Protesters gathered outside the NSW Independent Planning Commission (IPC) on July 16 to urge it and the Coalition state government to save the precious Bylong Valley, in Central West NSW, from a new thermal coalmine.
The IPC is due to make a decision on the future of South Korean company KEPCO鈥檚 Bylong mine proposal in the near future.
Bylong farmer Phil Kennedy said: 鈥淭here are just so many reasons why this mine cannot go ahead.
鈥淭his valley is so gorgeous and so productive. It would be a crime to ruin it with a dangerous coalmine, putting water resources and the Growie River under strain.
鈥淲e help produce food and fibre for the rest of NSW in this valley 鈥 yet KEPCO and the department think a great dirty coalmine is a better use of this country.
鈥淲e are also producing hay in this valley for export to other farmers in NSW, even during this drought.
Rally organiser and Lock the Gate Alliance spokesperson Nic Clyde said: 鈥淲e are demonstrating to let the IPC know that the Bylong Valley is too precious to be torn up for a dirty great coalmine.
鈥淭he Bylong mine would ravage high quality farmland and drain underground water aquifers in a previously unmined rural valley.
鈥淭he combined open cut and underground mine would produce 6.5 million tonnes of thermal coal for the export market, and would create more than five times the carbon emissions than the now scrapped Rocky Hill mine, which was rejected in the Land and Environment Court in February, in part due to the greenhouse gases it would produce.鈥
A copy of the Bylong Declaration, declaring 鈥渟upport for protecting the Bylong Valley from coalmining鈥, was presented to a representative of the IPC at the end of the rally.
[For more information on the campaign visit .]