Another
example of the erosion of democracy
---SMR
This
is the thin edge of the Wedge and if it is railroaded through we can
expect the Dam to Burst.
"TTR
has applied for a marine license to mine a 65sqkm are of the seabed
for black sand (ironsands), off the coast of South Taranaki. It is
the first such application for offshore black sand mining and, if
approved, is likely to create a precedent for other companies who
have permits right up the North Island’s West Coast from Taranaki
to Cape Reinga."
These
mining ships literally Vacuum up the seabed, killing and disturbing
the entire ecology, Spray the sand onto huge Magnet arrays which
remove the Iron and other components then dump the disturbed mess
back into our pristine oceans wili-nili. They say that they deposit
the Sand where it comes from but who can prove that and at the very
least they have strip-mined the area and we all know what that looks
like when we can see it.
Unless
we stop this Government of Ecological Vandals in it's tracks, The
Global Corporate Elite will strip-mine this Planet and this Country
to death.
Get
Rid of John Key John Key is an idiot Arrest John Key Arrest the
Bankers.
---Kevin
Hester
EPA
seabed mining hearing laws undermining democracy
Tuesday,
8 April 2014, 2:06 pm
Press
Release: Kiwis
Against Seabed Mining
EPA
seabed mining hearing laws undermining democracy
Press
release, 9 April 2014
8
April, 2014
Rules
around the EPA’s decision-making process on the country’s first
seabed mining application under the new Exclusive Economic Zone Act
are undemocratic and make it nearly impossible for adequate public
input, Kiwis Against Seabed Mining (KASM) said today.
Echoing
the sentiments expressed by the Environment Defence Society this
morning, KASM Chairperson Phil McCabe said the entire process appears
to have been set up to favour the applicant, Trans Tasman Resources
(TTR), and to severely curtail public input.
The
tight timeframes set up and adversarial environment where TTR lawyers
are able to attend every hearing day, when the hearing runs from
March to May, mean that it is virtually impossible for submitters to
keep up.
TTR
has applied for a marine license to mine a 65sqkm are of the seabed
for black sand (ironsands), off the coast of South Taranaki. It is
the first such application for offshore black sand mining and, if
approved, is likely to create a precedent for other companies who
have permits right up the North Island’s West Coast from Taranaki
to Cape Reinga.
“We
have struggled against a mountain of evidence from the company, with
so little time to examine it in detail,” said McCabe.
“Normally,
tiny, voluntary groups like ours would be entitled to get legal aid,
but the Minister for the Environment, Amy Adams, has decided this
won’t apply under this new legislation. This is in contrast to the
up to $25m ‘innovation’ grant the Government has awarded the
mining company,” he said.
“If
you steal an ice cream and can’t pay for your lawyer, you get legal
aid. But not if you’re trying to oppose a mining company that is
about to rip up our seabed in an area where the critically endangered
Maui’s dolphin and giant blue whales are found.”
“We
are having to move heaven and earth to fundraise so we can try to
keep our heads above water, but with these timeframes and the
Government’s refusal to giving submitters legal aid to counter the
subsidies given to the seabed miners, we feel we are drowning in
paperwork and evidence.”
Of
the 4850 submissions to the EPA on the application, 99.5% were
opposed, with only eight submitters in support, with most of them
related to the mining industry. Local Iwi and the fishing industry
are also opposing the application.
The
hearings are in Hamilton this week, owing to the huge concern from
people in Raglan, a black sand beach. KASM will be presenting its
submission on Thursday
Except that we won't "see it". Out of sight, out of mind, so go ahead and do it. Exlusive rights to the planet belong to homo insaneous apeus. Plunder the planet with abandon.
ReplyDeleteSee where that got us?