• Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • How to contact us
Sunday, April 26, 2026
No Result
View All Result
SACBC Justice And Peace
OUR NEWSLETTER
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Staff
    • Mission
    • How to contact us
  • Movements under pastoral accompaniment
    • Church witness in context of government corruption and state capture
    • Church walking with unemployed graduates challenging government policies on youth unemployment crisis
    • Church walking with rape survivors, and a movement tackling violent crime, alcohol abuse and moral renewal
    • Mission in context of scramble for Africa’s minerals and land
    • Church walking with apartheid-era human rights victims seeking reparation and the healing of the nation
  • Theology at the margins
  • Newsletter
  • News \ Articles
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Staff
    • Mission
    • How to contact us
  • Movements under pastoral accompaniment
    • Church witness in context of government corruption and state capture
    • Church walking with unemployed graduates challenging government policies on youth unemployment crisis
    • Church walking with rape survivors, and a movement tackling violent crime, alcohol abuse and moral renewal
    • Mission in context of scramble for Africa’s minerals and land
    • Church walking with apartheid-era human rights victims seeking reparation and the healing of the nation
  • Theology at the margins
  • Newsletter
  • News \ Articles
No Result
View All Result
SACBC Justice And Peace
No Result
View All Result
Home Climate Change and Green Economy: Church walking with victims of coal mining and climate activists

Coal mining companies have opposed the certification application

September 19, 2025
in Climate Change and Green Economy: Church walking with victims of coal mining and climate activists
Countries and mining companies that benefited from coal mining in South Africa should pay ecological debt
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

While thousands of former and current coal miners have joined a class action against companies regarding occupational lung diseases, spearheaded by the Catholic Church and Richard Spoor attorney, the companies have signalled they plan to oppose the certification application.

Richard Spoor Incorporated (RSI) said on Tuesday that its class action against coal companies had been bolstered by thousands of former and current mine workers joining its ranks, and it estimated that hundreds of thousands could eventually take part.

RSI spearheaded a historic R5-billion settlement on behalf of gold miners who contracted the incurable lung disease silicosis from inhaling silica dust.

Last year, RSI filed papers against South32 Group, BHP Billiton, Seriti Power, Exxaro Group, the Anglo American Group and Glencore, alleging they had not taken the necessary precautions to protect workers from coal mine dust lung diseases (CMDLD) such as pneumoconiosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

The companies have both former and current coal assets in South Africa.

“In our historic R5-billion settlement in the silicosis case, an estimated 15,000 to 500,000 gold miners were part of the class action. If the coal class action follows a similar trajectory, the number of affected workers could potentially be in the hundreds of thousands again,” RSI director George Kahn said in a statement.

A class action in South Africa follows a two-stage process. The first is an application to have the class certified by a court.

“At this point, all parties have filed notices of intention to oppose the certification application,” RSI said.

Daily Maverick’s request for confirmation or comment on this from three of the four companies in this time zone was not answered before publication. Glencore said it would not comment.

“The applicants’ responses to the respondents’ requests for documents were submitted on 26 February 2024, thereafter, the respondents are to serve their answering affidavits by 2 September 2024,” RSI said.

So, the court process will be a long and winding road. The silicosis settlement was reached about six years after the initial papers were filed.

Richard Spoor confirmed to Daily Maverick that the gold companies involved in the silicosis class action also initially filed notices of intention to oppose the certification application.

Like other sectors of the mining industry, coal has made strides in recent years on the health and safety front.

But the RSI class action goes back to March 1965 so, among other things, it seeks compensation for negligence from the apartheid era when profits meant more than black lives.

Meanwhile, some coal miners who joined the class action have died.

“RSI is aware that the mortality rate of mineworkers suffering from CMDLD is incredibly high; about 5% of these sick mine workers pass away annually. Since the launch of RSI’s application in August 2023, South32 class representative applicants Thomas Cindi and Dayina Daniel Mafuya have already passed away,” RSI said.

“Even before the launch, several prospective class representatives passed away, necessitating their widows to replace them as the new class representatives.

“RSI anticipates that additional class representatives may pass away before the end of the litigation or as a settlement is reached.”

This race against time raises the stakes in the saga at a time when the coal sector is increasingly being deprived of capital as banks stop providing finance for new projects because of the fossil fuel’s links to climate change.

Next Post
Church thanks legal firms at the heart of the reparation case against coal mining companies

Church thanks legal firms at the heart of the reparation case against coal mining companies

Connect with us

Recommended

Waste picker’s struggle to make ends meet during lockdown

Waste picker’s struggle to make ends meet during lockdown

8 months ago

Female cabinet ministers should be at the center of the battle against gender injustice

2 years ago

SACBC Justice and Peace Commission is an agency of the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference.
Its mission and role: “To proclaim the good news to the poor, to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free.” (Luke 4:18).

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • How to contact us

© 2025 SACBC Justice And Peace All Rights Reserved. Designed by Vasiliki Technologies.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Staff
    • Mission
  • Take Action
    • Church witness in context of government corruption and state capture
    • Church walking with apartheid-era human rights victims seeking reparation and the healing of the nation
    • Church walking with rape survivors, and a movement tackling violent crime, alcohol abuse and moral renewal
    • Mission in context of scramble for Africa’s minerals and land
    • Church walking with unemployed graduates challenging government policies on youth unemployment crisis
  • News \ Articles
  • Newsletter
  • How to contact us

© 2025 SACBC Justice And Peace All Rights Reserved. Designed by Vasiliki Technologies.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In