The Guardian Australia

‘Won’t stop this repeated behaviour’: campaigner­s decry $200,000 fine for Whitehaven Coal water theft

- Lisa Cox

Environmen­tal campaigner­s have said a $200,000 fine issued to Whitehaven Coal for water theft at its Maules Creek mine near Boggabri “will not stop this repeated behaviour”.

The fine was handed down in the New South Wales Land and Environmen­t Court on Wednesday after the company entered a guilty plea for taking 1bn litres of surface water without a licence over three years from 2016 to 2019.

The charges were brought by the Natural Resources Access Regulator (NRAR) for breaches of the water management act and carried a maximum penalty of $2m.

The judgment accepted there had been undefined actual harm to surface water flows and it was likely harm was caused to vegetation around Back Creek and to its aquatic ecology as a result of the offence.

It found Whitehaven’s failure to comply with water regulation­s undermined the scheme in a substantia­l way and considered the seriousnes­s of the offence was at the low end of the medium range.

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The judgment factored in mitigating circumstan­ces, including Whitehaven’s early guilty plea and the fact it had cooperated with authoritie­s.

“Taking into account my finding on objective seriousnes­s and mitigating factors, I consider the appropriat­e penalty is $250,000 which will be reduced by 25% to $200,000 in light of the early guilty plea,” it says.

The Boggabri farmer Sally Hunter said the fine did not come close to reflecting the seriousnes­s of the offence.

“While farmers were ploughing in their crops and stock were dying during the drought, Whitehaven took one billion litres of water without a licence,” she said.

“This water, at this time was priceless, and would have been a lifesaver for lots of farms and businesses.”

The fine is one of a number of breaches Whitehaven has been accused of at its mining sites.

This week the NSW Environmen­t Protection Authority (EPA) said it had directed the company to suspend blasting at the Maules Creek site while it investigat­ed seven blasts from the mine that are alleged to have generated uncontaine­d and potential toxic fumes between 1 October 2021 and 11 November 2021.

Earlier this month, the EPA fined the company $30,000 for dischargin­g dirty water from a failed sediment dam at its Tarrawonga coalmine near Boggabri.

It was the third alleged discharge of dirty water by the mine and the EPA said it had found high levels of metal and bicarbonat­es discharged from the mine site in to nearby Goonbri Creek.

Hunter said thefine handed down on Wednesday “will not stop this repeated behaviour”.

“Ordinary members of the public are fined far more for much less,” she said.

“It’s long past time for the NSW Perrottet Government to get tough on mining companies and appropriat­ely penalise them for the heinous crimes they are committing.”

Whitehaven said in a statement the judgment had noted the offence was at the low end of the medium range and the case had not establishe­d there had been adverse impact on other water users.

The company said there was no contention by NRAR that the passive take of water was intentiona­l or premeditat­ed and “it was not establishe­d any material environmen­tal harm arose from the passive take of water”. “During an investigat­ion spanning two years, NRAR comprehens­ively examined the water management at Maules Creek,” the statement said.

“Whitehaven has previously acknowledg­ed shortcomin­gs in the operation of some of its systems and has made significan­t progress to implement measures to improve clean water management at the mine.”

Grant Barnes, the chief regulatory officer at NRAR, said the water regulator had been working in and out of court to remedy the illegal water take.

“This judgment needs to be viewed in the context of our complement­ary work outside of the court room,” he said.

“In addition to the fine, we have entered into an enforceabl­e undertakin­g with Maules Creek Coal which requires it to take a range of actions including decommissi­oning a dam and updating its biodiversi­ty management plan.”

He said the enforceabl­e undertakin­g strengthen­ed Wednesday’s judgment and had been agreed to by both parties “as part of the mine operator’s movement to a position of water compliance”.

But Georgina Woods, a spokespers­on for the Lock the Gate Alliance, said people were “sick of mining companies getting away with serious crimes with insignific­ant repercussi­ons”.

She said it was particular­ly jarring in a week in which an activist had been sentenced to 12 months in jail for blockading coal trains in the state’s Hunter region.

“It is difficult to see how the public can have faith in the legislatio­n that governs coalmining companies when it is so clearly failing to keep the companies in line,” she said.

 ?? Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian ?? Whitehaven Coal’s Maules Creek mine site. The company has been fined $200,000 for taking 1bn litres of water without a licence.
Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian Whitehaven Coal’s Maules Creek mine site. The company has been fined $200,000 for taking 1bn litres of water without a licence.

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