Under pressure, Adani scales down its coalmine project

November 8, 2018
Issue 
A protest outside Adani's office in Brisbane on September 13. Photo: Alex Bainbridge

Strong support for climate action is adding to the nationwide pressure on proponents of the controversial Adani coalmine in central Queensland.

On November 1 new Adani chief executive Lucas Dow (formerly of BHP Billiton) announced that its proposed mega coalmine for Queensland鈥檚 Galilee Basin would be 鈥渟caled down鈥 and 鈥渟taged鈥.

Dow was coy about a starting date saying it was 鈥渘ot too far away鈥. Asked about the still-to-be-secured finance, he gave the same reply.

Adani now plans to export an initial 10-15 million tonnes a year, with a capacity to expand up to 27 million tonnes. This is less than half of what the company spruiked when it first proposed the project in October 2010.

Coal enthusiasts are trying to spin the scaled down mine as a 鈥渨in-win鈥 situation.聽Queensland Resources Council chief executive (and former Liberal MP) Ian Macfarlane welcomed Adani鈥檚 plans saying it gave it a better chance of getting across the line.

A cheaper rail plan and phased-mine development means that Adani will also need to secure less finance. Given that the four major banks have now distanced themselves from loaning to Adani, this was the most viable option for the project to stay on the table.

Adani has already spent聽about $3.3 billion in Australia, including more than $1 billion on preparing to build the Carmichael mine.

Federal resources minister Matt Canavan revealed just how important having Adani is, in whatever size, for the coal-loving Coalition government, when he 迟丑别听Australian Financial Review聽on November 1: 鈥淭he main thing for me is to get the first coal basin in 50 years opened up in Australia and once that鈥檚 opened, once infrastructure is built connecting that, other investments will be possible as well.

鈥淭his has never just been about just the Adani investment. It is about opening up a whole new region of opportunity for Australia as well.鈥

Those opposing the mine already know what is at stake.

The movement to stop Adani is continuing to grow and diversify. There are now about 150 local groups, a third of which are located in Queensland. They organise door-knocking, street actions, information stalls, visits to local MPs, film screenings and have blanketed neighbourhoods with Stop Adani signs.

The movement includes Galilee Blockade and Frontline Action Against Coal, which organise direct actions including stopping coal trains, and high school students who are organising a national walk-out for November 30.聽

The #StopAdani movement is also preparing a series of actions from mid-November to December 1, in the lead up to Labor鈥檚 National Conference in Adelaide over December 16-18. It has plans to maintain and grow the pressure until the federal election, due by May next year.

With defeat for the Coalition growing more likely, the movement against the mine is now focusing on Labor, at the federal and state level.

Adani still faces many obstacles. It is being investigated for breaches of existing agreements and has yet to sign an agreement with the Queensland government for a royalty holiday.聽

While Adani insists it can start the mine for a fraction of the investment it previously sought, the Queensland government has questioned Adani鈥檚 eligibility to delay its payment of royalties.

Queensland Treasurer Jackie Trad that Adani has not yet signed any royalties deal.

The state government and Adani were said to have reached an in-principle agreement over royalties 18 months ago, that would have allowed Adani to defer paying $315 million in royalties. Adani was also given an extra year to pay for a water licence due to 鈥減roject delays鈥.

Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis director of energy finance studies Tim Buckley said Adani鈥檚 Australian mining, rail and port operations are 鈥渁 rolling series of financial shell games鈥. Its recent accounts show very few tangible assets, he said, and a debt of $1.6 billion to its Indian parent.

Buckley said that meant governments, suppliers and contractors risked non-payment if the project falls over. 鈥淲hat [Adani鈥檚] done is pursued this ultra-capital light plan, where they use heavy financial leverage to avoid spending equity capital.鈥

鈥淭he government would be right to ask for some protection or security in a royalties deal. If the company goes bankrupt you don鈥檛 get repaid and Carmichael becomes a stranded asset. The risk here, global action on climate change, is a known and quantifiable risk.鈥

Buckley said Adani would need to secure a royalties deferral deal for the Carmichael project to be viable.

Stop Adani campaigners want the Queensland government to rule out any such agreement. 鈥淨ueensland Labor has already given Adani free water and a free road,鈥 Stop Adani鈥檚 Ben Pennings said. 鈥淭rad must rule out giving Adani a royalty holiday too.

鈥淎dani can鈥檛 be trusted to ever pay Queenslanders back, and we can鈥檛 afford the dangerous climate change impacts of their disastrous mine.鈥

Blair Palese from 350.org said Adani is 鈥減laying chicken with Australia鈥. 鈥淭he company is desperate to start operations while the coal-loving Coalition is still in power in Canberra, because it needs to get to financial close before the next federal election.

鈥淲e will do all we can to ensure there is no financial close, [and] this mine is killed off.鈥

Imogen Zethoven from the Australian Marine Conservation Society said it was 鈥渂eyond belief鈥 that Adani announced its plan to start digging within months less than a week after urgent warnings that there could be another severe coral bleaching event this summer.

鈥淚f Adani鈥檚 monstrous coalmine goes ahead, it will accelerate dangerous climate change, put our Reef in even more danger and threaten 64,000 tourism jobs.

She said Adani cannot be trusted, given that it is facing charges over allegedly polluting the reef with coal-contaminated water and is under investigation for potential illegal drilling at the mine site. 鈥淭his is not a company that can be trusted with our reef,鈥 Zethoven said.

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