Great Barrier Reef Be
Damned, Australia's Biggest
Coal Mine Project Moves
Forward
Andrea Germanos, staff writer
A rally to protect the Reef from new shipping ports for exporting coal
and minerals. (Photo: FusionVision/cc/flickr)In
the wake of warnings over the industry's threats to the Great
Barrier Reef, the Australian state of Queensland on
Thursday gave the
OK to one of the world's biggest coal mines.
8 May, 2014
The
slated project is the Adani Enterprises-owned Carmichael Mine in the
state's Galilee Basin, and it is expected to produce as much as 60
million tonnes of coal a year and also include a rail line and water
infrastructure.
"If
it proceeds," said Deputy Premier Jeff Seeney, "the
Carmichael project would not only be the largest coal mine in
Australia and one of the largest in the world, but a vital project
in opening up the hugely significant Galilee Basin."
[t]he port that Adani plans to use, Abbot Point, is facing a legal challenge from environmentalists fighting expansion plans that would involve dredging up 3m cubic meters of sand and dumping it near the Great Barrier Reef.
Seeney
said this and other approvals show that Queensland "is open for
business."
The
project now awaits approval at the federal level.
The
green light for the project comes
a day after
the Australian Marine Conservation Society warned in a report that
the Great Barrier Reef faces an 'unprecedented' threat from
industrial development as a result of seabed dredging for coal
industry expansion. It also comes on the heels of a warning from
UNESCO to re-list the Reef as a World Heritage in Danger site due to
the "range of significant threats affecting the property,"
including the dredging at Abbot Point.
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