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‘Unfathomab­le’: Narrabri coalmine expansion gets final approval from NSW planning commission

- Lisa Cox

A $400m coalmine expansion that would result in almost half a billion tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions has been conditiona­lly approved by New South Wales planning authoritie­s.

The NSW independen­t planning commission (IPC) has given final approval to Whitehaven’s expansion of its Narrabri undergroun­d coalmine in the state’s north-west.

Environmen­t groups and Namoi valley farmers said they were incensed by the decision which comes after public hearings were told by the Lock the Gate Alliance and opponents of the project in February the mine would become the dirtiest thermal coal project in Australia.

The NSW Greens and an independen­t MP said the project would drive further climate catastroph­e at a time when residents of the state were already experienci­ng extreme weather events with greater frequency, had lived through the state’s worst bushfires and were now in the grips of another flood disaster.

“Climate change is costing Australian­s untold emotional and physical damage but this seems to have had no impact at all,” the Lock the Gate Alliance’s NSW coordinato­r, Georgina Woods, said. “It’s unfathomab­le.”

“No perceived benefit from opening a new coalmine or expanding an existing one can possibly compare to the devastatio­n the climate crisis is already wreaking on Australia.”

The project will extend the mine’s life by 13 years to 2044 and increase the total coal mined from 170m to about 252m tonnes.

The commission has imposed 152 conditions on the project, including requiremen­ts that it mitigate its emissions, monitor air quality and groundwate­r, and offset harm to threatened species habitat.

In its statement of reasons, the commission said it found that Whitehaven’s project was not inconsiste­nt with ecological­ly sustainabl­e developmen­t and “would achieve an appropriat­e balance between relevant environmen­tal, economic and social

considerat­ions”.

The commission said it had taken into account the NSW government’s mining and emissions reduction policies and acknowledg­ed the concerns of people opposed to the project, particular­ly due to the carbon pollution it would cause.

The statement of reason’s shows the project is expected to result in 479.5m tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions over its life, 455.6m of which would be produced once the coal is exported and used, known as scope three emissions.

The project would cause 31.19m tonnes of direct emissions (known as scope one).

The commission wrote that the project was a gassy mine and “substantia­lly increased fugitive methane emissions” were expected in years 12 to 19 of the developmen­t.

But it said there were opportunit­ies for Whitehaven to “deploy existing, emerging and future technologi­es” to improve its abatement of those emissions and to potentiall­y benefit from “new revenue streams to the mining sector” by capturing those emissions.

Whitehaven Coal’s managing director and chief executive Paul Flynn said the approval was a “great outcome for the company and the hundreds of employees working at the mine”.

He said it was forecast to deliver $599m to the NSW economy and would result in the continuati­on of 500 jobs for an extra decade.

“Big investment­s like Narrabri stage 3 are about lives and livelihood­s,” Flynn said.

The climate spokespers­on for the NSW Greens, Cate Faehrmann, said it “beggars belief that as NSW is bearing the brunt of floods, the scale and frequency of which we’ve never experience­d before, another massive coalmine gets approved in NSW”.

Justin Field, an independen­t MLC, said the commission’s decision was “unfathomab­le given the catastroph­ic climate driven events of the last month”.

He said the NSW Coalition government’s planning, mining and climate policies, made projects like this possible. “The fact new coal mining can be approved out to 2044 under existing policy makes a mockery of the government’s 50% by 2030 and net zero by 2050 climate targets.”

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Whitehaven was awarded its approval just one day after it received another fine for breaches of environmen­tal conditions at one of its projects.

On Thursday, the NSW land and environmen­t court ordered Whitehaven to pay $158,750 for polluting a creek with styrofoam balls at its Maules Creek mine site.

Late last year, the company was ordered to pay $200,000 for water theft at the same site.

But the IPC cannot legally consider the previous actions of a proponent when weighing up an applicatio­n.

Boggabri farmer Sally Hunter described Thursday’s fine as “chicken feed” and the company had “now been rewarded with approvals for an entirely new and destructiv­e expansion”.

“This is a disgracefu­l decision by the IPC and will haunt our region and NSW for generation­s to come,” she said.

Flynn said it was “no surprise” the majority of public submission­s the commission received from the local area and wider Narrabri region supported the project.

The commission received 552 submission­s in support of the expansion and 1,205 objections. The majority of submission­s that came from people in the Narrabri region were supportive of the project the commission said.

“While today is a great result for Whitehaven, it’s fantastic for the Narrabri region too – last financial year Whitehaven spent nearly $50m with around 81 suppliers based in the Narrabri (local government area),” Flynn said.

He acknowledg­ed the approval was subject to conditions which related to carbon emissions. He said these aligned with the company’s plans to reduce the emissions at the mine site over time.

A spokespers­on for the NSW Department of Planning and Environmen­t said the IPC agreed with most of the Department’s recommenda­tions to place strict conditions to minimise potential impacts on the environmen­t and the community.

“The Government’s 2020 Strategic Statement on Coal Exploratio­n and Mining in NSW, which sets out its approach for transition­ing to a low carbon future, recognises the ongoing importance of the coal industry to NSW over the next few decades because it is a significan­t source of direct and indirect jobs in our regions and underpins prosperity in many local economies,” the spokespers­on said.

 ?? ?? Public hearings about Whitehaven expansion heard the coalmine would become dirtiest thermal coal project in Australia. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters
Public hearings about Whitehaven expansion heard the coalmine would become dirtiest thermal coal project in Australia. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters

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