PUB2606
Assignment 2 Semester 1 2025
Unique #:806189
Due Date: April 2025
Detailed solutions, explanations, workings
and references.
+27 81 278 3372
, CHALLENGES AFFECTING ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT IN SOUTH
AFRICA: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF POLICY, PRACTICE, AND
IMPLEMENTATION GAPS
1 Introduction
Environmental management in South Africa is guided by section 24 of the
Constitution, which guarantees everyone the right to an environment that is not
harmful to health or well-being and obliges the state to prevent pollution, promote
conservation and secure sustainable development. Despite a sophisticated policy
and legal architecture, a range of intertwined challenges continues to undermine
the country‟s ability to meet this constitutional promise. This essay argues that
South Africa‟s environmental management difficulties stem primarily from
fragmented governance, limited capacity, complex legislation, mounting pollution
pressures, climate vulnerability, entrenched inequality, high-impact extractive
industries and data gaps. By examining each theme in turn and drawing on recent
empirical evidence, the discussion illustrates how these factors interact to impair
implementation and highlights practical examples that reveal both the scale of the
problem and avenues for reform.
2 Governance and Institutional Fragmentation
South Africa‟s “co-operative governance” model distributes environmental
competences across national, provincial and local spheres, but overlapping
mandates often impede coherent action. The Department of Forestry, Fisheries
and the Environment (DFFE) develops national policy, yet water quality rests with
the Department of Water and Sanitation, and mine rehabilitation sits with the
Department of Mineral Resources and Energy. Such dispersal has produced
regulatory “grey areas” where pollutants escape oversight, as illustrated by the
protracted acid-mine-drainage crisis on the Witwatersrand
(van der Linde & Vincent, 2021). Municipalities must implement national laws but
frequently lack fiscal resources, leading to uneven enforcement. Statistics South
Africa‟s 2023 Non-Financial Census of Municipalities found that fewer than half of
local authorities could fund routine environmental inspections, a gap that
undermines deterrence (Stats SA, 2023). Until clearer lines of accountability and
Varsity Cube 2025 +27 81 278 3372
Assignment 2 Semester 1 2025
Unique #:806189
Due Date: April 2025
Detailed solutions, explanations, workings
and references.
+27 81 278 3372
, CHALLENGES AFFECTING ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT IN SOUTH
AFRICA: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF POLICY, PRACTICE, AND
IMPLEMENTATION GAPS
1 Introduction
Environmental management in South Africa is guided by section 24 of the
Constitution, which guarantees everyone the right to an environment that is not
harmful to health or well-being and obliges the state to prevent pollution, promote
conservation and secure sustainable development. Despite a sophisticated policy
and legal architecture, a range of intertwined challenges continues to undermine
the country‟s ability to meet this constitutional promise. This essay argues that
South Africa‟s environmental management difficulties stem primarily from
fragmented governance, limited capacity, complex legislation, mounting pollution
pressures, climate vulnerability, entrenched inequality, high-impact extractive
industries and data gaps. By examining each theme in turn and drawing on recent
empirical evidence, the discussion illustrates how these factors interact to impair
implementation and highlights practical examples that reveal both the scale of the
problem and avenues for reform.
2 Governance and Institutional Fragmentation
South Africa‟s “co-operative governance” model distributes environmental
competences across national, provincial and local spheres, but overlapping
mandates often impede coherent action. The Department of Forestry, Fisheries
and the Environment (DFFE) develops national policy, yet water quality rests with
the Department of Water and Sanitation, and mine rehabilitation sits with the
Department of Mineral Resources and Energy. Such dispersal has produced
regulatory “grey areas” where pollutants escape oversight, as illustrated by the
protracted acid-mine-drainage crisis on the Witwatersrand
(van der Linde & Vincent, 2021). Municipalities must implement national laws but
frequently lack fiscal resources, leading to uneven enforcement. Statistics South
Africa‟s 2023 Non-Financial Census of Municipalities found that fewer than half of
local authorities could fund routine environmental inspections, a gap that
undermines deterrence (Stats SA, 2023). Until clearer lines of accountability and
Varsity Cube 2025 +27 81 278 3372