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Cyber king in race to save Cape Town mountain peak from inferno

‘Wildfire time bomb’ turned into wilderness experience for underprivileged kids

Mimecast co-founder Peter Bauer.
Mimecast co-founder Peter Bauer. (Mimecast)

A South Africa-born cybersecurity billionaire has emerged as the “angel investor” who purchased a “condemned” Cape Town mountain peak to create a campsite haven for underprivileged children.     

Peter Bauer co-founded Mimecast, the global cloud-based e-mail security company, in 2003. But since 2017 he has been providing educational shelter via a charitable foundation which has a new horizon — a wildlife education programme on a mountainside once considered a wildfire time bomb in Cape Town.

Bauer and his family have so far spent about R6m to have thick alien vegetation cleared from Glencairn ridge, sandwiched between the suburbs of Simon’s Town and Glencairn — a 90ha mountaintop plot some had dubbed “matchbox mountain”, fearing it may ignite. The vegetation has now all been cut and awaits clearing, a process requiring controlled burns.

The last time the ridge was extensively burnt, during the 2000 fires, some Glencairn homes were destroyed.

Environmental stakeholders have praised Bauer and his team for their pioneering effort.

A drone picture showing a controlled burn of a portion of the property owned by Peter Bauer.
A drone picture showing a controlled burn of a portion of the property owned by Peter Bauer. (Rob Erasmus/ Enviro Wildfire Services (EWS) )

“He deserves a medal,” said Philip Prins, former Table Mountain National Park fire manager who now leads the Cape Peninsula Fire Protection Association, which was contracted to manage Bauer’s clearing project. “We came on board in May 2022 and gave them a plan in terms of what we can do,” said Prins.

The project comes as a relief for local residents and authorities who viewed the property as a liability. For years it was owned by a foreign absentee owner who ignored legal directives to keep it clear of alien vegetation. It ran up an unpaid rates bill, was expropriated and sold at a public auction.

Bauer instructed his Cape Town business associate to put in a bid. He was the only bidder. “We didn’t know what we were getting ourselves into,” said Dave Froneman, director of the Cape Kids Foundation. “It was a little like the dog that caught the speeding car. We had to pay the [outstanding] rates and taxes — it was a bit of a wrangle.

“We thought this is a great place for us to take our kids, something we could develop to suit our purposes. Because one of the main things we want our kids to learn is that we need to be ecologically responsible. We need to take our environment seriously and we want our kids to learn that,” said Froneman.

The cost of clearing the land, according to sources familiar with the property, was the chief reason it was not incorporated into the Table Mountain National Park despite containing a 12ha patch of pristine fynbos. Froneman said Bauer’s intention was to keep it in a pristine state for the benefit of those being assisted by the foundation. Proposals included a campsite to facilitate a wilderness experience.

A drone image showing how the wood stacks were cleared by the controlled burn. The adjoining alien-infested land is government-owned.
A drone image showing how the wood stacks were cleared by the controlled burn. The adjoining alien-infested land is government-owned. (Rob Erasmus/Enviro Wildfire Services (EWS) )

The project still faces challenges, notably the threat of fire spreading from an adjoining department of public works property infested with alien vegetation. A fire that started on public works land near Glen Marine last week jumped onto the Bauer property, igniting some wood stacks. Four helicopters were called in to contain the blaze.

Froneman tried unsuccessfully to lease the adjoining land to clear that too.

The Bauer property escaped a huge December wildfire that raged on either side of Glencairn ridge, destroying a swathe of mountainside above Simon’s Town and Noordhoek. Prins said it was a race against time to clear the wood piles.

Simon Liell-Cock, ward councillor for Simon’s Town, commended Froneman and his team for clearing the land. “As far as I’m concerned, it’s first prize ... they have cleared the property. They have done an incredible job, under very difficult circumstances.”

Felicity Purchase, a fellow councillor and Glencairn resident, said the area was already more fire-safe despite the wood stacks. “At least there are now firebreaks around the stacks.”

Glencairn residents have since 2022 speculated about the identity of the property owner, with Bauer preferring to stay under the radar despite his high profile at Mimecast. Froneman said he “preferred to get on with things” and was not looking for the limelight, or credit for his outreach work. The Cape Kids Foundation employs 25 people and intends expanding into early childhood development.

Bauer’s profile on the Mimecast website says he was born and raised in South Africa, where he trained as a Microsoft systems engineer. “He moved to the UK where Mimecast was founded and then moved once more, to Boston, Massachusetts, in 2011.”

The Bauer alien clearing project remains a popular talking point, particularly in Glencairn Heights across the valley, where for several months residents have watched work teams with chainsaws reclaim the mountainside. “It just shows what can be done if you put your mind to it,” said Liell-Cock.