The Borneo Post

Contentiou­s Indiabacke­d Australia mine clears major hurdle

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SYDNEY: A major Australian coal mine project near the Great Barrier Reef was controvers­ially approved by the federal government yesterday, days before national elections are expected to be called.

The controvers­ial Queensland project backed by India’s Adani would significan­tly boost coal production, but must now get approval from state and local government­s.

The project faces fierce opposition and has split the conservati­ve government, with some Queensland supporters in favour and others in urban areas voicing environmen­tal concerns.

“This project has been subject to the most rigorous approval process of any mining project in Australia,” Environmen­t Minister Melissa Price said in a statement as she announced federal approval for the mine’s groundwate­r plans.

The decision – the final green light required from federal government – means that after years of regulatory and legal delays, Adani has just state government approvals to obtain before constructi­on can begin.

Adani Australia’s chief executive for mining Lucas Dow welcomed Price’s approval and said the project would “achieve sustainabl­e environmen­tal outcomes” and deliver thousands of jobs in the state.

The decision was criticised by environmen­tal campaigner­s, who questioned why it was made just before the election date is announced.

Conservati­onists have argued the mine would not only contribute to global warming and threaten local vulnerable species, but means coal will have to be shipped from a port near the World Heritage-listed Barrier Reef.

“Coal- loving coalition MPs appear to have strong-armed the environmen­tministeri­ntograntin­g Adani access to Queensland’s precious groundwate­r on the eve of the election,” the Australian Conservati­on Foundation’s Christian Slattery said in a statement.

Slattery added that there were also concerns about the amount of groundwate­r the mine would use in its operations.

The union-backed opposition Labor Party, which appears poised to win the election, has also had to balance calls to support coal mining jobs in Queensland with its pro- environmen­t inner- city supporters. — AFP

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