Lake St Lucia Estuary Mouth Intervention

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Lake St Lucia Estuary Mouth Intervention

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Monday the 4th of January 2021 marked the day the recommendations of the St Lucia Estuarine Functional Zone Task Team saw the light of day, when equipment was moved on site to begin the implementation of a short-term solution to help reinstate functionality of the estuary, and reestablish links with the ocean.

Lake St Lucia is one of the largest estuarine systems in Southern Africa. It falls within the iSimangaliso Wetland Park, which is South Africa’s first World Heritage site (recognised by UNESCO in 1999). In the recent years, the estuarine system has not been able to function naturally.

The following principles were thus adopted at the St Lucia Symposium, as key steps that should be addressed to restore function to the system:

1. the need for reconnection between the marine system and the lake;
2. the reduction of sediment load in the bay;
3. the need for restoration of estuarine functionality;
4. the need to resolve back-flooding into agricultural fields which currently is resulting in agricultural loss;
5. the restoration of economic activity, including tourist attractions;
6. the importance of managing the floodplain and prevention of silt transportation to the estuary;
7. consideration of future plans to maintain the functionality of the estuary.

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The consultative process led by the new management of the iSimangaliso Authority has been ongoing, with the involvement of various stakeholders. This extensive consultation culminated in a symposium held from 13 - 15 October 2020, which included scientific experts in various fields, business operators, community members and community leadership, traditional leadership, small scale fishers, private and associate/ affiliated farmers, NGOs & NPOs, provincial and national departments, as well as key government parastatals.

At this symposium, a presentation was made of actions that have been taken over the past few years, linked to the Global Environment Fund (GEF) project. It was noted that while the restoration of the St Lucia Estuary/uMfolozi catchment connectivity has the potential for positive long-term benefits, short-term challenges for stakeholders remain, and ongoing interventions and monitoring may be needed to maximise positive outcomes.

A key resolution of the symposium was to establish an inclusive multi-disciplinary task team to take forward the resolutions suggested by the attendees of the symposium. The task team should deal with the challenges currently being experienced by these multiple stakeholders. At its first meeting in November 2020, the task team discussed and considered necessary interventions, and their phased implementation. It was recognised that there are short term, mid-term and long-term solutions to be considered to restore the optimal ecological functioning of the system. Key short-term interventions were deliberated at this first meeting and four technical teams were appointed to investigate and report-back on the following focus areas: scientific, legal, finances and logistics, and communications.

It was also agreed that the collection of ongoing survey and monitoring data would be important going forward to ensure a proactive approach to management of the system, and that longer term interventions would be discussed by the task team at future meetings.

The second task team meeting held on the 15th of December 2020, confirmed the need to urgently focus on a short-term solution to assist the system to function in its natural state as an estuarine functional zone. A unanimous resolution was taken by the task team to recommend to the iSimangaliso Wetland Park Authority that urgent action be taken prepare the area to attempt to achieve a reconnection between the sea and the St Lucia lake, and Umfolozi and Umsunduzi rivers. A detailed and time-bound action plan was developed to achieve these interventions, to unlock the functioning of the estuarine functional zone time-bound action plan.

The action being taken today is the beginning of the implementation of the time-bound action plan recommended by the task team, with the intention of restoring the ecological functioning of this unique and dynamic system. The iSimangaliso Authority remains committed to consultation and engagement on this complex issue with any stakeholders and parties accordingly.

For more information on the iSimangaliso Wetland Park, visit our website at isimangaliso.com. Media enquiries should be directed to Bheki Manzini at bhekimanzini@isimangaliso.com.

Newsflash No.: 2021.01.05


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Re: Lake St Lucia Estuary Mouth Intervention

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OUR BURNING PLANET

Oom Rudi and the bulldozers: Huge blow to restoration as SA’s largest estuarine lake mouth is smashed open

By Tony Carnie• 7 January 2021

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Heavy earthmoving equipment and trucks were moved onto the beach at Lake St Lucia this week to carve an artificial link to the sea (Photo: iSimangaliso Wetland Park Authority)

The mouth of South Africa’s largest estuarine lake has been bulldozed open with heavy earth-moving equipment – in apparent open disregard of a high court ruling and the scientific advice of several of the country’s most experienced estuarine experts.

Ecological experts fear the artificial breaching of the Lake St Lucia estuary mouth on Wednesday afternoon poses a major setback for a multimillion ecological restoration project financed by the World Bank to reverse decades of human interference in the natural functioning of the heartland of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park, a World Heritage Site.

Four years ago, the Isimangaliso Wetland Park Authority and then Environmental Affairs Minister Edna Molewa won a landmark victory in the high court against local sugar farmers who had demanded that the lake be breached to protect some of their fields from back-flooding as a more natural water flow was restored to the lake. The court victory – later affirmed by the Supreme Court of Appeal – opened the way to reconnect the uMfolozi River to Lake St Lucia, which has been increasingly starved of water due to nearly 50 years of human interference.

But the park authority, now under new management, appears to have buckled under pressure from local fishermen, sugar farmers and tour operators in St Lucia village who have been pushing the government and the park authority for a quick-fix solution by bulldozing the mouth. Proponents argue that an artificial breach would allow seawater to re-enter the lake from the Indian Ocean, thereby increasing the number of saltwater species for recreational anglers, reducing muddy sediments that have built up around the estuary, and reducing the risk of sugar farms being flooded in the uMfolozi River floodplain.

The authority has been sending out mixed messages recently – denying that it had sanctioned a breach while indicating that it would be guided by expert advice on what to do.

And when earthmoving equipment arrived on the beach on Monday, attempts were made to allay concerns by ecologists by suggesting that the equipment was simply there to scrape away a bit of beach sand and to “nudge the system” into opening naturally.

The authority confirmed on Tuesday that “equipment was moved on-site to begin the implementation of a short-term solution to help reinstate functionality of the estuary, and re-establish links with the ocean” – but it did not explicitly state that it planned to bulldoze the mouth open.

Simultaneously, local lodge owner and St Lucia village marketing representative Amanda Theron de Gaspary posted a sound clip on social media declaring that: “Okay, they are not opening the mouth 100%… They are just giving it a ‘little nudge’ to use Oom Rudi’s words… So they are not digging a trench all the way to the ocean… They are not going to open it and let the estuary run empty… You can speak to Oom Rudi.”

Yet by lunchtime on Wednesday the earthmovers did just that – ploughed a trench directly into the sea, breaching the mouth – and “Oom Rudi” (resident and ratepayers representative Rudi Redinger) flatly refused to speak when Daily Maverick contacted him to clarify why the mouth had been bulldozed open.

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Heavy earthmoving equipment and trucks were moved onto the beach at Lake St Lucia this week to carve an artificial link to the sea (Photo: Supplied)

“We are not prepared to make any comment. We are not playing games,” said Redinger, who recently made a presentation to the park authority in which he suggested that the mouth be breached because the solutions proposed by scientists were not “realistic”.

Redinger has also been at the forefront of recent campaigns by St Lucia village residents to be granted greater autonomy, by “seceding” from the neighbouring Mtubatuba Municipality. Some residents of the former fishing resort were reported to have proposed a new flag for the town and also put up a boom-gate barrier at the village entrance to control access a few years ago before it was removed after opposition from neighbouring communities.

The wetland authority did not respond to email queries on Wednesday about suggestions that it had acted surreptitiously or dishonestly by giving the impression that it simply wanted to “reinstate functionality of the estuary” with the assistance of bulldozers, when in fact its intention from the outset was to break open the mouth – contrary to the advice of ecological experts.

Professor Derek Stretch, a senior scientist and expert witness who gave evidence in the high court strongly opposing artificial breaching, said he was not clear about who had recommended the action – though it was clear that local farmers and several St Lucia tourism operators and bed-and-breakfast owners had become impatient and were pushing for the mouth to be breached.

Stretch is an emeritus professor at the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) who holds a PhD in environmental fluid mechanics from Cambridge University and was formerly director of the UKZN Centre for Research in Environmental, Coastal and Hydrological Engineering.

He was also among a group of several estuarine experts who recommended that 50 years of artificial manipulation of the mouth should be halted.

“I sincerely hope that they don’t persist with this [new] strategy to interfere with natural processes,” said Stretch, adding that he had withdrawn from a recent symposium held by the iSimangaliso authority as he did not wish to be involved in processes where scientific advice was seemingly “trashed”.

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The mouth of the Lake St Lucia estuary was bulldozed open yesterday afternoon, undermining previous multi-million rand efforts to restore the lake’s natural ecological processes. (Photo: Dr Ricky Taylor presentation)

“Unfortunately, we are now almost back at square one.”

Senior estuarine scientist Nicky Forbes, who was closely involved in a R72-million project to restore the lake’s natural ecological functioning, said it appeared that the new management team at iSimangaliso were anxious to “get pressure off their backs”.

By bowing to pressure for a short-term solution the authority was disregarding advice from science experts and the breaching meant that scarce freshwater inflows over the past four years would now start draining out of the lake.

“This is totally unacceptable… when winter comes the lake will start drying out again and a whole lot of dominoes will start to drop. I would like to know who really made this decision… There also seem to be no data about current sediment or water levels in the lake.”

Bryan Ashe of the iSimangaliso Action Group has sent questions to the park authority about whether an environmental impact assessment was done before the breaching decision was taken.

He has also asked who paid for the breaching and the name of the company that conducted the operation and whether Barbara Creecy, the new minister of environmental affairs, forestry and fisheries, was consulted.

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Heavy earthmoving equipment and trucks were moved onto the beach at Lake St Lucia this week to carve an artificial link to the sea (Photo: iSimangaliso Wetland Park Authority)

Creecy’s office, her department and the iSimangaliso authority did not respond to queries from Daily Maverick, although the authority issued a statement on Tuesday in which it said there was a need to reconnect the sea to the lake and to reduce sediment levels in the lake.

There was also a need to restore “estuarine functionality”, resolve back-flooding into agricultural fields and restore economic activity, including tourist attractions.

At a recent iSimangaliso symposium it was noted that while the restoration of the St Lucia Estuary/uMfolozi catchment connectivity “has the potential for positive long-term benefits”, short-term challenges for stakeholders remained and “ongoing interventions and monitoring may be needed to maximise positive outcomes”.

“A key resolution of the symposium was to establish an inclusive multidisciplinary task team to take forward the resolutions suggested by the attendees of the symposium… A unanimous resolution was taken by the task team to recommend to the iSimangaliso Wetland Park Authority that urgent action be taken to prepare the area to attempt to achieve a reconnection between the sea and the St Lucia lake, and uMfolozi and Msunduzi rivers.” DM


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Re: Lake St Lucia Estuary Mouth Intervention

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The war between economical interests and the safeguard/protection of Nature will never end O/


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Re: Lake St Lucia Estuary Mouth Intervention

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Official Newsflash No.: 2021.01.08

Lake St Lucia mouth connects with the sea again

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The St Lucia Lake has successfully connected with the sea after almost a decade. This comes after the multi-disciplinary and multi-sectoral Task Team recommended to iSimangaliso Wetland Park Authority that the system needs nudging to support natural processes, as part of addressing the ongoing ecological and socio-economic challenges currently being experienced by various sectors. The Task Team represents a wide range of stakeholders, including key scientific experts, tourism operators, conservation managers, NGOs, rural community representatives, fishers, farmers, and business owners.

“Nudging“ of the system has been defined by the Task Team as the immediate short-term solution to mark the beginning of the implementation of an action plan, which seeks to implement short-, medium-, and long-term solutions to the St Lucia estuary problem, which has been ongoing for decades. “Scientific information is used by the Task Team as the foundation for decision-making, based on ecological considerations and the conservation of the biodiversity of the system, but social and economic information also play a critical role” said the Chair of the Task Team, Dr Jean Harris, commenting on the approach of the Task Team. A Scientific Technical Team, comprised of scientists with experience and expert knowledge of the system, took part and provided advice to the integrated Task Team, which also considered the legal and practical aspects of finding a short-term solution.

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Mr Rudi Redinger, member of the St Lucia Rate Payers Association (left) and Mr Petros Mlaba, of Sokhulu farmers (right)

“We have been waiting for this for so many years, and we wish to thank the management of iSimangaliso Wetland Park Authority for adopting an all-inclusive and adaptive management approach, which has culminated in this successful day”, said Mr Rudi Redinger, member of the St Lucia Rate Payers Association.

Upon visiting the site, and witnessing the flow of water from the lake to the sea, Mr Petros Mlaba (of Sokhulu farmers) commented with a sigh of relief, “this is a dream come true for the Sokhulu community which I represent. For so many years we have been crying and fighting - this means that the livelihoods of the community will improve because we live out of subsistence farming. Our relationship with iSimangaliso has been restored.” Echoing the sentiment of communities, Mr Sibusiso Bukhosini, Chief Executive Officer, expressed his heartfelt appreciation for the collaboration enjoyed from communities of Sokhulu and other stakeholders during the difficult time of finding an all-inclusive management intervention to the system. “I am happy that through working together, all sectors found the common ground in the approach utilised,” he added.

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Task Team Symposium

Having achieved the first target of the Action Plan, the Task Team will be meeting later this month again to focus on medium, and longer-term solutions to the challenges experienced. The challenges are largely due to historical human-induced modifications to the river and lake systems and their catchments, which are being exacerbated by global crises such as climate change. The iSimangaliso Authority plans to embark on ongoing engagement for co-operative decision-making, informed by science, to support, update and implement an adaptive Estuary Management Plan.

For more information on the iSimangaliso Wetland Park, visit our website at isimangaliso.com. Media enquiries should be directed to Bheki Manzini at bhekimanzini@isimangaliso.com.


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Re: Lake St Lucia Estuary Mouth Intervention

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They are all a bit short of masks O**


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Re: Lake St Lucia Estuary Mouth Intervention

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But still good news! \O


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Re: Lake St Lucia Estuary Mouth Intervention

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I don't know! Not reading the article above :-?


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Re: Lake St Lucia Estuary Mouth Intervention

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OUR BURNING PLANET

Top water scientists fuming after ‘God’s yellow machines’ smash open Lake St Lucia mouth

By Tony Carnie• 14 January 2021

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Local residents and contractors keep a close eye on the progress of the ‘skimming’ operation at the Lake St Lucia mouth (Photo: Supplied)

An estimated R747-million was reported to have been spent on a bold plan to restore the natural ecology of one of South Africa’s first World Heritage sites after 60 years of continuous human interference. Now a group of top water and ecology scientists have asked environment minister Barbara Creecy to explain who authorised the sudden policy flip-flop on artificially breaching the Lake St Lucia mouth.

There was a palpable sense of euphoria among many residents of the far northern KwaZulu-Natal village of St Lucia as they watched millions of litres of fresh water pouring out of South Africa’s biggest estuarine lake earlier this month, followed by a major influx of salt water from the Indian Ocean.

Social media platforms were abuzz with “thumbs up” and “awesome” emoticons as locals, anglers and tourism operations congratulated the iSimangaliso Wetland Park Authority and civic leaders for finally removing a berm of sand which had blocked the lake mouth for several years.

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Some tour operators said they were worried that boat-based hippo and crocodile watching tours were under threat unless the mouth was breached to reduce muddy water sediments and reed growth after a prolonged period of mouth closure. (Photo: Tony Carnie)

Now that the mouth was breached, the sea would bring “life” and plentiful stocks of sea fish back into the lake. Some said the next step was to bring back dredgers to keep the mouth open forever – and why not also lift the ban on 4×4 vehicles so that anglers could drive down to their favourite fishing spots, just like they used to do in the good old days.

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The good old days, a post by Andrew Joubert. (Photo: Facebook / Andrew Joubert)

There were also dark mutterings on several St Lucia Facebook groups about the “slim mense”, “kwerekweres”, “mafikizolos” (newcomers) and other assorted “idioots”, killjoys and outsiders who did not share this euphoria and dared to question the wisdom of breaking open the mouth to “restore nature”.

(One resident kindly offered to reward this writer with “a hard bliksem” for writing an article voicing criticism on the artificial mouth breaching.)

But now that the mouth is open and the volume of cheering has dimmed somewhat, seven top water and estuarine scientists have written an open letter to Barbara Creecy, the national Minister of Environment, Forestry and Fisheries, asking some tough questions.

The letter – which will also be sent to the United Nations’ World Heritage Committee, The World Bank, Global Environment Facility (GEF) and other interest groups – questions how the park authority came to its decision to authorise mechanical breaching. Was it legal?

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Hippo on the move in search of water during previous droughts that dried up large sections of the lake (Photo: Tony Carnie)

Was the park authority still committed to scientific, evidence-based management decisions, or had it now chosen to ditch management strategies based on the expert advice of scores of scientists and partly implemented at a cost of several hundred million rands?

The seven scientists – Prof Anthony “Ticky” Forbes, Nicolette Forbes, Prof Derek Stretch, Dr Barry Clark, Dr Jane Turpie, Eddie Bosman and Prof Gerrit Basson – said iSimangaliso “seems to have abandoned its own management strategy and ignored the scientific evidence on which this strategy is based”.

“In addition to committing significant time and effort to the GEF project and outcomes between 2010-2017, the iSimangaliso Park Authority also made a significant financial contribution, initially committing US$12.7-million and then being able to leverage extra funds to extend this to a contributed total of US$49-million to the restoration initiative.”

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Park authorities claim they simply wished to ‘skim’ a sand berm at the estuary mouth to give nature a helping hand – but several images and video clips show that a deep straight-line channel was dug almost to the waterline of the sea. (Photo: Supplied)

The seven researchers said: “The actions taken on 6 January are directly contrary to the outcomes envisaged by this substantial commitment and we hope that the current pathway can be halted and the restoration of this estuary brought back to a scientifically robust and data-driven process.

“As scientists and as citizens, we respectfully request that you, as the minister, source and provide an explanation regarding this deviation from scientific, evidence-based management decisions.”

They said the latest events also flew directly against recommendations made to the then department of water affairs in 2016 that “Lake St Lucia estuary mouth should not be breached artificially except in emergency or when exceptional circumstances prevail”.

“We know of no information nor circumstances preceding this breaching event that could constitute an ‘emergency’ or ‘exceptional’ circumstances.”

In their letter to Creecy, the scientists explain the rationale for new strategies to reverse a 60-year-old policy of regular human intervention which starved the lake of more than 60% of the water that originally flowed into it.

These interventions included diverting the mouth of the Umfolozi River away from St Lucia to prevent back-flooding of commercial sugar crops planted in this river’s floodplain and to reduce the volume of river sediments entering the St Lucia mouth area.

Science and hydrology experts who met at St Lucia in 2010 said it had become clear that this was contributing significantly to the gradual drying out of the lake over time. In a comprehensive report to the Water Research Commission, they said the time for action to restore natural processes was long overdue.

Creecy has not yet responded to the letter or to questions from Daily Maverick, although iSimangaliso issued a media statement shortly after the breaching, stating that the lake and sea had been “successfully connected” after a “multi-disciplinary and multi-sectoral task team” recommended that the system needed “nudging” to support natural processes.

It said “nudging“ had been defined by the task team as “an immediate short-term solution to mark the beginning of the implementation of an action plan, which seeks to implement short-, medium- and long-term solutions to the St Lucia estuary problem, which has been ongoing for decades.”

Quoting WildOceans marine ecologist Dr Jean Harris, the park statement said: “Scientific information is used by the task team as the foundation for decision-making, based on ecological considerations and the conservation of the biodiversity of the system, but social and economic information also plays a critical role.”

The authority attributed this statement to Harris and named her as chair of the task team – but Harris told Daily Maverick this was not correct.

“No. I facilitated it (the symposium initiated at St Lucia in October). I did not chair it.”

Harris said a series of meetings and workshops were initiated by the park authority and Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife management agency who wanted to have a consultative process to respond to issues raised by several stakeholders and to discuss whether any interventions were required to resolve a “difficult and complex issue”.

The discussion had included scientists, although “some decided not to attend”.

Nicolette Forbes, who was invited to the symposium, told Daily Maverick that she was reluctant to take part in a “tainted, rubber-stamping process”, while Dr Derek Stretch has indicated that he attended part of the symposium but decided to withdraw as he feared scientific inputs were being disregarded.

Harris said the task team appointed after the symposium met twice and at the second meeting a decision was taken to reconnect the sea and lake “not by breaking through to the sea”, but by “skimming” the mouth berm to 1.6m above the high-water mark of the sea.

“It (breaching) was not being induced. The intention was just to skim it to 1.6m and nothing more.”

It was felt that in a normal situation, reducing the height to this level would result in a “natural breach” at some point, but it appeared that the sand and mud in the berm was very tightly compacted.

“The intention was to flatten the height of the sand berm… whether it ended up slightly differently, that was the plan.”

This “skimming” narrative was repeated by senior iSimangaliso official Sizo Sibiya in an eNCA interview shortly before the diggers broke through to the ocean.

However, numerous video clips posted on social media strongly suggest that the contractor carved a straight-line channel directly to the sea shore and did not stop digging until lake water emptied into the ocean.

In a Facebook post about the breaching, a local observer, who gave his name as Bjorn Hoffman, commented: “Personally I feel that the mouth was opened by people who know ADTs, TLBs (backhoe machinery), excavators and tractors, with little to no environmental background.

“It’s like they got gatvol and after a few dops just decided ‘today is the day’.”

Hoffman hoped the mouth area could be dredged to keep it open, but cautioned: “We need to pray we do not lose too much fresh water in the system, or else someone will be sitting red-faced, not just from his dop, but from shame that his actions led to a disaster and set the system back years in terms of getting back what we all want… a fully functioning and mostly self-sustainable estuary.”

Earlier this month, St Lucia Ratepayers Association spokesman Rudi Redinger flatly refused to discuss the breaching issue. However, a transcription of comments recorded on video at the recent symposium suggests that Redinger was one of the most ardent advocates for the mouth to be opened immediately.

He told the symposium that urgent interventions were needed as there had been extensive human interference in the Lake St Lucia catchment over many decades.

“It cannot be left 100% to nature,” he said, suggesting that preliminary work be done to skim the beach to a level that “makes it easy to help the lake when it’s needed”.

“It’s not beyond us humans. God has put us here to manage his system and we must help him… Our (symposium working) group says we want yellow machines on the beach… it has to happen. The sooner the better.”

His message was echoed by Elephant Lake Hotel manager Deon Steyn, who said boat-based hippo and crocodile tours in the popular Narrows area were in danger of collapsing because of the volume of mud and sand in this section of the lake.

Steyn said his working group felt the scientific models presented at the symposium were “outdated and don’t match the reality on the ground”, adding that they also wanted the “yellow machines” to get going.

iSimangaliso has yet to reveal the cost of the operation; the name of the contractor hired to “skim” the beachfront berm or what measures were taken to supervise the process.

In response to questions, the authority said a decision was taken to “assist the lake” to re-establish a link to the sea and this decision was “in line with the St Lucia Estuarine Management Plan through the above-mentioned multi-disciplinary approach”. DM


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Re: Lake St Lucia Estuary Mouth Intervention

Post by Richprins »

What drama! 0:

Sort of like the culling debate... O-/

River and sea systems are much different from 20 years ago. It will probably silt up continuously anyway with all the erosion? -O-

So maybe artificial intervention is inevitable.


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Re: Lake St Lucia Estuary Mouth Intervention

Post by Lisbeth »

I have no idea! 0:


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