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Friday, 30 June 2017
Farmers join fight against Adani coalmine over environmental concerns
More than 2,000 farmers and agriculture leaders express concern
proposed Carmichael coalmine could affect groundwater, biodiversity and
climate change
Longreach farmer Angus Emmott launched a petition calling on the
Queensland government to rescind its commitment to give Adani unlimited
free access to groundwater used by farmers.
Photograph: Change.org
A group of Australian farmers have joined the large coalition of groups fighting against Adani’s giant Carmichael coalmine,
after they became concerned about the affects the mine would have on
groundwater, biodiversity, rural communities and climate change. Farmers for Climate Action
– a group of more than 2,000 farmers and agriculture leaders concerned
about climate change – became the newest group to join the Stop Adani
alliance last week, at the same time as one of its members attracted
more than 30,000 signatures to a petition
calling on the Queensland premier, Annastacia Palaszczuk, to rescind
her commitment to give Adani unlimited free access to groundwater used
by farmers in the region.
Longreach farmer Angus Emmott launched the petition last week; a few days later he had an accident on his farm and had to be airlifted to hospital. When he checked on the number of signatures on Wednesday, he was shocked to see there were nearly 30,000.
“I thought maybe I’d get a thousand signatures,” he told Guardian
Australia. “I know a lot of people are concerned – but there’s a
difference between being concerned and taking the time to sit down and
fill out a petition.”
He said he started the petition after speaking with other farmers who
were concerned about the premier’s decision to give Adani an unlimited
water licence, he said.
“It’s too big a danger for the future,” Emmott said. “We need clean
water. We need good soil. We need food security. And we have the
potential to be a leader in renewable energy in Queensland. We don’t need to be reviving an outdated technology.”
Excited
by the number of signatures, Emmott decided to try to get a meeting
with Palaszczuk and deliver the petition in person. “The doc says I
should take it easy after my accident, but as soon as I get the
all-clear to travel I’ll fly to Brisbane to deliver the petition in
person. I might bring a few other farmers with me too,” he said in an
update posted on the petition website.
Emmott said it appeared a lot of farmers have signed the petition, as
well as people in cities who share his concerns. He said he hopes to
reach 50,000 signatures before he delivers the petition to Palaszczuk.
The Farmers for Climate Action chief executive, Verity
Morgan-Schmidt, said the group had decided to join the Stop Adani
alliance mainly because of impacts the proposal would have on
groundwater, but also because of concerns about biodiversity, rural
communities and the climate. The decision brought the number of groups
in the Stop Adani alliance to 13.
“No one can tell us, with any confidence, what impact this project
could have on water supplies from underground aquifers because there is
no independent or government oversight, or trigger levels that would
halt mining,” Morgan-Schmidt said.
In April, Palaszczuk announced
the Queensland government had granted the mine a free unlimited 60-year
water licence. The licence acknowledges this will “have an impact on
the underground water levels in the region of the mine” both during and
after the planned Carmichael coalmine’s years of operation.
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.
Compensating for the loss of habitat – which Adani has been given
federal government approval to do with “biodiversity offsetting” – was
not possible since the best remaining habitat would be impacted by the
Carmichael mine, according to experts from James Cook University in Townsville.
Fact v fiction: Adani's Carmichael coal mine – video explainer
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