State Significant Development
Mount Pleasant Optimisation Project
Muswellbrook Shire
Current Status: Determination
Interact with the stages for their names
- SEARs
- Prepare EIS
- Exhibition
- Collate Submissions
- Response to Submissions
- Assessment
- Recommendation
- Determination
Extend the life of the open cut operation by mining deeper coal seams, using existing and proposed new infrastructure.
Attachments & Resources
Notice of Exhibition (1)
Request for SEARs (2)
SEARs (13)
EIS (48)
Response to Submissions (3)
IESC (2)
Agency Advice (25)
Amendments (2)
Additional Information (26)
Recommendation (3)
Determination (3)
Approved Documents
Management Plans and Strategies (25)
Agreements (2)
Community Consultative Committees and Panels (2)
Notifications (1)
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
9/04/2021
16/03/2022
20/11/2024
Note: Only enforcements and inspections undertaken by the Department from March 2020 will be shown above.
Submissions
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Glen Cherry
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Glen Cherry
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From what I can see happening every afternoon on dusk the water carts stop, and dust is going straight up into the air and over the town. This is clearly visible from any vantage point. The solar panels on my roof need regular cleaning now to stay functional and when it rains the water in my gutters runs brown and my freshwater tank is now full of dirt. We are encouraged to save water and place solar panels on our homes, but it makes it hard to use these when a mine site is polluting the environment and the government agency is doing nothing about it.
There is also no light pollution control and the lights are shining all over the town from the mine unless you have block out curtains the high-powered lights will light up your room at night.
Mine vehicles can be clearly see dumping spoil from the town and every time this happens another dust cloud comes towards the town.
The noise from mine vehicles is can be clearly heard at night and there are no sound barriers in place to stop this from occurring.
The NSW government does not do enough in the way of checking on any controls and the mine is now doing what it wants.
The actions that currently need to be address before any extension should be considered are:
• Dust pollution
• Noise Pollution
• Light Pollution
Unless the mine is held accountable and forced to amend its current operations then it should not get an extension.
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This optimization project will allow the site to continue to operate past its current approvals of 2026 providing stable employment opportunities and allow families who have moved to town for roles there or currently have roles there to remain linked to the community.
The rehabilitation work done by MACH Energy and Thiess looks different to the standard/traditional pile it up approach of older mines and certainly gives the landscape a more natural look.
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The mine understands the social licence required to operate and continually looks to improve it's impact while continuing production goals. I work as a contractor to this mine and the extension means job security for me and my work mates.
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Jessica Newberry
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It has proved that it listens and looks after its community as it can be seen in the recent rehabilitation project etc.
I will support the project.
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Upper Hunter Residents have had to battle for years to stop this whole region in turning into one massive coal pit with no thought for the current residents, their children let alone the needs of the country or the planet. The footprint of these mines has expanded massively in the past 15~20 years encroaching to impact land designated as critical industry clusters and/or strategic agricultural land. The town of Muswellbrook is now totally encircled by open cut coal pits, visible in almost every direction from the centre of town. The Mt.Pleasant mine is only 3 km from the town and is contributing a visible blight to the west.
Measuring the impact of the extension of this mine individually is extremely misleading when there are already 40 plus open cut coal mines in the Hunter Valley. The cumulative impact on air quality, water resources, visual amenity, the environment, social fabric and health and wellbeing of the communities of the Upper Hunter region is not considered at all in this project submission. The world is having to prepare rapidly for a post coal-based energy sector and this tone-deaf submission is promoting a project that will be marooned within a dozen years. The region needs industry and activities that are sustainable for the long term so that the community can leave the land in a state that is safe and habitable for their children and their children. A foreign owned marooned coal project is likely to be left bankrupt with no penalty to the ones who profited from the exploitation of the project. The owners of this project have no profile in this country and can shrink away leaving a scarred damage landscape, communities with no future and a massive clean-up bill for taxpayers.
Air Quality and Health Impacts
There is no safe level of air pollution.
Due to the intensity and concentration of open cut coal mines in close proximity to population centres in the Upper Hunter region, air quality has deteriorated over the last 10 years, such that there are regular exceedances of national air quality standards in the region, as evidenced by data from the Upper Hunter Air Quality Monitoring Network.
The intensity of coal production has increased in a northward direction impacting the population centres in the upper reaches of the valley far more than when mining was located away from the density of people. From the top of Scone Mountain looking south on many days you see a brown haze more akin to what you see in China or saw in Soviet era Eastern Europe. Asthmatics and people with cardiorespiratory disease in these communities are being adversely impacted by environmental air pollution contributed to, in large part, by open cut coal mining.
Water Impacts
Cumulative 10m drawdown is predicted in the Hunter River alluvium and the impact of the mine on water resources, including the alluvium and Dartbrook, will worsen after mining ceases.
Visual Impacts
The visual impacts from the currently approved Mt Pleasant mine are stark and impossible to ignore. The eastern spoil pile of the mine will be 100m higher if this expansion project is approved and will be visible from Scone.
Noise impacts
The community of Muswellbrook are already experiencing noise intrusions from the currently approved mine which will only be exacerbated by expansion and extension of this mine in time and space.
Community and Social Impacts
There are 30 privately-owned rural residences or parcels of land with the right to acquisition upon request because of intolerable air and noise pollution. The social impact assessment acknowledges the flow-on impact this will have on the social fabric and volunteer organisations like the RFS.
Environmental impacts
The legacy being left by open cut coal mining in the Upper Hunter is catastrophic and nothing short of tragic. The communities of this region are experiencing, and will be left with, environmental degradation on a scale that no other community in NSW is being subjected to.
This project will increase the already multiple negative impacts which mining is already having on our local environment. With reference to the Rocky Hill decision by Chief Justice Preston, now is the time that rapid and deep decreases in emissions are needed to ensure climate targets can be met.
The cumulative impacts from the already existing multiple mines in the Upper Hunter already significantly impact the environment. Additional mining is not needed and is considered a tipping point in terms of long-term negative impacts on our environment.
Final Voids
Final voids left from open cut coal mining in the Upper Hunter are vast without enough remediation funding available to properly manage the after-effects of these saline water-laden toxic dumps.
Climate Impacts
The impacts of this open cut coal mining operation on climate change are not considered in this process, since Scope 3 greenhouse gas emissions are no longer able to be taken into account by the IPC in the planning process. This is a gross omission of one of the greatest known man-made contributors to climate change. The estimated greenhouse gas emissions over the life of the mine if this project goes ahead are 860 million tonnes.
Stop this tone deaf vandalization of our land. The Upper Hunter does not want or need this project. The country doesn't need it and the world cannot afford it. We need to start caring for the Upper Hunter Country with projects that will ensure a quality environment for generations like a pumped Hydro scheme based around the existing infrastructure like Lake Glenbawn or Lake Liddell.
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I'm proud to proclaim in the community that I work at Mt Pleasant. I expose the tough dust controls, the rehab work and the community benefit of the mine to all who will listen. To live in such close proximity to my workplace is so beneficial to me and my family. I've been at Mt Pleasant for 2 years now and I'd love to be there for many years to come.