The NSW Independent Planning Commission has conditionally approved the Mount Pleasant Optimisation Project near Muswellbrook.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
MACH Energy sought approval to extend the life of the existing mine until December 2048 and deepen part of the open cut mining area, allowing for the extraction of approximately 444 million tonnes of run-of-mine coal over the life of the mine.
The Project would also increase the existing approved extraction rates from 10.5 to 21 million tonnes per annum of run-of-mine coal.
READ MORE:
The commission said on Wednesday that it had granted conditional consent for the project.
In its Statement of Reasons for Decision the commission found the application should be approved, subject to strict conditions including:
- air quality and noise impacts of the project are capable of being minimised, managed or at least compensated;
- the greenhouse gas emissions for the project have been adequately estimated and are permissible in the context of the current climate change policy framework;
- Opportunities exist for the applicant throughout the life of the project to deploy existing, emerging and future technologies to improve the abatement of greenhouse gas emissions;
- impacts on historic heritage are capable of being managed;
- any harm to Aboriginal cultural heritage can be acceptably managed through conditions of consent;
- biodiversity impacts can be suitably avoided, mitigated and/or offset, including impacts to Delma vescolineata;
- the Project can be managed such that it would not result in a significant impact to surface water and groundwater resources;
- visual impacts associated with the Project would be generally similar to those under the existing approval and would reduce over time as a result of progressive rehabilitation;
- the Project would have a net positive economic impact through the provision of up to an average of 447 direct and indirect full time equivalent jobs in the Muswellbrook and Upper Hunter LGAs, 643 FTE jobs in the wider Hunter Valley region, and 444 FTE jobs elsewhere in NSW.
The Department of Planning and Environment completed its assessment of the application in May and recommended to the Commission that the Project be approved.
A three-member commission panel inspectyed the site and hosted a two-day Public Hearing in July.
The Commission received 689 submissions in support of the Application, 251 objections, 20 comments and 80 emailed submissions.