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Planned BHP coal mines pose climate threat

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MELBOURNE: A proposed pipeline of coal mine projects in Australia, the world’s second-biggest exporter of the fuel, is threatenin­g to lock in decades of new carbon emissions and challenge the country’s promises of bolder climate action.

The federal government is considerin­g 29 applicatio­ns for new mines and expansions that, if developed to their full capacity, would produce more than 250 million tonnes a year and contribute as much as 17 billion tonnes

of carbon dioxide emissions, according to a study by Move Beyond Coal, a Sydney-based climate advocacy group.

That total is equivalent to more than half of global emissions in 2021.

The future of the country’s Us$63bil (Rm289.04bil) coal export industry is a dilemma for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who took office in May with a promise to improve a weak record on climate action.

Though his government has tightened emissions reduction targets, Albanese has also signalled support for new gas and coal developmen­ts amid a global energy crisis that’s seen buyers scramble for the country’s exports and swelled profits for fossil-fuel producers.

Global electricit­y generation from coal jumped about 8.5% last year to more than 9,600 terawatt-hours, the first increase since 2018, according to data compiled by Bloombergn­ef.

Climate groups have raised concerns over the potential impact on efforts to curb emis

sions as nations revert to using the dirtiest fossil fuels.

Albanese’s government “is talking the talk that Australia is back on climate, but it’s got all these coal mines that are under review,” said Fahimah Badrulhish­am, a spokespers­on for Move Beyond Coal, the campaign group that produced the data.

Ministers currently have no legal obligation to consider climate impacts when authorisin­g the developmen­t of new mines, and campaigner­s in March lost an attempt to block a Whitehaven Coal Ltd proposal over

its projected emissions.

Members of Australia’s Green Party and pro-climate independen­t lawmakers have

called for existing environmen­tal laws to be tightened.

Environmen­t Minister Tanya Plibersek is reviewing current laws, her office said.

Coal mine applicatio­ns are being assessed on a “case-by-case” basis, she said in July.

Mining tycoon Clive Palmer was refused approval in August for the Central Queensland Coal project over the potential impact on the Great Barrier Reef.

Mining giants including BHP Group, Glencore Plc and Peabody Energy Corp are among producers with projects in Australia being considered by the government.

BHP and Mitsubishi Corp’s proposed Blackwater South metallurgi­cal coal mine in Queensland is seeking approval to cover a 90-year lifespan.

That would equate to 1.98 billion tonnes of emissions, according to Move Beyond Coal’s estimates.

BHP declined to comment on the emissions forecast.

Chief executive officer Mike Henry previously suggested the mine would be unlikely

to operate for the duration set out in approval documents.

Move Beyond Coal said Glencore’s Valeria thermal and metallurgi­cal coal mine in central Queensland has a proposed lifetime of 35 years and would emit 1.39 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide.

The release of 17 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide from all the proposed mines would account for 4% of the world’s remaining “carbon budget” of 420 million tonnes – the point at which planetary warming of 1.5 degrees Celsius becomes the most likely scenario, according to the Global Carbon Project.

A total of 31 coal mine projects were at the committed stage, where a final investment decision has been taken, or undergoing feasibilit­y studies, Australia’s resources ministry said in a report in December. — Bloomberg*

 ?? ?? Tough stance: A green turtle swims in waters of Ribbon Reef No. 10 near Cairns. The
Australian government refused approval for the Central Queensland Coal project over the potential impact on the Great Barrier Reef to prevent a coal mine from being opened. — AP
Tough stance: A green turtle swims in waters of Ribbon Reef No. 10 near Cairns. The Australian government refused approval for the Central Queensland Coal project over the potential impact on the Great Barrier Reef to prevent a coal mine from being opened. — AP

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