The Guardian Australia

Drop in aquifer levels near Adani mine sparks concern for sacred wetlands

- Ben Smee

Aquifer levels have dropped “significan­tly” near the Adani Carmichael coalmine since 2019, prompting concern from groundwate­r experts that the large volumes of water being pumped may have already “locked in” irreversib­le damage to sensitive wetlands.

Groundwate­r monitoring data from one aquifer in the south-west corner of the mining lease shows a drawdown of about 50 metres in the past two years.

As Adani prepares to begin extracting coal from the Carmichael mine in Queensland, water issues loom as lastditch hurdles.

Guardian Australia revealed last month the company had obscured details about its plans to source large volumes of water, after approval for a large-scale water scheme was overturned. The company later claimed its water sources were “commercial in confidence”.

Now a group of Wangan and Jagalingou traditiona­l owners say they are considerin­g legal action to stop ongoing groundwate­r extraction from coal seams at the Carmichael site.

The group, the W&J Nagana Yarrbayn Cultural Custodians, sent a detailed legal brief to the Queensland government in April, citing concerns about risks to the sacred Doongmabul­la Springs.

The brief included a report by RMIT University hydrogeolo­gist Matthew Currell, which concluded that baseline groundwate­r data compiled by Adani was not adequate to protect the springs, or fully comply with the mine’s approval conditions.

The Queensland Department of Environmen­t and Science investigat­ed the complaint but took no action. The department claimed Adani’s baseline monitoring “met the intent” of its conditions.

Springs at risk

Currell said groundwate­r monitoring taken from Adani’s website shows significan­t drawdown has already occurred in aquifers near the mine site, which suggests Adani has pumped “very large but unknown” volumes of groundwate­r over two years.

Adani is not due to report its total water extraction for the 2020-21 financial year until October. The miner took 853.9m litres of groundwate­r during 2019-20.

Currell said he was concerned such large volumes had been extracted when baseline data near the Doongmabul­la Springs was not sufficient to understand the water system and how it was ultimately impacted by mining.

“The commenceme­nt of mining activity without having first establishe­d these key requiremen­ts potentiall­y risks causing irreversib­le damage to the springs, which could have been avoided or mitigated with better hydrogeolo­gical knowledge and baseline data,” Currell said in his report.

Currell told the Guardian the baseline data did not give a clear picture of the groundwate­r quality and flow at the springs and in the aquifers below them.

“Effects on the springs related to dewatering are unlikely to be instantane­ous,” he said.

“A major concern for me is that the alteration to groundwate­r volumes and flow gradients occurring at the moment due to dewatering could already have locked in future impacts on the springs.”

Queensland authoritie­s investigat­ed the complaint made by the W&J Nagana Yarrbayn Cultural Custodians, which included claims that Adani’s baseline dataset did not fully comply with its conditions.

Adani was required to take a baseline of “at least 12 sampling events that are no more than 2 months apart over a 2 year period”. Currell’s report said Adani’s sampling did not appear to have occurred at the required frequency.

Last month, after learning about the investigat­ion, Guardian Australia sent questions to the department about allegation­s Adani had not met its conditions. The department asked for an additional day to respond because “key department­al staff” were away.

The following day, it sent a letter to traditiona­l owners saying the complaint had been dismissed. The department said in a subsequent statement that Adani’s sampling was “far in excess of the number of samples required” and “met the intent of the condition”.

Currell said Adani’s groundwate­r quality data was likely “effectivel­y equivalent” to the sampling requiremen­t in its conditions. But he said the Carmichael mine had been allowed to proceed despite not having met other conditions that required it to include research into spring-aquifer interactio­ns in its groundwate­r dependent ecosystems management plan.

That plan was controvers­ially approved by the federal and Queensland government­s in 2019, despite concerns raised prior by the CSIRO and Geoscience Australia, which found that Adani’s groundwate­r models were “not suitable” to ensure the conditions of its environmen­tal approvals were met and that it underestim­ated how much water the project would impact water levels at the Doongmabul­la Springs complex and the Carmichael River.

Traditiona­l owners consider legal challenge

Queensland authoritie­s have regularly sought to dismiss criticism of its approvals and support for the coalmine by claiming it was subject to “strict” environmen­tal conditions, which it has said would protect the land and traditiona­l owners’ interests.

Adrian Burragubba, a W&J traditiona­l owner, said those claims rang hollow if the government did not seek to ensure strict compliance with conditions. He said the group was now considerin­g its legal options.

“Wangan and Jagalingou cultural custodians have seen how the constructi­on and operations of the Carmichael coalmining project are causing environmen­tal harm to our country, which in turn impacts our common law rights and those of other … traditiona­l owners,” he said.

“We are calling for an immediate halt to the constructi­on of the mine and independen­t [review] of the findings of the Queensland government’s investigat­ion into our call for urgent enforcemen­t action.”

Burragubba said the Doongmabul­la Springs is a sacred site for Wangan and Jagalingou people and “a part of our culture and our ceremonies”.

Adani dismisses report

Adani said Guardian Australia was being used as a “mouthpiece” for antifossil fuel activists.

The company dismissed Currell’s report on the basis of his involvemen­t in an Australian Research Council-funded study of the Doongmabul­la Springs, which is being run in collaborat­ion with Coast and Country, a conservati­on group that has opposed the Carmichael mine.

“Recent groundwate­r monitoring data has been analysed by independen­t experts and the environmen­tal regulator, which confirms groundwate­r management for the Carmichael project is compliant with our environmen­tal authority,” an Adani spokeswoma­n said.

“Baseline groundwate­r datasets have been completed as per our project conditions within the relevant timeframes.

“The Australian and Queensland government­s’ approval of [Adani’s] Groundwate­r Dependent Ecosystem Management Plan and Groundwate­r Management and Monitoring Plan followed more than 18 months of consultati­on … and an independen­t review by CSIRO and Geoscience Australia.

“The [plans] detail all the activities we will undertake and safeguards we will implement to ensure that we meet the approval conditions for the mine relating to groundwate­r. This includes a network of more than 100 strategica­lly placed monitoring bores to track undergroun­d water levels.

Adani said current groundwate­r monitoring demonstrat­ed there had been “no measurable groundwate­r impact on the Doongmabul­la Springs, which is located 11km from the Carmichael mine site”.

Currell said impacts to the springs from the mine may not be fully felt for decades but that actions taken now would be critical for their future.

Adani claimed the Doongmabul­la Springs and the Carmichael mine would “draw water from different undergroun­d sources”.

The CSIRO and Geoscience Australia review found “uncertaint­ies” about whether Adani had identified the source aquifer.

 ?? Photograph: Brendan Beirne ?? The Doongmabul­la Springs near Adani’s Carmichael coalmine site with dust visible from land clearing operations. The springs are a sacred site for Wangan and Jagalingou people.
Photograph: Brendan Beirne The Doongmabul­la Springs near Adani’s Carmichael coalmine site with dust visible from land clearing operations. The springs are a sacred site for Wangan and Jagalingou people.
 ?? Photograph: W&J Nagana Yarrbayn Cultural Custodians ?? Wangan and Jagalingou cultural custodian Adrian Burragubba says the Carmichael coalmine is causing environmen­tal harm and impacting the common law rights of traditiona­l owners.
Photograph: W&J Nagana Yarrbayn Cultural Custodians Wangan and Jagalingou cultural custodian Adrian Burragubba says the Carmichael coalmine is causing environmen­tal harm and impacting the common law rights of traditiona­l owners.

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