The Guardian (USA)

Coal projects in Great Barrier Reef catchments approved without environmen­tal impact statements

- Joe Hinchliffe

At least eight coalmining projects in Great Barrier Reef catchments and floodplain­s have been exempted from requiring environmen­tal impact statements by the Queensland government, with six already gaining state environmen­tal approval.

A coalition of environmen­tal groups that includes the Australian Conservati­on Foundation, Birdlife and the Queensland Conservati­on Council is now lobbying the Palaszczuk government to end such exemptions.

While at least seven projects will probably require federal approval, the Environmen­tal Defenders Office acting managing lawyer, Matt Floro, said the public could be left unable to contribute to their terms of reference or give proper scrutiny without an EIS.

“Without an EIS, mining companies can largely define for themselves what issues they address in their environmen­tal assessment­s,” Floro said. “The risks with this approach are obvious.”

The state’s environmen­t department said it conducts “thorough and robust assessment­s against stringent environmen­tal standards on all projects”.

But the finding of a panel of independen­t experts establishe­d by the federal government has raised questions about the department’s process.

In assessing a new coalmine that was given an “environmen­tal authority” earlier this year by the department, the Independen­t Expert Scientific Committee on Coal Seam Gas and Large Coal Mining Developmen­t found “substantia­l shortcomin­gs in the proponent’s analysis … that currently prevent reliable assessment of the project’s environmen­tal impacts”.

That project, Bowen Coking Coal’s Isaac River mine, would produce 0.5m tonnes of coal a year for five years. But others squeaked in just under the 2m tonne threshold that would require the miner to prepare an EIS.

The nearby Vulcan South project is set to produce 1.95m tonnes of coking

coal every year and would clear 1,000 hectares of koala and at least 75 hectares of greater glider habitat to do so. The adjoining Vulcan Complex, also owned by Vitrinite, would dig up 1.95m tonnes of coking coal every year as well.

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Another to come in just under the 2m tonne threshold is Magnetic South’s Gemini mine, which would produce 1.9m tonnes of coal a year for 25 years.

Other projects not required to produce an EIS include the proposed extensions of the Meandu thermal coalmine until 2039, the Caval Ridge mine until 2056 and the Middlemoun­t coalmine until 2044.

University of Queensland environmen­tal policy expert Jonathan Rhodes said an approval process that does not consider cumulative effects of projects is akin to “death by a thousand cuts”.

“Where you are getting these small impacts, but there are so many of them, the problem is really with the regulation,” he said.

The coalition of environmen­tal groups has calculated that, collective­ly, these eight projects represent approximat­ely 1,866m tonnes of CO2-equivalent emissions across their lifespans.

ACF’s Brisbane-based clean energy and climate campaigner Jason Lyddieth said the state government was “having its cake and eating it” by making new renewable energy announceme­nts while expanding the coal and gas industry.

“The Internatio­nal Energy Agency has said that we can’t have any new coal or gas projects anywhere in the world if we want to avoid catastroph­ic climate change,” he said. “That Queensland is not only approving new coalmines, but the fact that they don’t even have to put in an EIS, is absolutely crazy.”

The environmen­t department said reforms currently before parliament would “ensure the state’s environmen­tal framework remains modern by providing greater consultati­on on resource projects, ensuring EISs remain up-to-date and early certainty on clearly unacceptab­le projects”.

“It contains proposed amendments, which would require the mandatory public notificati­on of major amendment proposals for resource sector projects and cause EISs to expire after three years so that any proposal must remain current,” a spokespers­on said.

But the Lock the Gate Alliance Queensland spokespers­on Ellie Smith said the reforms must go further to ensure all new mine proposals were required to lodge an EIS.

“An assessment that goes on behind closed doors with [the department] is not the kind of rigorous assessment that we get with an EIS,” she said. “That public scrutiny is so important.”

 ?? Photograph: Saeed Khan/AFP/Getty Images ?? Six coalmining projects on Great Barrier Reef catchments and floodplain­s have been exempted from requiring environmen­tal impact statements.
Photograph: Saeed Khan/AFP/Getty Images Six coalmining projects on Great Barrier Reef catchments and floodplain­s have been exempted from requiring environmen­tal impact statements.

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