Australian Government approves thermal coal mine
06 Jul 2023
Environmentalists
predict the mine approval will add an additional 100 million tonnes of CO₂ to the atmosphere.
https://www.mining-technology.com/news/australia-approves-thermal-coal-mine/
Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek has been accused of being
incapable of “doing her job properly” by the Greens. Credit: Sebastian Reategui
via Shutterstock.
The Australian
Government has approved a license extension at a thermal coal mine despite
opposition from climate groups and Australia’s Greens Party.
Prime Minister Anthony
Albanese, who came to power in May 2022, approved the
mine on Friday. This is the third coal mine to be approved by Australian
ministers in the past two months.
Japanese company Idemitsu Kosan will have its licence for
the Ensham mine in Queensland extended for
another nine years. The 4.5 million tonnes a year of coal it produces will be
used in power stations.
Albanese’s left-wing
government came to power last year with promises of stricter emissions
targets and greater renewables investment. Despite this, the government has
also backed the expansion of coal and natural gas production.
The Australian
Government seeks to reduce CO₂ emissions to 43% of 2005 levels by 2030.
Coal and gas are
Australia’s second and third-largest export earners. The
annual production rates at the Ensham mine will equate to 2.5% of Australia’s
thermal coal exports in 2022.
In May of this year,
Albanese approved another mine located in Queensland to
produce metallurgical coal.
Australia is the
world’s second-largest coal exporter. According
to a report published this week by the
Australian Government, thermal coal volume rates will grow by 7.3% this year.
Shipments of metallurgical coal will also grow by 2.6%.
“Overall investment in
(thermal and metallurgical) coal mines remain healthy, but with a shift towards
less risky brownfield projects, and with less focus on thermal coal,” the
report states.
Criticism from
environmentalists
“Three coal mine
approvals in the last two months show our environment laws are broken,” Greens
spokesperson for the environment Senator Sarah Hanson-Young said in a statement.
“The Ensham coal mine
will add 100 million tonnes of pollution and wreck critical koala and greater
glider habitat, hurting native wildlife. Australians didn’t vote for this, but
Labor [Albanese’s party] are captured by donations from the coal and gas
industry,” she went on.
Albanese’s Environment
Minister Tanya Plibersek said that the approval was made in line
with existing environmental rules.