Press release – 16 November, 2014Brisbane, 16 November 2014: Queensland taxpayers could soon be slugged with the bill of destroying their own Great Barrier Reef, under an outrageous plan outlined by Premier Campbell Newman today at G20 negotiations, said Greenpeace.“Premier Campbell Newman is offering a paycheck to a foreign company with a
shocking track record
to dredge up our Great Barrier Reef and build a dirty great coal mine,” said Greenpeace reef campaigner Shani Tager.
“Our premier has turned into a kamikaze pilot, determined to destroy our Great Barrier Reef, even if it makes no economic sense,” she said.
The announcement comes just days after China and the US negotiated a deal to address climate change and move away from coal as an energy source.
Obama himself expressed concern
about the future of the Great Barrier Reef, and leading global banks such as Deutsche Bank and
Citi
have turned away from funding the new coal port at Abbot Point.
Premier Newman’s support of Adani’s Carmichael mega mine also appears to be out of joint with a
recent announcement
by Indian Power Minister, Piyush Goyal, detailing how India will stop foreign imports of thermal coal in the next three years, just as Adani’s mine is predicted to come online.
“It’s pure madness to be investing tax-payer money into coal infrastructure on the Great Barrier Reef when the world’s largest banks aren’t even willing to touch it.”
“Why isn’t Premier Newman protecting the 60,000 jobs that already exist on the Great Barrier Reef and investing money into clean solar and wind energy instead of tying us to the dying coal industry?”
The proposal would bring dredging in the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area a step closer, as Adani’s Carmichael mine would require a new coal export terminal at Abbot Point, for which dredging must occur. Dredging in the World Heritage Area was cited by UNESCO as a reason it considers placing the Reef on its World Heritage ‘in danger’ list.
To add insult to injury, the Queensland Government plans to give our hard-earned dollars to a company notorious for flouting the law. Coal giant Adani has been investigated and fined in its home country of India for
bribery, illegal shipments, environmental destruction and building on village land without permission
,” said Shani Tager.
Video footage and photographs of the Carmichael mine site and Abbot Point terminal available here:
www.greenpeacemedia.org
Username: photos Password: green
For images or more information, contact:
Elsa Evers, Greenpeace Media Advisor, 0438 204 041
For interviews, contact Shani Tager,
0432 050 809