A GIANT mine planned in Queensland, Australia, is facing a court challenge over the impacts that burning its coal will have on rising sea-levels, global temperatures and oceanย acidification.
The Swiss-owned mining company Xstrata wants to extract about 30 million tonnes of coal a year for the next 30 years from the mine next to the small township ofย Wandoan.
According to figures from Xstrata, once all emissions are counted for the life of the mine – including the burning of the coal – some 1.3 billion tonnes of greenhouse gases will be released into theย atmosphere.
The mine would be the stateโs largest and one of the biggest in the southern hemisphere in a country which is already the worldโs leading coal exporter. The mining lease covers 32,000 hectares (123 sq miles).
Environment group Friends of the Earth Brisbane is challenging the mineโs lease and environmental authority, already granted conditionally by the Queensland State Government, in the stateโs land court.
As the case started, FoE spokesperson Bradley Smith said the case was one of โDavid vย Goliathโ.ย
Ten local landholders are also objecting to the mine on several grounds, including the effects of dust, vibration, potential water contamination, effects on cattle andย health.
Xstrata is defendingย itโs applications to mine the site, saying it takes its responsibility to reduce itโs climate chnage footprintย โseriouslyโ.
Several high-profile key witnesses are scheduled to appear on behalf of FoE, who will argue the mineโs impact will be measurable on a globalย scale.
A statement already filed to the court comes from Dr Malte Meinhausen, a leading climate researcher from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany and Honorary Senior Research Fellow at School of Earth Sciences, University ofย Melbourne.
The statement says emissions from the single mine will be enough to flood an additional 23,000 homes around the world by the yearย 2080.ย
Because the mine is focussed on exporting the coal to burn in power stations in Asia, FoE points out the emissions are not counted against Australiaโs greenhouseย accounts.
Dr Meinhausenโs statement says the emissions from the mine are equal to about three years of emissions from the entireย country.
Another expert witness, Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, is currently a co-ordinating lead author for a chapter on the impacts of climate change on oceans for the next Inter-government Panel on Climate Change assessmentย report.
Prof Hoegh-Guldbergโs statement to the court says the mineโs emissions will impact the Great Barrier Reef, in terms of raising global temperatures and increasing oceanย acidification.
The environment group wants the court to recommend the state Government refuse the mineโs lease and the environmental authority, which have already been conditionallyย granted.
The FoE climate change arguments are set to be heard in court on week two of the hearing, which is scheduled to conclude on 2ย September.
Pic: Xstrata media library.
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