
Despite opposition from the Plains Clan of the Wonnarua People (PCWP) and the New South Wales Heritage Council (NSWHC), NSW Planning has recommended the Swiss multinational corporation Glencore be given approval to expand its Glendell open-cut coal mine at Mount Owen in the Hunter Valley.
Planning NSW 聽to the Independent Planning Commission (IPC) on February 22, describing it as 鈥渁pprovable鈥. This is despite an聽. The NSWHC is warning about irreversible impacts on heritage sites in the Hunter Valley, reminiscent of the Juukan Gorge outrage in Western Australia.
Glencore wants to bulldoze and excavate on sites recording some of the most brutal frontier violence in NSW in the mid-1820s, including a site of a likely massacre.
At the centre of the controversy is the colonial Ravensworth Homestead, which Glencore has proposed to relocate so it can mine the remainder of the former Ravensworth Estate 鈥.
PCWP chairperson Robert Lester wrote in 2020:聽鈥淭he PCWP states that the area in question was and is a landscape that clearly records inland wars waged upon our people covering a large area of the massacre of our people and as such should be treated as a sacred site.鈥
Lock the Gate Alliance spokesperson Georgina Woods聽said the IPC鈥檚 decision on the mining project, due in 12 weeks, was a 鈥渓ine in the sand鈥 for the Hunter Valley鈥檚 past and future.
鈥淭he independent Heritage Council warned the government that the harm of this mining project would be irreversible, but these warnings have been ignored,鈥 she said.
鈥淲e cannot allow a multinational coal mining company to tear up an irreplaceable site that tells the unique story of the Hunter and its communities which Traditional Owners want to see protected.
鈥淲e will never get back what we will lose if we allow Glencore to rip up this heritage in the Hunter Valley and continue its rapacious climate-wrecking coal expansion plans. This is about the Hunter鈥檚 past, as well as its future, and we will not stand for it.鈥
George said Glencore announced a聽聽two years ago, claiming to recognise the importance of the Paris climate goals. 鈥淭he聽Glendell聽expansion project shows how hollow Glencore鈥檚 climate change commitments are,鈥 she said.
to continue mining coal for a 鈥渇urther 21 years鈥 beyond current approvals.
NSW Greens MP David Shoebridge said coal is in its 鈥渄ying days鈥 and pointed to Origin Energy鈥檚 decision to close Eraring power station earlier than expected. He said the government鈥檚 push to approve the mine鈥檚 extension was 鈥渦nconscionable鈥 and said it was 鈥渃ritical鈥 the federal environment minister Sussan Ley listen to the Traditional Owners 鈥渢o avoid a repeat of the Juukan Gorge destruction鈥.