State Significant Development
United Wambo Open Cut Coal Mine
Singleton Shire
Current Status: Determination
Interact with the stages for their names
- SEARs
- Prepare EIS
- Exhibition
- Collate Submissions
- Assessment
- Recommendation
- Determination
Consolidated Consent
Modifications
Archive
SEARS (5)
EIS (32)
EA (3)
Submissions (3)
Agency Submissions (14)
Response to Submissions (25)
Additional Information (17)
Assessment (21)
Determination (5)
Approved Documents
Management Plans and Strategies (102)
Agreements (3)
Community Consultative Committees and Panels (2)
Reports (8)
Independent Reviews and Audits (4)
Notifications (2)
Other Documents (15)
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
Penalty Notice issued to United Collieries Pty Ltd (SSD-7142, Singleton Shire LGA)
On 18 December 2020, the Department issued a $15,000 Penalty Notice to United Collieries Pty Ltd for failure to comply with ‘Transmission suspension tower’ ground vibration limits at the United Wambo Coal Mine. On 24 September 2020 a blast at the mine recorded a ground vibration level of 167.06 mm/s at a nearby Transmission suspension tower in exceedance of the 50mm/s limit.
Inspections
18/02/2020
9/03/2020
04/11/2020
09/12/2020
19/04/2021
27/09/2022
25/01/2023
1/03/2024
27/04/2023
18/05/2023
28/05/2024
Note: Only enforcements and inspections undertaken by the Department from March 2020 will be shown above.
Submissions
Gerald McCalden
Object
Gerald McCalden
Message
Su Morley
Object
Su Morley
Message
-This project proposes clearing 464ha of vegetation, close to half of which is Central Hunter Valley Eucalypt Forest, a critically endangered ecological community under the Environment Protection Biodiversity Conservation Act.
- The impacts of this project on biodiversity will be unacceptable and it must be refused development consent. It will clear 223ha of a critically endangered ecological community, including moderate to good quality patches that are critical to the community's survival.
- The proponent is offering a 'biodiversity offset' package that will protect just 7% of the required area of this community protection as existing woodland. In contrast 56% of the offset requirement is proposed to be met through future mine rehabilitation. This is a clear violation of the 25% limit on meeting offset obligations through mine rehab promises, and is a clear indication that impacts on this community cannot be offset and the mine should be refused consent.
- 38 nearby residences are predicted to be impacted by increased noise pollution from this project. This area of the Hunter has been severely depopulated because of large scale mining, and further loss of farmers and private residents will cause ongoing destruction of regional social fabric. Increased dust emissions will also exacerbate health problems in the region.
- Threatened species such as the Spotted-tailed Quoll will lose important habitat if this project proceeds. These species are already in severe trouble and any further loss of habitat will drive them towards extinction.
- This mine and the three surrounding it will cause more than two metres draw down in the productive alluvial aquifers of the Hunter River and Wollombi Brook. The cumulative loss of water and productivity in these water sources and the wholesale destruction of surface water catchments for their tributaries is already too great.
- This project has been developed at the expense of the owners of the United mine fulfilling obligations to close and remediate a mine that has been inoperational for six years and which was supposed to cease mining altogether four years ago.
- It's going to leave behind two final voids, and delay rehabilitation at both the United and Wambo mine sites. Final voids are an unacceptable impact of mining that damage waterways for hundreds of years into the future, and are not wanted by the NSW community.
- This is the first mine to be assessed under new economic assessment guidelines, but the economics of it don't stack up.
- There's increased unemployment in the local area for this project since early 2014. Over the same period at least half a dozen damaging mine expansion projects were approved by the State Government on the basis that doing so would be good for employment in the region. New mine approvals are not securing jobs in the Hunter, and we need another strategy.
- This mine is going to exacerbate the oversupply of coal in the export market, which has been a key driver of job losses. Further oversupply will drive further drops in the price of coal and this will lead to lay-offs and even mine closures, as it has in the last two years.
- Despite applying the new economic guidelines, the assessment of the mine fails to include the economic cost of worsening air quality from coarse particle pollution and lost water from the Hunter River and Wollombi Brook.
- It also fails to include the economic cost of the downstream greenhouse gas emissions from the coal mined at the site. The downstream emissions likely to be generated by this project are 259.3 million tonnes. Applying the per tonne carbon costs used in the economic assessment in Appendix 19, this would result in costs of a staggering $2.3-4.9 billion, dramatically reversing the proponent's claim that this mine will have a net economic benefit.
I have not developed the above text because I could not put it better myself. I have read all of these points and fully agree with each point.
yours sincerely,
Su Morley
Yours sincerely,
Su Morley
Islington
NSW 2296
Craig Shaw
Object
Craig Shaw
Message
The thing that I am most outraged by is the proponent's reliance in part on the Upper Hunter Assessment Strategy, which has not yet been released.
To quote the Newcastle Herald's editorial today (22/9):
"The Upper Hunter Assessment Strategy, first flagged four years ago, is supposed to be a sort of catch-all for biodiversity issues in the Upper Hunter. (...)
"But when a mine - in this case the United Wambo open-cut - seems to be able to refer to a document that no one has seen, it rightfully raises red flags.
"If the mine conforms to the assessment, what exactly is in the assessment? Why has its release been so thoroughly delayed? Is it based on rigorous science? How much say have the firms who helped pay for it had in its structure?"
Lock the Gate makes the following point regarding environmental impacts, showing that - in the absence of this yet-to-be-released strategy - the project violates offset clear offset obligations:
"The proponent is offering a 'biodiversity offset' package that will protect just 7% of the required area of this (Central Hunter Valley Eucalypt Forest) community protection as existing woodland. In contrast 56% of the offset requirement is proposed to be met through future mine rehabilitation. This is a clear violation of the 25% limit on meeting offset obligations through mine rehab promises, and is a clear indication that impacts on this community cannot be offset and the mine should be refused consent."
There can be no natural justice in a referral to the PAC without rigorous public examination of the UHAS: "falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus".
Miriam Riley
Object
Miriam Riley
Message
John Brattan
Object
John Brattan
Message
Gillian Reffell
Object
Gillian Reffell
Message
If we are to come anywhere close to meeting our international commitments to keep global warming to significantly less than 2 degrees there can be no more new mines.
Committing to an approval for 23 years of 10Mtpa is unacceptable!
With coal in structural decline a very careful assessment also needs to be made of the company's capacity to meet ALL of its obligations should this mine become a stranded asset.
Please do not approve it.
Gillian Reffell
Hunter Communities Network
Object
Hunter Communities Network
Message
Nature Conservation Council of NSW
Object
Nature Conservation Council of NSW
Message
Louisa Connors
Object
Louisa Connors
Message
The Hunter Valley can't afford to lose any more of its critically endangered remnant woodland. It can't afford any worsening air quality or any more draw down of its rivers and alluvial aquifers. It can't afford to worsen the oversupply of coal that is costing jobs. It cannot afford this mine, and the project should not be approved.
Julie Sheppard
Object
Julie Sheppard
Message
These are the reasons for my objection to this proposal:
1. United Wambo is a joint venture superpit in an area of the Hunter Valley where cumulative impacts of mining are already too great
2. An important area of critically endangered bushland supporting habitat for over 20 threatened species will be destroyed and cannot be offset
3. Two large final voids will be left in the landscape
4. Wollombi Brook and the Hunter River will lose more base flows
5. Poor air quality in the region will continue to worsen
6. 38 residences will be impacted by increased mine noise
7. 259.3 million tonnes of additional greenhouse gases will be generated
8. There will be no public benefit from the project, cumulative social and environmental impacts have not been adequately accounted for
9. Peabody Energy, now in bankruptcy, is not fit and proper to hold a mining lease
10. The project is not an ecologically sustainable development
Greg Crowe
Object
Greg Crowe
Message
With having the unfortunate dealing of the latest Mount Thorley Warkworth corrupt approval there now an understanding of how the PAC operates.
Being a close resident and having to experience now ever increasing noise and dust that is being released from Wambo coal mine that is now amplified by MTW existence.
As Rio Tinto has proven to be a lousy neighbour of agricultural land, can't see where is lot will be any different.
Buying of adjoining propertied will only mean more farming land being degraded with poor tenants that are only there for the house rental, neglecting the farming value of the property, bringing there ill bread dogs to roam and kill surrounding live stock as is now the practise of Rio Tinto renters.
The future of coal is now at an end, with the world now demanding cleaner forms of energy; even if coal is wanted it must be low sulphur and ash content coal which the Hunter Valley does not produce. The PAC approving new coal mines would be the equivalent to giving the approval for a new 8 track cassette factory.
Barbara Davis
Object
Barbara Davis
Message
Leonie Burnham
Object
Leonie Burnham
Message
It has not been made evident of what the plan is for the harvesting and re-distribution of this valuable commodity will be.
The loss of biodiversity is not acceptable for flora fauna and human betterment.
It is ugly from every view point.
Lynden Jacobi
Object
Lynden Jacobi
Message
Development consent should be refused. This development will clear 223ha of a critically endangered ecological community, including moderate to good quality patches that are critical to the community's survival.
The proponent's biodiversity offset' package will protect just 7% of the required area of this community protection as existing woodland. In contrast 56% of the offset requirement is proposed to be met through future mine rehabilitation. This is a clear violation of the 25% limit on meeting offset obligations through mine rehab promises, and is a clear indication that impacts on this community cannot be offset and the mine should be refused consent.
38 nearby residences are predicted to be impacted by increased noise pollution from this project. This area of the Hunter has been severely depopulated because of large scale mining, and further loss of farmers and private residents will cause ongoing destruction of regional social fabric. Increased dust emissions will also exacerbate health problems in the region.
Threatened species such as the Spotted-tailed Quoll will lose important habitat if this project proceeds. These species are already in severe trouble and any further loss of habitat will drive them towards extinction.
This mine and the three surrounding it will cause more than two metres draw down in the productive alluvial aquifers of the Hunter River and Wollombi Brook. The cumulative loss of water and productivity in these water sources and the wholesale destruction of surface water catchments for their tributaries is already too great.
This project has been developed at the expense of the owners of the United mine fulfilling obligations to close and remediate a mine that has been inoperational for six years and which was supposed to cease mining altogether four years ago.
It's going to leave behind two final voids, and delay rehabilitation at both the United and Wambo mine sites. Final voids are an unacceptable impact of mining that damage waterways for hundreds of years into the future, and are not wanted by the NSW community.
This is the first mine to be assessed under new economic assessment guidelines, but the economics of it don't stack up.
There's increased unemployment in the local area for this project since early 2014. Over the same period at least half a dozen damaging mine expansion projects were approved by the State Government on the basis that doing so would be good for employment in the region. New mine approvals are not securing jobs in the Hunter, and we need another strategy.
This mine is going to exacerbate the oversupply of coal in the export market, which has been a key driver of job losses. Further oversupply will drive further drops in the price of coal and this will lead to lay-offs and even mine closures, as it has in the last two years.
Despite applying the new economic guidelines, the assessment of the mine fails to include the economic cost of worsening air quality from coarse particle pollution and lost water from the Hunter River and Wollombi Brook.
It also fails to include the economic cost of the downstream greenhouse gas emissions from the coal mined at the site. The downstream emissions likely to be generated by this project are 259.3 million tonnes. Applying the per tonne carbon costs used in the economic assessment in Appendix 19, this would result in costs of a staggering $2.3-4.9 billion, dramatically reversing the proponent's claim that this mine will have a net economic benefit.
The Hunter Valley can't afford to lose any more of its critically endangered remnant woodland. It can't afford any worsening air quality or any more draw down of its rivers and alluvial aquifers. It can't afford to worsen the oversupply of coal that is costing jobs. It cannot afford this mine, and the project should not be approved.
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
Edward Milan
Object
Edward Milan
Message
Hunter Environment Lobby Inc
Object
Hunter Environment Lobby Inc
Message
Jan Davis
Object
Jan Davis
Message
Because this proposal is amongst a 'super-pit' there are even greater concerns as the impacts become even more concentrated.
The two very large final voids that will result in the development of this proposal is an unacceptable consequence of mining - there must be no final voids as they are environmentally unsustainable.
the Hunter River and Wollombi Brook will lose even more base flows if mining is increased - this is totally unacceptable in this water catchment of this most degraded working river of NSW.
An important area of critically endangered species woodland will be destroyed by the development of this mine - The habitat for 20 threatened species will be destroyed, and cannot be replaced or offset.
The cumulative impacts on community health for the communities of the Hunter is being impacted with every new or enlarged coal mine development - this is not sustainable for good health outcomes.
Communities in the Hunter deserve better treatment by governments of all persuasions.