Australia state premier calls for timeframe on Adani coal mine approvals

The massive coal mine in Queensland state has been a controversial topic, with the project expected to produce 2.3 billion tonnes of low-quality coal. 
Adani Group chairman Gautam Adani (File | AFP)
Adani Group chairman Gautam Adani (File | AFP)

MELBOURNE: The premier of Australia's Queensland state on Wednesday asked India's energy giant Adani to sit down with the environment regulator to work out a "definitive timeframe" to obtain approvals for its controversial coal mine project in the state.

It comes days after Labor suffered a poor voter turnout across the state in the federal election, which has been widely attributed to the party's position on Adani's Carmichael mine project.

The move also comes after Queensland Government ministers spent weeks saying the Department of Environment and Science (DES) would not be rushed on making decisions. Adani group entered Australia in 2010 with the purchase of the greenfield Carmichael coal mine in the Galilee Basin in central Queensland, and the Abbot Point port near Bowen in the north.

The massive coal mine in Queensland state has been a controversial topic, with the project expected to produce 2.3 billion tonnes of low-quality coal. In addition to its impact on climate change, environmentalists have argued the mine could do serious damage to Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area.

Another major concern about the environmental impacts of the proposed mine has been that it would wipe out the most important habitat of the threatened black-throated finch. Speaking at a press conference, Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced she would appoint her Coordinator-General to oversee approvals of the mine.

"I think that the community is fed up with the processes, I know I'm fed up with the processes, I know my local members are fed up with the processes. I'm asking for the two parties, Adani and the independent regulator (DES) to sit down with the Coordinator-General and I want them to meet tomorrow actually. I want them to sit down and work out a definitive timeframe on decisions around these reports. We're up for this challenge, we work every day focusing on jobs," she added.

"We need some certainty and we need some timeframes enough is enough," she said. Adani is currently waiting on approval of two of its environmental management plans one concerning the black-throated finch, the other related to the management of groundwater at the site.

Last month, the Federal Government granted its final environmental approvals for the project days before the election was called. Adani mining chief executive Lucas Dow said he was cautiously optimistic about the Queensland Government's change of tone.

"I'm encouraged to hear that the Premier's finally said enough is enough, but the reality is what we've now got is simply another process," Dow said.

"If these approvals are not provided within the next two weeks, this new process that the Premier has described is simply nothing more than a further political delaying tactic." Dow said the mining company was ready to begin construction as soon as the project was approved.

"We think it's more than reasonable that this gets wrapped up in the next couple of weeks," the process has been exhaustive, and the scrutiny has been appropriate," he said.

"It's now time to finalise these and allow us to get on with the job." Dow said that the "ball is entirely in the Queensland Government's court."

"We've written to them, we've provided responses to their requests on the black-throated finch, that's now sitting with the Queensland Government," Dow said.

Voicing support for Adani's Carmichael coal and mine project in central Queensland, Mayor of Rockhampton council in the region has sough a "fair go" for the company.

Rockhampton Mayor Margaret Strelow said Adani should "be given the proper treatment and allowed to proceed, for the Galilee Basin to open, for those jobs to flow, so that we as a community can start to build a long-term future".

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