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Draft National Waste Exemptions Regulations: A Pause Button, Not a Free Pass

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Overview

The Department of Forestry, Fisheries & the Environment has issued Draft National Waste Exemption Regulations, 2026 (draft National Waste Exemption Regulations) for public comment, formalising how exemption applications under Sections 74–77 of the National Environmental Management: Waste Act 59 of 2008 (NEMWA) will be lodged, assessed and decided.

Applicability—what Section 74 does (and does not) allow

Allows: written applications for exemption from the application of a provision of NEMWA (i.e. specific duties, norms/standards obligations, reporting/administrative requirements).

Does not allow: using exemptions to avoid waste management licensing, registration under applicable Norms & Standards, or public participation - these are expressly excluded.

Proposed process at a glance

Under the draft National Waste Exemption Regulations, an applicant must submit a complete exemption application, which includes providing:

  • a detailed motivation setting out the provision of the Act from which exemption is sought,
  • the reasons for the request,
  • baseline environmental information,
  • the proposed mitigation measures,
  • an alternatives assessment,
  • any supporting documents, and
  • disclosure of any past or current enforcement action related to the provision concerned.

It is worth noting that before lodging the application, the applicant must conduct a mandatory public participation process lasting at least 30 days and must include in its submission evidence of all comments received and responses provided.

Timelines:

  • Applicant submits full exemption application with proof of public participation.
  • Acknowledgement of receipt issued by the Minister/MEC within 14 calendar days of receiving a complete application.
  • Decision to grant/refuse the exemption within 60 calendar days of receipt of a complete application.
  • After Regulator has made a decision, they have 20 calendar days in which to notify and provide written reasons to the applicant.
  • Applicant must notify I&APs of the outcome and appeal rights within 20 calendar days of being notified of the decision.
  • Regulator may request additional information within 15 calendar days of receipt of the application for exemption.

Considerations for business:

The message for business is clear: exemptions buy time, not compliance. They come with a high disclosure burden and can expose operational weak spots. Treat them as a strategic tool to get your house in order, and not a way around regulatory obligations.

 

Contact the Author

For more information or to discuss a particular matter, please contact us.

Contact the Author

Author

  • Gillian Niven, Partner | Environmental, Johannesburg, +27 11 586 6079, [email protected]
Gillian Niven Gillian Niven Partner | Environmental Johannesburg +27 11 586 6079