The Phnom Penh Post

Adani to start work on mine near Great Reef

- Martin Parry

INDIAN mining giant Adani yesterday said it will start work on a huge US$16 billion coal project that environmen­talists warn will damage Australia’s Great Barrier Reef.

Billionair­e Chairman Gautam Adani said in Townsville that the board had made its “final investment decision” which marked the “official start” of the Carmichael coal mine, destined to be one of the world’s largest.

The controvers­ial project – the biggest investment in Australia ever by an Indian company – encountere­d numerous regulatory and legal hurdles, leading to seven years of delays, with a lease finally granted last year.

It has also been slammed by environmen­talists who say it will hurt the reef, a World Heritageli­sted biodiverse site stretching along Australia’s northeaste­rn coast, which is already threatened by climate change.

“Now the time for waiting is over and the time for doing is b e g i nni ng ,” s a i d Fe d e r a l Re s o urc e s Mini s t e r Matt Canavan.

The developmen­t proposes exporting coal to India from a massive open-cut and undergroun­d coal mine 160 kilometres northwest of Clermont in central Queensland, home to the reef, via a 189-kilometre rail link to port.

The conglomera­te, which had delayed final approval due to uncertaint­y over royalty payments, forecasts it will produce 60 million tonnes of thermal coal a year for export.

It also estimates it will generate 10,000 direct and indirect jobs, with pre-constructi­on work starting in the September quarter of 2017.

Adani hit out at activists who have challenged the project for years, accusing them of exploiting legal loopholes to stall developmen­t.

“We have been challenged by activists in the courts, in inner city streets, and even outside banks that have not even been approached to finance the project,” he said.

“We are still facing activists. But we are committed to this project. We are committed to regional Queensland and we are committed to addressing energy poverty in India.”

Canavan also brushed off activist concerns, saying they should remember the “quarter billion Indians who don’t have electricit­y at all”.

“It is about providing a benefit to those people to have electricit­y and bring them from the suffering of poverty and disadvanta­ge,” he said. “That does a lot more for the world, our globe, our environmen­t, than anyone tweeting in air-conditione­d rooms in Sydney who might be opposed to it.”

Earlier this year a group of prominent Australian­s urged Adani to abandon the mine.

Signatorie­s to an open letter included former Australian Test cricket captains Ian and Greg Chappell, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Geraldine Brooks, Australian-based British comedian Ben Elton, and rock group Midnight Oil.

They cited public opposition, risks to miners’ health, the potential impact on the reef, and India’s reputation as reasons not to proceed.

Environmen­talists said yesterday that Adani had yet to reveal how it would fund the mine, with numerous banks ruling out finance.

Greenpeace Australia called it “toxic” and a “disaster for the climate”, while WWF-Australia c hi ef Dermot O’Gorman warned of a risk to the reef.

“Carbon pollution from burn- ing coal is the single largest cause of global warming,” he said. “The Australian and Queensland gover nments should be investing in actions that protect the reef, not a new mine doomed to fail, that will hasten the reef ’s destructio­n.”

The reef – already under threat from farming run-off, developmen­t and the crownof-thorns starfish – is in the grip of a second successive mass bleaching event this year, which has been blamed on global warming.

 ?? SAM PANTHAKY/AFP ?? Chairman of Adani Group Gautam Adani.
SAM PANTHAKY/AFP Chairman of Adani Group Gautam Adani.

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