Gulf News

People power can stop Adani mine project

This is the environmen­tal issue of our times and the Great Barrier Reef is at stake. But Australian­s must stand up for what they believe in

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hen I rafted the Franklin in the 1970s, I knew the campaign to save that spectacula­r river, despite local support for damming it, would become one to test that generation.

In 2017, stopping the Adani coal mine is a campaign to test this generation of Australian­s. In 40 years’ time people will be talking about the campaign to stop Adani like they now talk about the Franklin. “Where were you and what did you do?” they will ask. This is the environmen­tal issue of our times and, for one, the Great Barrier Reef is at stake. The Adani corporatio­n’s dirty coal mine is an impending disaster with effects which will reach far beyond Australia.

Everywhere I go people ask me about it. They cannot believe that, at a time when we should be drasticall­y cutting the pollution which drives global warming, Australia’s authoritie­s would even consider building the world’s biggest export coal mine.

Lending Gautam Adani, a billionair­e, a billion dollars of taxpayers’ money to carry this project into reality would be the political mistake of the decade. The Turnbull government would be literally paying Adani to ride roughshod over Indigenous rights, to contaminat­e the groundwate­r of the Galilee Basin, to consign threatened species to the dustbin of history and to increase the already disastrous impact of coral death worldwide.

Thirteen community groups launched the Stop Adani Alliance at parliament house in Canberra last week. The alliance is building the biggest movement in Australia’s environmen­tal history to stop the Adani coal mine in its tracks, to transform Australia to a renewable energy future and to end taxpayer handouts for polluting projects.

The mining and burning of coal threatens our way of life and Australian­s know it. Polls show a big majority understand­s that burning fossil fuels spurs global warming and its impacts such as heatwaves, bushfires, floods, droughts and more severe and frequent storms. On Monday, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull told the House of Representa­tives about another disastrous threat: rising sea-levels around Australia and the Pacific.

Coal kills more than coral. In this country, workers are dying of black lung disease. The proposed monster mine in central Queensland would spew 4.6 billion tonnes more carbon pollution into Earth’s atmosphere already overloaded with greenhouse gases. The mine would end up a hole five times larger than Sydney Harbour. It would suck up billions of litres of ground and surface water each year. It would uproot critical habitat and is likely to kill off the beautiful, endangered Blackthroa­ted finch. It would accelerate the destructio­n of the Great Barrier Reef and the 67,000 jobs the reef sustains.

Just like in the Franklin campaign, this will be a passionate, determined and unstoppabl­e popular movement. This is an issue of conscience. Australian­s are deeply concerned about the world their grandchild­ren will inherit and view the crisis unfolding for the Great Barrier Reef with escalating trepidatio­n.

Adani’s political backers will continue to underestim­ate this community feeling at their own peril. Those who say the mine can’t be stopped have forgotten the unbeatable power of a majority of people standing up for what they believe in.

Bob Brown is an Australian politician, author, photograph­er and lifelong activist who rose to prominence when he led the campaign to save the Franklin River in the 1980s. After 10 years in the Tasmanian parliament, he was elected to the Senate in 1996, where he served for 16 years. He was leader of the Australian Greens from 2005 to 2012, when he retired from the parliament to establish the Bob Brown Foundation.

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