a river without authorisation. “When confronted with these facts, Thirsti’s consultants GCS have failed to provide answers.” The dispute centres on a water use licence application through which Thirsti is seeking authorisation to abstract 281 371 cubic metres of groundwater annually from eight boreholes. In a joint statement, Thirsti’s board confirmed Normandien Farms Group owns the brand, which operates at Buffelshoek farm in KwaZulu-Natal’s Northern Drakensberg Strategic Water Source Area. Asked about the alleged 36 000 m³ limit versus the current abstraction and licence application volumes, Thirsti declined to address the claim directly, saying: “Thirsti is not in a position to respond to the specific allegations raised, as the matters in question fall squarely within the scope of the Water Use Licence Application currently before the Department of Water and Sanitation.” It added that the process “exists precisely to assess the lawful basis and sustainability of the facility’s water use” and should not be pre-empted. All Rise and SEJN also said the department, as the regulator, has taken no effective enforcement action despite alleged long-term over-abstraction. However, DWS spokesperson Wisane Mavasa confirmed the department became aware of the “exceedance of groundwater abstraction volumes” during a compliance inspection on 24 November 2020. She said the department’s compliance monitoring and enforcement unit first inspected the site in 2016, after receiving a referral complaint from the department of economic development, tourism and environmental affairs’ Amajuba district office. The facility’s operations were “confirmed to be lawfully operating under the General Authorisation,” though an audit of the authorisation was recommended. A compliance inspection/ audit was further conducted by the unit on 24 November 2020, against a general authorisation confirmed to the facility on 17 June 2015. “The compliance inspection revealed findings of non-compliance with conditions of the General Authorisation,” Mavasa said. “Upon assessing the information provided by the company on annual abstraction volumes for the year May 2019–May 2020, it was found that the volumes exceeded the authorised volume of 36 000 m³ limit and was abstracted from six boreholes, whereas the general authorisation only authorised one borehole. “The facility also failed to measure volumes of groundwater taken since the issuance of the general authorisation and conditions confirmation on 17 June 2015 and only installed the flow meters and started recording in May 2019 and every month thereafter for the period of until April 2020.” Mavasa said the non-compliances were discussed with the facility during the audit opening and closing meetings and “the company was directed to provide an action plan detailing rectification of non-compliances, however no action plan was submitted since”. She said the 2015 authorisation applied only to the original single-borehole application and any expansion required further approval under the National Water Act (NWA). An integrated licence application submitted in 2021 was later withdrawn in 2023. On enforcement, Mavasa said the licensing process assesses “current and proposed water uses, operational requirements, potential impacts and applicable legislative considerations,” but added that where non-compliance is found, DWS will act, including ordering reduced abstraction and pursuing financial recovery for unlawful use. “The compliance and enforcement process is separate to the licence application process,” she said. Thirsti said it has operated under a general authorisation since 2015 an
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