Melbourne protest precedes Malcolm Turnbull’s meeting with Gautam Adani during Australian Indian Leadership Dialogue
Calla
Wahlquist
@callapilla
Monday
5 December 2016 11.08 AEDT
More
than 300 people rallied in Melbourne on Monday to protest against a
proposed $1bn federal government loan to Adani for a rail line before
an expected meeting in the city between Malcolm Turnbull and the head
of the
Indian mining company, Gautam Adani.
Adani
and Turnbull were expected to meet on the sidelines of the Australian
Indian Leadership Dialogue in Melbourne, which they are both
scheduled to attend.
The
minister for northern Australia, Matt Canavan, confirmed the federal
government was considering lending $1bn toward the construction of a
310km rail line from the proposed Galilee Basin coalmine to the port.
The
potential funding deal was
reported on Saturday.
Canavan
told the ABC’s RN Breakfast that the proposal was currently before
the independent panel of the National Australia Infrastructure Fund
(NAIF), which makes recommendations to government on how the $5bn
fund should be spent.
Canavan
said there was “no decision to be made by the federal government at
this stage” but that it would not be unusual for it to support
mining infrastructure.
He
said progress on the proposed mine was “good news for our country”.
“It
is a major project, it will be the first time a new minerals basin
has opened up for 40 years, and this has the potential to be the
platform for many other projects in our region as well,” he said.
“We
have some of the highest-quality coal in the world, so providing
India with its energy needs from Australian coal is good for the
environment because it burns at a higher rate and produces less
emissions per kilowatt hour produced.”
The
Galilee Basin is the largest untapped coal reserve in Australia but
the coal is lower quality. Six companies, of which Adani is the
largest, have sought permits to develop the basin, despite warnings
from scientists and conservationists that it could damage the already
fragile Great Barrier Reef.
A recent
report said mining Australia’s untapped coal reserves,
including the Galilee Basin, could produce enough emissions to push
global warming beyond 2C.
Canavan
dismissed concerns about the quality of the coal, saying it was
higher quality than coal being mined in Indonesia and South Africa,
India’s two other options for cheap fuel. India, he said, was
“agnostic” about where the coal came from.
The
Australian Conservation Foundation’s campaign director, Paul
Sinclair, said at the protest in Melbourne’s Treasury Gardens that
committing any funding toward the project would break the Turnbull
government’s election promise.
“Malcolm
Turnbull has a very clear choice to make,” Sinclair said. “He
made an iron-clad promise during the election campaign, which he can
honour, or he can make a dirty deal with a billionaire polluter and
bankroll coal.”
Behind
him, the crowd chanted “reef not coal.”
Sinclair
said Canavan’s comments about the relative quality of the coal was
misleading and accused the government of trying to drum up public
support by leaking the NAIF proposal.
“I
think that the government is in fairyland when they say coal is good
for the environment,” he said. “It’s like saying smoking is
good for your health.”
Charlie
Wood, campaign director for 350.org, said the suggestion of any
federal funding for Adani’s project was “deeply concerning.”
“It’s
a sign that the government is putting the big polluters ahead of the
people they are here to represent,” Wood said. “Here we are
outside while Gautam Adani, the head of one of the biggest coal
companies in the world, is meeting with our prime minister ... has
that level of access. This is outrageous.”
Behind
Wood, two masked protesters showing Turnbull as a puppet being
controlled by Adani tried not to crash into the crowd.
Protesters
at Treasury Place before an expected meeting in the city between
Malcolm Turnbull and Gautam Adani, the head of the Indian mining
company Adani. Photograph: Julian Smith/AAP
Among
the protesters was Mary Beech, who told Guardian Australia she began
fighting to save the reef to honour her parents, who moved to
northern Queensland after the second world war.
“It
is 30 years ago tomorrow that my mother died,” Beech said. “At
the funeral she didn’t want flowers, all the money went toward
saving the reef and saving the Daintree … I’m so against the
government using taxpayers money to fund this dirty, dirty coalmine.”
India,
she said, could meet its energy needs elsewhere. “If it wants its
coal that badly it can get it from somewhere else,” she said.
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