Townsville Bulletin

Mining giant in court win

- MADURA MCCORMACK

MINING giant Adani has been “vindicated” after a court overturned a ruling that it had engaged in “unconscion­able conduct” as part of a contractua­l dispute involving its port operations at Abbot Point.

The company’s North Queensland Export Terminal (NQXT), formerly known as the Abbot Point Terminal, was also set to reclaim hundreds of millions of dollars in settlement costs and owed port handling charges in light of the unanimous Court of Appeal decision.

Adani, now known as Bravus, took four of its eight port users to court in 2017 in relation to non-payment handling fees.

In a legal twist, the four users – Lake Vermont Resources, Qcoal, Byerwen Coal and Sonoma Mine – countersue­d, alleging unconscion­able conduct over increased port charges.

The Supreme Court in August 2020 ordered Adani pay over $100m to the four port users after Justice Jean Dalton found the miner had been exploitati­ve and unfair.

But the appeal court, in a unanimous decision handed down Tuesday, overturned the most significan­t sections of the ruling in a decision Adani Australia boss Lucas Dow described as vindicatio­n. He said Adani expected to recoup money it had paid out as part of the settlement among other costs.

A spokeswoma­n for NQXT said the company was pleased that the court had unanimousl­y found it had not engaged in unconscion­able conduct.

“We are also pleased that the decision on the 2018 and 2019 terminal handling charges is now resolved in our favour,” she said.

Justice Philip Mcmurdo, in the Court of Appeal judgment, ruled the conduct by NQXT could not be characteri­sed as being so far outside societal norms of acceptable commercial “behaviour as to warrant condemnati­on as conduct that is offensive to conscience”.

“The trial judge was in error in finding that the appellant’s conduct was unconscion­able,” he said.

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