Cape Times

Australia gives nod to Adani coal mine

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AUSTRALIA has approved a huge coal mine that could provide fuel for electricit­y for up to 100 million Indians, angering environmen­talists who warned yesterday that it might threaten the Great Barrier Reef.

Environmen­t Minister Greg Hunt said approval for Indian firm Adani’s A$16.5 billion (R163bn) Carmichael coal mine and rail project in Queensland was subject to 36 conditions.

“The absolute strictest of conditions have been imposed to ensure the protection of the environmen­t, with a specific focus on the protection of groundwate­r,” he said.

The developmen­t proposes open-cut and undergroun­d coal mining in central Queensland, and a 189km rail link. It is forecast to produce 60 million tons of export thermal coal a year.

State officials say the project, which could be the largest coal mine in Australia, will play a major role in opening up Queensland’s resource-rich Galilee Basin. It is also expected to contribute A$2.97bn to the state’s economy each year and generate thousands of jobs.

Trade Minister Andrew Robb said the project was a welcome foreign investment that demonstrat­ed the potential for the resources sector to drive economic growth. “It will help support the opening of Australia’s first new mineral province in 40 years,” he said.

But conservati­onists criticised the approval of a project which plans to ship the coal through Abbot Point on the Great Barrier Reef coast.

Ben Pearson of Greenpeace Australia Pacific said: “You can’t ignore that it is a mine which, if it went ahead, would impact on the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage area because… to get that coal out you have to build a new coal export terminal at Abbot Point.”

The Australian Conservati­on Foundation said the approval was “bad news for water resources, wildlife and the effort to tackle climate change”.

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