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This document provides a very concise summary
of the issues involved. Supporting documentation can be provided
where necessary.
The Brenton Blue Butterfly (Orachrysops
niobe) occurs on a 2-hectare piece of land belonging to the
Brenton Development Company and two individual private land
owners. The total value of these stands is approximately R2
million.
Minister Jordan and Minister de Villiers before
him has asked the Government of the Western Cape to
‘seriously consider’ using Section 31A of the
Environment Act if necessary. Thus far this has not happened.
In October last year the Endangered Wildlife
Trust (EWT) and the Green Trust (TGT) joined the Brenton Blue
Campaign (BBC), an alliance of local conservationist. A
previously proposed land swop within Extension 1 (the currently
relevant development area)that would have resulted in the
butterfly stands being exchanged for Public Open Space, had been
rejected by the Brenton Transitional Local Council. As a result
the BBC was forced to release the hold on half of the stands
earmarked for the butterfly reserve to obtain a further
moratorium of sales until the end of November 1996. One of these
stands were subsequently sold.
The following activities and initiatives were
conducted between October and the present:
- Formation of the Brenton Blue
Trust:
The institutions represented in the
original BBC organised themselves in the Brenton Blue
Trust (BBT). The Trustees are: Cape Nature Conservation,
Brenton Transitional Local Council, the Wildlife &
Environment Society, Lepidopterists Society of
Africa and the EWT. Objective of the Trust is to save the
Brenton Blue from extinction and establish a butterfly
reserve at Brenton-on-Sea.
- Renegotiated agreement with the
Developer:
An agreement was reached with the
Developer that the BBT would design a solution to the
conflict of interests at Brenton-on-Sea that takes due
recognition of his interests. All the butterfly stands
were taken of the market and a final moratorium until the
end of April was negotiated. A similar agreement was also
reached with the owner of the one butterfly stand that
was sold before October last year.
- Development of a solution:
Efforts were made in cooperation with the
Developer and the Regional Services Council, to identify
parcels of government land that could be used for a land
swop. One such piece of land has already been identified
but may not be enough to cover the entire swop value
needed. The Department of Public Works has indicated that
they have at their disposal an entire register of state
land that could, following appropriate channels, be used
to identify further land. Fund raising efforts to
contribute to the total swop value raised are currently
continuing.
- Interdisciplinary research
conducted:
To resolve the different stand points that
were being taken with respect to the biology of the
butterfly an research team was pushed into the field over
December and January. Within that time and relying on
previous research that had been conducted they compiled a
comprehensive interdisciplinary assessment of the
situation and the current stand of knowledge on the
butterfly. Only a draft report is available at this time
and the recommendations arrived at may be expanded
pending further analysis of the scientific data.
- Legal research:
A preliminary assessment of the legal
situation has been done.
The relevant National and Provincial
Government Departments were informed in November last
year that the BBT would approach them early in 1997 with
the scientific information needed to make a decision and
a ‘package deal’ to resolve the conflict of
interest at Brenton-on-Sea. Due to a crisis situation on
the ground, this point has now been reached. The longer
Government intervention is delayed the more complex and
tenuous the situation becomes.
[Contents]
|[Summary]
|Introduction
|[Case for]
|[Current]
|[Case Against]
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