State Significant Development
Maxwell Underground Coal Mine Project
Muswellbrook Shire
Current Status: Determination
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- SEARs
- Prepare EIS
- Exhibition
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- Response to Submissions
- Assessment
- Recommendation
- Determination
Underground mining to produce high quality coals primarily for the steel industry using existing and proposed new infrastructure.
Consolidated Consent
Modifications
Archive
Request for SEARs (2)
EIS (48)
Response to Submissions (2)
Agency Advice (15)
Amendments (1)
Additional Information (25)
Recommendation (3)
Determination (3)
Approved Documents
Management Plans and Strategies (39)
Community Consultative Committees and Panels (2)
Reports (3)
Independent Reviews and Audits (2)
Notifications (4)
Other Documents (6)
Note: Only documents approved by the Department after November 2019 will be published above. Any documents approved before this time can be viewed on the Applicant's website.
Complaints
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Make a ComplaintEnforcements
There are no enforcements for this project.
Inspections
28/06/2022
8/09/2022
5/09/2023
12/03/2024
20/11/2024
Note: Only enforcements and inspections undertaken by the Department from March 2020 will be shown above.
Submissions
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
Gavin Wilks
Support
Gavin Wilks
Matt Frost
Support
Matt Frost
Message
Attachments
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
Jason Troy
Support
Jason Troy
Message
My name is Jason Troy, I am a Muswellbrook resident and Service Manager at Muswellbrook Nissan.
I fully support Malabar Coal's Maxwell Underground Project. The project will be a fantastic, much needed boost to our local economy, supporting local businesses and offering employment opportunities to local residents for decades to come.
Our business was a long term supplier to Anglo American Drayton mine, benefiting from the sale of new vehicles to the mine, and the continued service and parts supply in support of those vehicles over many years. When the Drayton South proposal did not gain approval, and with the cessation of mining activities, we were forced to cut our workforce by 50%, such was the amount of work we were afforded by our relationship to the mine. As a smaller, family based business, this was a very hard decision to come to terms with.
On a further personal level, I witnessed many friends of mine who were long term employees of the mine, that were forced to move on from the area to seek out work opportunities elsewhere.
The Maxwell project, with it's commitment to underground mining, and the utilisation of existing infrastructure, I believe has addressed the concerns that some parties have had with previous submissions made relating to the site, and I could not see how anyone could be in opposition to the existing proposal.
I would look forward to the opportunity for our business to again flourish, along with many others over a broad range of areas , in partnership with the Maxwell Project.
Regards
Jason Troy
Rod Barry
Support
Rod Barry
craig benjamin
Object
craig benjamin
Message
The visual impact, and the dust component is unbearable.
I am totally against this mine in the location it is being proposed
Regards
Craig Benjamin
General Manager
Upper Hunter Tours
Bill Johnson
Support
Bill Johnson
Tom Higgins
Support
Tom Higgins
Sue Jolliffe
Support
Sue Jolliffe
Message
Attachments
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
Benjamin Johnson
Support
Benjamin Johnson
Message
Attachments
Bruce Murray
Object
Bruce Murray
Message
My objections to this mine are simple. AIR, WATER & CULTURE
I was lucky to be born in the hunter valley, coming from stock that has been rooted within the Hunter Rivers catchment for 3 over generations.
My objections are based on the future of the hunter valley itself and that future isn’t another coal mine, it’s my 9month old son. I look at the devastation to the land, air and water that’s unfolded through my eyes over the last 33 years I’ve lived directly in The Hunter Valley and I ask myself a question, what will be left of this valley when he is my age? The land we’ll have been turned on its head, the air will be dirty and dusty and the river will be scared beyond repair.
The impacts directly and indirectly from this coal mine on air quality are demonstrably underestimated, I live and work here in the valley with the majority of my time is spent within an area of NSW that has the worst air quality in all of the state and that is because of coal-based pollution.
Our region like many others has been hit hard by water stress over the past few years, any further impacts on that highly stressed system could see catastrophic results across many facets of life. Malabar’s groundwater modelling predicts a 2-metre drawdown of the hunter river alluvium thus having an effect of groundwater availability and surface water flows. They also plan to use the old Drayton site to dump spoil, reject and pumped water, this has potential to contaminate the alluvial aquifers of the hunter valley. If there is any impact on the hunter river or its alluvium this mine cannot proceed.
The constant strain on myself and family has to stop, there is no certainty that the air or water quality will get better, the line pushed by all and sundry is that “they” are taking steps to reduce all forms of pollution, but data suggest we are in a worse state then we have ever been. So the question and uncertainty remain, can I afford to raise my family within a valley that generations before me have because of the coal mining operations and its effects?. We have no certainty or control over the future of this beautiful valley.
Onto culture, Australia is often seen in the eyes of the world as not having much culture because Europeans have only been here for 200+years, that notion astounds me. We have some of the oldest living cultures in the world and this valley has a rich indigenous history and it's being lost forever to create large open wounds in the ground. An emphasis on cultural heritage whether it is indigenous or not needs to take place.
I will conclude with a question that I often ask myself, what will be left of this valley when all is said and done? Will it be left better than it was found? Or will it be left for my kids and their kids to try and clean up?
Regards
Nicola Cramsie
Object
Nicola Cramsie
Message
Attachments
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
NSW Health
Comment
NSW Health
Message
Division of Resources & Geoscience
Comment
Division of Resources & Geoscience
Bobby Dodovski
Support
Bobby Dodovski
Message
56 South street Adamstown NSW 2289
NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment
GPO Box 39, Sydney NSW 2001
Date 23/09/2019
To Whom It May Concern
Re: Maxwell Underground Coal Mine Project. SSD-9526
My name is Bobby Dodovski and I have lived and worked in the Hunter Region for the past 24 years.
I am writing to lodge my support for Malabar Coal’s Maxwell Underground Project.
Upon reading the executive summary proposal I’m confident that all parties will benefit from the opportunities this project will bring to the area.
I support the project because it will deliver important benefits for the local community and NSW.
The Maxwell Project will create 350 new jobs for the region. These new jobs and the wages that will flow from them, will deliver a much needed boost to the local economy. Further afield, the project will also generate up to $1.25 billion for the NSW State Government and local Councils. This money can be used to upgrade regional hospitals, schools or infrastructure.
The project will mean 350 more skilled jobs for the local community. These jobs will inject around $55 million in wages into our community – benefiting many other businesses in the area. Malabar have also said they want to prioritise hiring locals to ensure that the benefits of the project stay here in the community.
Malabar takes mine rehabilitation seriously. They started rehabilitating the old Drayton open cut straight away and have made great progress so far. It is great to see a business take this job so seriously. I appreciate that they have already opened up some of the land for cattle to graze on. This shows a commitment to coexistence with other local industries. I also note that the Maxwell Project will deliver a better rehabilitation outcome in the long term by filling voids at the former Drayton Mine with reject stone and rock. This will mean a much better outcome for our community.
It is my belief that the benefits of the project will make a substantial long-term difference to the communities in the Upper Hunter and to NSW.
The Hunter Region needs a diverse economy and the Maxwell Underground Project can help make sure our economy prospers for years to come.
Regards
Bobby Dodovski