Google – AFP,
11 December 2013
Sydney —
Conservationists on Wednesday slammed Australia's approval for an Indian firm
to expand a major coal port on the Great Barrier Reef coast, warning it would
hasten the natural wonder's demise.
"The
Great Barrier Reef is dying and (Prime Minister) Tony Abbott is hastening its
death," Greens leader Christine Milne told reporters.
"(He)
has made it clear that industrialising the reef, giving approvals to coal mines
and gas facilities for his big business mates, is a much greater priority for
him than protecting the reef and the 63,000 jobs that depend on it," she
said.
Environment
Minister Greg Hunt on Tuesday gave the green light to the project by India's
Adani Group, under what he labelled as "some of the strictest conditions
in Australian history" governing environmental protection.
Adani can
now dredge some three million cubic metres from the seabed to allow for
freighters to dock at the port in Abbott Point, lifting the facility's capacity
by 70 percent to make it one of the world's largest coal ports.
WWF
Australia said the material dredged during the expansion would be enough to
fill 150,000 dump trucks that "lined up bumper-to-bumper would stretch
from Brisbane to Melbourne", a distance of more than 1,000 kilometres (620
miles).
Greenpeace
said Hunt had ignored the "serious concerns of scientists, tourism
operators, fishers and UNESCO" to approve a development just 50 kilometres
(31 miles) from the pristine Whitsunday Islands.
UNESCO's
World Heritage Committee is to decide in June whether to list the Great Barrier
Reef as being in danger, Greenpeace campaigner Louise Matthiesson noted,
"and this decision will cause alarm among the international
community".
"If
these plans succeed, and Abbot Point becomes the world's biggest coal port,
Australia will be speeding up the climate crisis that threatens our children's
future."
The reef is
now formally considered to be in "poor" health by government
scientists, with overall coral cover declining by 15 percent since 2009 due to
cyclones and floods, pollution and attacks by the coral-eating crown-of-thorns
starfish.
The Great
Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority -- whose board is currently under
investigation for its links to the mining industry -- must now issue a permit
allowing the dredge material to be disposed of within the park.
It said it
would reveal its intentions within the next 10 days.
Hunt has
also approved a major liquefied natural gas plant and transmission pipeline at
Curtis Island, which is also within the reef marine park, for Australian firm
Arrow Energy under 53 environmental conditions.
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