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State Significant Development

Determination

Tarrawonga Coal Mine

Narrabri Shire

Current Status: Determination

Interact with the stages for their names

  1. SEARs
  2. Prepare EIS
  3. Exhibition
  4. Collate Submissions
  5. Assessment
  6. Recommendation
  7. Determination

Extension of open cut mining, increase of extraction rate from 2 to 3 million tonnes per annum and replacement of road haulage of coal with rail transport.

Consolidated Consent

Consolidated Consent

Modifications

Determination
Determination
Determination
Determination
Determination
Determination
Determination
Determination

Archive

Application (4)

DGRs (1)

EA (45)

Submissions (1)

Agency Submissions (1)

Response to Submissions (3)

Recommendation (2)

Determination (2)

Approved Documents

Management Plans and Strategies (47)

Agreements (2)

Reports (4)

Independent Reviews and Audits (6)

Other Documents (1)

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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Enforcements

Official Caution issued to Tarrawonga Coal Pty Ltd (MP11_0047) Narrabri Shire LGA

On 19 August 2022, the department issued an Official Caution to Tarrawonga Coal Pty Ltd (TCPL) for failure carry out the project generally in accordance with the Environmental Assessment. On 1 March 2022, a mulching contractor carrying out planned 2022 clearing activities at Tarrawonga Coal Mine was found to have cleared vegetation beyond the approved disturbance boundary and Mining Lease 1693 boundary, and encroached on Coal Lease 368 which is not held by TCPL. The department expects all proponents to adhere to the limits of their development consent which include approved disturbance limits. TCPL have since updated their Biodiversity Management Plan and Land Disturbance Protocols to include more stringent boundary marking protocols.

Inspections

19/03/2020

25/11/2020

16/2/2021

15/03/2022

12/10/2023

18/02/2025

Note: Only enforcements and inspections undertaken by the Department from March 2020 will be shown above.

Submissions

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Showing 21 - 40 of 62 submissions
Name Withheld
Object
Coonabarabran , New South Wales
Message
The clearing of 397 ha of native vegetation includes some clearing of native veg in Leard Forest. This publicly owned Forest is already being impacted by the Boggabri Coal and Maules Creek projects and should not be being further exploited for largely foreign interests.

It is unlikely that the proposed rehabilitation would be sufficient to support white box and other native tree communities as currently exist.
Also the plan to leave the final void as a void has numerous adverse consequences. It would result in dangerous body of water that would become an increasingly toxic brew. In area, it would mean less land was returned to its pre mining capacity. It would operate as an evaporative pump that would have a permanent negative effect on ground water.

The pattern of surface water flows from the current mining project, re directed by overburden embankments, has already had an impact on the adjacent flood plains, adding to recent floods. The proposed extension would exacerbate this.

The Goonbri Creek is an integral part of groundwater recharge for the area of Barbers Lagoon and the township of Boggabri. It should be left in its current natural state. The plan to permanently re-route it will turn a well functioning natural asset into something like a drain.
The collective interferences with water will do permanent damage that cannot be rehabilitated.
angela Newberry
Object
Springwood , New South Wales
Message
I object to publicly owned land being made available to foreign owned companies to exploit for profit. There appears to already be major damage to our waterways in this area because of exploitation for irrigation etc so any further development that effects waterways (in this proposal Goonbri Creek) should not be permitted.
Warren Laylim
Object
Springwood , New South Wales
Message
. The proposed "permanent" re-alignment of Goonbri Creek which is a 4th order stream in good to excellent condition, will turn a natural
asset into a drain. The mine should halt 300m prior to Goonbri
Creek and leave the creek in its current, natural and permanent
location. Goonbri Creek is a major component of the groundwater
recharge for the area of Barbers Lagoon and the township of Boggabri.
2. The clearing of 397 Ha of Native Vegetation including some
vegetation in the Leard State Forest. The consequence of this
clearing is to increase the cumulative impact to the Leard Forest
from the Boggabri Coal and Maules Creek Coal mines. This Forest is
PUBLIC LAND and is being provided to a largely foreign owned company
for private profit.
3. The project area will be rehabilitated by spreading a thin layer of
topsoil over the overburden embankment. This is not sufficient to
ensure the water holding capability can sustain White Box and other
native trees which are currently found in the area.
4. The disturbance of surface water flows from the existing mine due to
the overburden embankments has directed large volumes of mine water
from within the project area onto the flood plain during the Nov
2011 and Feb 2012 floods. The increased project area in the Goonbri
Creek Catchment due to the mine expansion will exasperate this issue.
5. The plan to leave a final void where there was native vegetation is
not best practice. The void does not return the land to its
pre-mining land capability and creates an evaporative pump that
permanently negatively impacts on the ground water.
6. The water contained in the final void will increase in toxicity and
be a threat to native animals in the area and as shown in the recent
flood event could be a major threat to the floodplain.
Name Withheld
Comment
Armidale , New South Wales
Message
The proposed "permanent" re-alignment of Goonbri Creek which is a 4th order stream in good to excellent condition, will turn a natural
asset into a drain. The mine should halt 300m prior to Goonbri
Creek and leave the creek in its current, natural and permanent
location. Goonbri Creek is a major component of the groundwater
recharge for the area of Barbers Lagoon and the township of Boggabri
The clearing of 397 Ha of Native Vegetation including some
vegetation in the Leard State Forest. The consequence of this
clearing is to increase the cumulative impact to the Leard Forest
from the Boggabri Coal and Maules Creek Coal mines. This Forest is
PUBLIC LAND and is being provided to a largely foreign owned company
for private profit.
The project area will be rehabilitated by spreading a thin layer of
topsoil over the overburden embankment. This is not sufficient to
ensure the water holding capability can sustain White Box and other
native trees which are currently found in the area.
The disturbance of surface water flows from the existing mine due to
the overburden embankments has directed large volumes of mine water
from within the project area onto the flood plain during the Nov
2011 and Feb 2012 floods. The increased project area in the Goonbri
Creek Catchment due to the mine expansion will exasperate this issue.
. The plan to leave a final void where there was native vegetation is
not best practice. The void does not return the land to its
pre-mining land capability and creates an evaporative pump that
permanently negatively impacts on the ground water.
The water contained in the final void will increase in toxicity and
be a threat to native animals in the area and as shown in the recent
flood event could be a major threat to the floodplain.
Name Withheld
Object
Coraki , New South Wales
Message
Dear Planning Department and decision makers on this project.

I object to the mine as proposed. I have been in the field with botanists and zoologists related to CSG in the Pilliga. I have seen reports done by biologists for different development applications both on a local level, state and federal level. From my experience I have witnessed that the independent surveys are more accurate than those executed by those wishing to develop. I have read points made by the Northcoast Environment Council and have no doubt that their findings are worth serious consideration. Therefore I am listing here for your review in support of my objection to this mining project.

1. The proposed "permanent" re-alignment of Goonbri Creek which is a 4th order stream in good to excellent condition, will turn a natural
asset into a drain. The mine should halt 300m prior to Goonbri
Creek and leave the creek in its current, natural and permanent
location. Goonbri Creek is a major component of the groundwater
recharge for the area of Barbers Lagoon and the township of Boggabri.
2. The clearing of 397 Ha of Native Vegetation including some
vegetation in the Leard State Forest. The consequence of this
clearing is to increase the cumulative impact to the Leard Forest
from the Boggabri Coal and Maules Creek Coal mines. This Forest is
PUBLIC LAND and is being provided to a largely foreign owned company
for private profit.
3. The project area will be rehabilitated by spreading a thin layer of
topsoil over the overburden embankment. This is not sufficient to
ensure the water holding capability can sustain White Box and other
native trees which are currently found in the area.
4. The disturbance of surface water flows from the existing mine due to
the overburden embankments has directed large volumes of mine water
from within the project area onto the flood plain during the Nov
2011 and Feb 2012 floods. The increased project area in the Goonbri
Creek Catchment due to the mine expansion will exasperate this issue.
5. The plan to leave a final void where there was native vegetation is
not best practice. The void does not return the land to its
pre-mining land capability and creates an evaporative pump that
permanently negatively impacts on the ground water.
6. The water contained in the final void will increase in toxicity and
be a threat to native animals in the area and as shown in the recent
flood event could be a major threat to the floodplain.

Regards,

Jimmy Malecki
Name Withheld
Object
Tamworth , New South Wales
Message
We are opposed to the project.

The proposed "permanent" re-alignment of Goonbri Creek which is a 4th order stream in good to excellent condition, will turn a natural asset into a drain.

The mine should halt 300m prior to Goonbri Creek and leave the creek in its current, natural and permanent location. Goonbri Creek is a major component of the groundwater recharge for the area of Barbers Lagoon and the township of Boggabri.

The clearing of 397 Ha of Native Vegetation including some vegetation in the Leard State Forest. The consequence of this clearing is to increase the cumulative impact to the Leard Forest from the Boggabri Coal and Maules Creek Coal mines. This Forest is PUBLIC LAND and is being provided to a largely foreign owned company for private profit.

The project area will be rehabilitated by spreading a thin layer of topsoil over the overburden embankment. This is not sufficient to ensure the water holding capability can sustain White Box and other native trees which are currently found in the area.

The disturbance of surface water flows from the existing mine due to the overburden embankments has directed large volumes of mine water from within the project area onto the flood plain during the Nov 2011 and Feb 2012 floods. The increased project area in the Goonbri Creek Catchment due to the mine expansion will exasperate this issue.

The plan to leave a final void where there was native vegetation is not best practice. The void does not return the land to its pre-mining land capability and creates an evaporative pump that permanently negatively impacts on the ground water.

The water contained in the final void will increase in toxicity and be a threat to native animals in the area and as shown in the recent flood event could be a major threat to the floodplain.
VICTORIA HAMILTON
Object
WEE WAA , New South Wales
Message
I hereby oppose the Tarrawonga Coal Project for the following reasons.
The proposed "permanent" re-alignment of Goonbri Creek which is a 4th order stream in good to excellent condition, will turn a natural asset into a drain. The mine should halt 300m prior to Goonbri Creek and leave the creek in its current, natural and permanent location. Goonbri Creek is a major component of the groundwater recharge for the area of Barbers Lagoon and the township of Boggabri.

The clearing of 397 Ha of Native Vegetation including some vegetation in the Leard State Forest. The consequence of this clearing is to increase the cumulative impact to the Leard Forest from the Boggabri Coal and Maules Creek Coal mines. This Forest is PUBLIC LAND and is being provided to a largely foreign owned company for private profit.
The project area will be rehabilitated by spreading a thin layer of topsoil over the overburden embankment. This is not sufficient to ensure the water holding capability can sustain White Box and other native trees which are currently found in the area.

The disturbance of surface water flows from the existing mine due to the overburden embankments has directed large volumes of mine water from within the project area onto the flood plain during the Nov 2011 and Feb 2012 floods. The increased project area in the Goonbri Creek Catchment due to the mine expansion will exasperate this issue.

The plan to leave a final void where there was native vegetation is not best practice. The void does not return the land to its pre-mining land capability and creates an evaporative pump that permanently negatively impacts on the ground water.

The water contained in the final void will increase in toxicity and be a threat to native animals in the area and as shown in the recent flood event could be a major threat to the floodplain.
Thankyou
Marg McLean
Object
Singleton , New South Wales
Message
The proposed coal mine expansion is totally inappropriate.The clearing of 397 Ha of Native Vegetation including some vegetation in the Leard State Forest should not occur. The consequence of this clearing is to increase the cumulative impact to the Leard Forest from the Boggabri Coal and Maules Creek Coal mines. This Forest is PUBLIC LAND and is being provided to a largely foreign owned company for private profit.
The plan to leave a final void where there was native vegetation is not best practice. The void does not return the land to its pre-mining land capability and creates an evaporative pump that permanently negatively impacts on the ground water.
The water contained in the final void will increase in toxicity and be a threat to native animals in the area and as shown in the recent flood event could be a major threat to the floodplain. This expansion should not proceed.
Name Withheld
Object
Armidale , New South Wales
Message
I object to the proposed expansion of the Tarrawonga Coal mine for the following reasons:
1. The proposed "permanent" re-alignment of Goonbri Creek which is a 4th order stream in good to excellent condition, will turn a natural asset into a drain. The mine should halt 300m prior to Goonbri Creek and leave the creek in its current, natural and permanent location. Goonbri Creek is a major component of the groundwater recharge for the area of Barbers Lagoon and the township of Boggabri.
2. The clearing of 397 Ha of Native Vegetation including some vegetation in the Leard State Forest. The consequence of this clearing is to increase the cumulative impact to the Leard Forest from the Boggabri Coal and Maules Creek Coal mines. It is inappropriate use of public land to hand over this Forest to a largely foreign owned company for private profit.
3. The proposal to rehabilitate the area by spreading a thin layer of topsoil over the overburden embankment is not sufficient to ensure that the water holding capability will sustain White Box and other native trees which are currently found in the area.
4. The disturbance of surface water flows from the existing mine due to the overburden embankments has directed large volumes of mine water from within the project area onto the flood plain during the Nov 2011 and Feb 2012 floods. The proposed increased project area in the Goonbri Creek Catchment due to the mine expansion will exacerbate this problem.
5. The plan to leave a final void where there was native vegetation is not best practice. The void does not return the land to its pre-mining land capability and creates an evaporative pump that permanently negatively impacts on the ground water.
6. The water contained in the final void will increase in toxicity and adversely impact on native animals that might drink from it. The recent flood event highlights the risk of contamination of the floodplain.
Name Withheld
Object
Binnaway , New South Wales
Message
Leard State Forest is public land that should be protected for the public not given to a largely foreign owned company for private profit.

The mine should halt 300m prior to Goonbri Creek and leave the creek in its current, natural and permanent location. Goonbri Creek is very important for the groundwater recharge for the area of Barbers Lagoon and the township of Boggabri. Re-alignment of Goonbri Creek will turn a stream currently in good to excellent condition into a drain.

The project area should be properly rehabilitated to its former vegetation rather than just by spreading a thin layer of topsoil over the overburden embankment. This is definitely not sufficient to ensure that a white box woodland will regenerate. Any rehabilitation should be thorough returning the complete range of local provenance species to the site.

The issue of flooding which has occurred with the existing mine will only become worse if this expansion goes ahead.

The plan to leave a final void where there was native vegetation is not good enough. Ground water will be permanently impacted and should be properly rehabilitated. If the void is left water contained there will increase the chances of flood plain poisoning over time. Leaving the void should not be an option.
Lyn Burkitt
Object
cornubia , Queensland
Message
clearing More of our native vegetation is a major concern as the planned regeneration of the area after it is cleared will not return the land to its pre-mining land capability.
Rob Noonan
Object
Armidale , New South Wales
Message
Please reject coal mining expansion in Boggabri area. Reject greedy unsustainable industries. Protect the natural environment and food security for future generations.
Patsy Asch
Object
Armidale , New South Wales
Message
There are many environmental reasons to oppose the expansion of the Tarrawonga coal project, not least because the clearing of parts of a Leard State Forest, a public asset, is for private profit, largely profit that will leave Australia.

The realignment of Goonbri Creek, will not only effect the health of the creek but also the groundwater recharge for the neighouring lagoon and the township of Boggabri.

Rehabilitation plans are inadequate and will not return the area to anything like its current health. Of particular concern is future water quality, and the added danger of the spread of toxicity in years of heavy rain like this one. One need only look at the flow of water from the existing mine and the disturbance of the embankments for evidence of future degradation.

Patsy Asch for SLA
Jane Judd
Object
COONABARABRAN , New South Wales
Message
The proposed expansion of the Tarrawonga Mine near Boggabri should not be allowed to go ahead.

This action would continue to replace Leard State Forest with a hole in the ground and a plateau of overburden. There is already little enough of this original woodland left on the Liverpool Plains. In spite of assurances by environmental managers for the mines, the animals displaced by the clearing will not just move into adjacent bushland. This bushland already contains its carrying capacity of native animals. And other nearby lands are all cleared.

This is a lovely patch of bushland which cannot be recreated by mine rehabilitation. Nor will plans to establish a plantation forest on the site be successful. All trees, native white box or plantation, require more than a thin layer of topsoil laid on top of overburden and a scattering of dead trees to establish successfully.

You can't just realign the Goonbri Creek and expect the ecosystems to re-establish at the new site. The realignment is effectively a drain which will disturb recharge areas for natural wetlands (Barber's Lagoon) and Boggabri town water supply.

The impact of disturbances to natural water flow and aquifers are unpredictable. Large volumes of mine water have already been redirected onto the flood plain during recent flood events. Aquifers will be drained by the hole in the ground. Other areas will become contaminated swamps.

The long-term cumulative impacts of this and other adjacent mines on this publicly owned land should be considered together. The transfer of this public asset for private profit by a largely foreign-owned company eats into our inheritance for future generations.

I speak from knowledge of the area. I am on the Namoi Community Conservation Area Advisory Committee which is responsible for advising on Leard State Forest. While I am not expressing the opinion of the committee, I would like to point out that we were neither informed nor consulted on this matter.
Michael Daley
Object
Lismore , New South Wales
Message
I object to these developments for the following reasons; The proposed "permanent" re-alignment of Goonbri Creek which is a 4th order stream in good to excellent condition, will turn a natural asset into a drain. The mine should halt 300m prior to Goonbri Creek and leave the creek in its current, natural and permanent location. Goonbri Creek is a major component of the groundwater recharge for the area of Barbers Lagoon and the township of Boggabri.
The clearing of 397 Ha of Native Vegetation including some vegetation in the Leard State Forest. The consequence of this clearing is to increase the cumulative impact to the Leard Forest from the Boggabri Coal and Maules Creek Coal mines. This Forest is PUBLIC LAND and is being provided to a largely foreign owned company for private profit.
The project area will be rehabilitated by spreading a thin layer of topsoil over the overburden embankment. This is not sufficient to ensure the water holding capability can sustain White Box and other native trees which are currently found in the area.
The disturbance of surface water flows from the existing mine due to the overburden embankments has directed large volumes of mine water from within the project area onto the flood plain during the Nov 2011 and Feb 2012 floods. The increased project area in the Goonbri Creek Catchment due to the mine expansion will exasperate this issue.
The plan to leave a final void where there was native vegetation is not best practice. The void does not return the land to its pre-mining land capability and creates an evaporative pump that permanently negatively impacts on the ground water.
The water contained in the final void will increase in toxicity and be a threat to native animals in the area and as shown in the recent flood event could be a major threat to the floodplain.
joe sparks
Comment
glen innes , New South Wales
Message
I do not support the expansion of this mine. mainly because of the known detrimental effects to the natural environment these sort of "development " is bound to result in but also the detrimental effects that these smash and grab operations. will have on the future generations of local residents.

I do not support the exploitation of public natural resorces and public environmental assets for the benefit of few (mainly over seas) company's.

This is Australia, this is 2012..... wake up, profit is not everything.




Beth Williams OAM
Object
, New South Wales
Message
2 Tarrawonga submissn

I further object to the proposed Tarrawonga Open-cut Coal Mine expansion near Boggabri for the following additional reasons:

New evidence of likely impacts on surface waters: The flooding of Boggabri CoalÃ,Â's existing operation pit and holding dams during the Nov 2011 and Feb 2012 floods has necessitated issue of an emergency license for release of 700ML of possibly contaminated water to the Namoi River valley. This shows unequivocally that the building of containment dams and engineering structures to Ã,Â"100 year flood standardsÃ,Â", as set out in the EP&A Act cannot guarantee risk-free operation and lack of impact in extreme weather events which are becoming more frequent due to the accelerating effects of global warming.

It mandates urgent re-evaluation of all such works in the adjacent Tarrawonga project, as well as the Maules Creek project before any approval or rejection can be considered.

This applies particularly to the proposed Tarrawonga Open-cut Coal Mine expansion.

The proposed "permanent" re-alignment of Goonbri Creek and associated voids and embankments of the expanded mining project area are likely to cause serious flooding and impacts in the Goonbri Creek catchment. The disturbance of surface water flows from the existing mine due to the overburden embankments has directed large volumes of mine water from within the project area onto the flood plain during the Nov 2011 and Feb 2012 floods. This has also happened in the associated Boggabri Coal mine project area, forcing a licensed discharge of 700ML of water from the coal pit to the Namoi River Ã,Â- a clear case of cumulative impacts

The increased project area in the Goonbri Creek Catchment due to the mine expansion will exacerbate this issue. This is unacceptable because Goonbri Creek is a major component of the groundwater recharge for the area of Barbers Lagoon and the township of Boggabri. The mine expansion should halt 300m prior to Goonbri Creek and leave the creek in its current, natural and permanent location.
Unacceptable cumulative impacts of open-cut mining
The clearing of 397 Ha of Native Vegetation including some vegetation in the Leard State Forest increases the cumulative impact to the Leard Forest from the Boggabri Coal and Maules Creek Coal mines. This Forest is PUBLIC LAND and is being provided to a largely foreign owned company for private profit.
Rehabilitation of the project area will be by spreading a thin layer of topsoil over the overburden embankment. This is not sufficient to ensure the water holding capacity that can sustain White Box and other native trees currently found in the area.
The plan to leave a final void where there was native vegetation is not best practice. The void does not return the land to its pre-mining land capability and creates an evaporative pump that permanently negatively impacts on the ground water.
The water contained in the final void will increase in toxicity and be a threat to native animals in the area and as shown in the recent flood event could be a major threat to the floodplain.
For all these reasons I ask that the proposed extension of the Tarrawonga coal mine be rejected.

Submission by Beth Williams, 25 the Avenue, Armidale NSW 2350, phone 02 6772 4454


Alistair Todd
Object
Boggabri , New South Wales
Message
Dear Sir,
As a resident of Maules Creek i object to the merits of theTurrawonga Coal Project. The three main reasons being, cummulative dust effects from the Leard Forrest Coal Complex, the relocation of the Goonbri Road into a natural floodplain and the flow on effects that this will have when considering the closure of the Leard Forrest Road due to the Boggabri Coal Project - Taking away the only flood free access for the Maules Creek Community, and thirdly on environmental grounds - NSW does not need any new or expanded coal projects to provide for its own energy needs.
Thankyou ror the opportunity to comment.
Alistair Todd
Kate Boyd
Object
Armidale , New South Wales
Message
I object to the proposal to expand this coal mine beyond its previously approved extent on the following grounds:

1. The mine will destroy high quality woodlands that are currently functioning as ecological communities providing habitats for a wide range of species. Too much of NSW's woodlands have already been destroyed or significantly altered so the remaining areas should be conserved. Improving management of one area cannot "offset" the destruction of an area that is currently a high quality functioning woodland. While keeping common species and communities common is important, the fact that these woodlands include an endangered ecological community and habitats of threatened species makes this proposal more unacceptable.

2. The woodlands (including their soils) also have values as a carbon store and in the regional water cycle. Areas that have been cleared also have some of these values. Digging them up, storing the bits and puting it back after mining on top of the piles of crumbled rock will result in release of some of the stored carbon and gross alteration for ever to the way the water cycle functions. The thin layer of top soil will not enable recreation of the same types of ecological communities - not in a thousand years. Some of the same plant species may be able to grow there but not all. Some animals may die out as a result of cumulative impacts or climate change and never be able to return. New communities will develop and the new landscape will have some values but they won't be equivalent to the present values.

3. Leard State Forest is public land that was set aside to be kept as a publicly owned forest. It should not be destroyed for the private benefit of mining companies and their customers nor for very short term public financial gain from royalties. It should be managed sustainably for many hundreds of years not wrecked for 20 years of profit and royalties.

4. Similarly, the soil and ecological resources of the privately owned parts of the project site should be sustainably managed and handed on to future generations in better not poorer condition. I am sceptical about the claim that some land can be restored to class 3 agricultural value. Whether or not that is possible, there is no plan to restore class 4 areas to class 4 and leaving a final void is not leaving that land in equal or better condition.

5. The final void is unacceptable. When water evaporates from its surface that will enable water from higher groundwater layers to move into it, at least inperiods when evaporation exceeds rainfall. Being connected to coal seams it is likely to have water quality that is toxic to many species.

6. The whole mine and the adjoining mines will grossly alter the regional surface and groundwater systems, with adverse impacts on other water users. The fact that contaminated water had to be released from mines in this area in recent wet weather shows that the mining companies have not planned on avaoiding pollution in all types of weather events: worse extremes are likely to occur in the next few decades due to climate change and worse still in millenia to come. The mine therefore exposes pollutants that have been trapped for millenia and should be expected to cause future pollution as well as changing ground and surface flow patterns.

7. Goonbri Creek should not be moved. there should be no mining anywhere near it. There is too much risk that the engineers will make a mistake, e.g. not enough freeboard, or that future people will not understand the importance of leaving the proposed wall in tact, then the creek could be deverted into the void in some future big flood event (like or bigger than that which wiped out Grantham in Qld).

8. The expanded mine is to extract both steaming and coking coals. Australian and world economies should be moving rapidly to reduce their dependence on and use of steaming coal by using less energy and shifting to renewable sources in order to minimise risks of serious climate change. Our economies should also be reducing their dependence on extracting and using raw materials, particularly non-renewable ones like coking coal, to reduce both the impact of mining and carbon emissions (e.g. from mining/transport equipment burning oil and in steel making). We should be making better use of the steel, aluminium and other materials we have already produced. Yes, I do use non-renewable resources because I live in and try to help improve our society: a society which needs to reorganise itself partly by planning to significantly shift away from inefficient use of non-renewables. Planning in NSW should be aiming to achieve this, not to enable ongoing dependence on fossil fuels, wasting of non-renewable resources, and destruction of functioning ecosystems in the vane hope that a little effort will be sufficient to replace them. If no new coal projects were approved the markets would get a strong signal to shift economic resources into efficiency, recycling and renewable.

Thank you for considering these issues.
Name Withheld
Object
Armidale , New South Wales
Message
I oppose the proposed expansion of the Tarrawonga Coal Mine because of the following reasons:
1. The proposed "permanent" re-alignment of Goonbri Creek which is a 4th order stream in good to excellent condition, will turn a natural asset into a drain. The mine should halt 300m prior to Goonbri Creek and leave the creek in its current, natural and permanent location. Goonbri Creek is a major component of the groundwater recharge for the area of Barbers Lagoon and the township of Boggabri.
2. The clearing of 397 Ha of Native Vegetation including some
vegetation in the Leard State Forest. The consequence of this clearing is to increase the cumulative impact to the Leard Forest from the Boggabri Coal and Maules Creek Coal mines. This Forest is PUBLIC LAND and is being provided to a largely foreign owned company for private profit.
3. The project area will be rehabilitated by spreading a thin layer of topsoil over the overburden embankment. This is not sufficient to ensure the water holding capability can sustain White Box and other native trees which are currently found in the area.
4. The disturbance of surface water flows from the existing mine due to the overburden embankments has directed large volumes of mine water from within the project area onto the flood plain during the Nov 2011 and Feb 2012 floods. The increased project area in the Goonbri Creek Catchment due to the mine expansion will exasperate this issue.
5. The plan to leave a final void where there was native vegetation is not best practice. The void does not return the land to its pre-mining land capability and creates an evaporative pump that permanently negatively impacts on the ground water.
6. The water contained in the final void will increase in toxicity
and be a threat to native animals in the area and as shown in the recent flood event could be a major threat to the floodplain.

Pagination

Project Details

Application Number
MP11_0047
Assessment Type
State Significant Development
Development Type
Coal Mining
Local Government Areas
Narrabri Shire
Decision
Approved With Conditions
Determination Date
Decider
IPC-N
Last Modified By
MP11_0047-Mod-10
Last Modified On
19/10/2023

Contact Planner

Name
Paul Freeman