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Farmer John Hamparsum in front of an irrigation ditch overlooking the black-soil plains on his farm. His family farm abuts the Shenhua site. Photographs: www.sallyaldenphotography.com
Farmer John Hamparsum in front of an irrigation ditch overlooking the black-soil plains on his farm. His family farm abuts the Shenhua site. Photographs: www.sallyaldenphotography.com

Battle for Liverpool Plains: Chinese coal project tears at fabric of rural NSW

This article is more than 9 years old

Agricultural produce from some of the richest soil in Australia is in high demand in China, but so is its coal. With a federal verdict imminent on the proposed Shenhua open-cut mine, farmers and miners are divided over the region’s future

John Hamparsum squats down, scoops up a handful of earth and holds it out for me to sniff.

“You can smell fertility, smell living organisms. It’s like really good compost,” he says.

We’re standing in a field of ripening sorghum on John’s property on the Liverpool Plains in north-western New South Wales. The black soil whose bouquet he is inviting me to savour is some of the richest in Australia.

Sorghum from these plains is in high demand in China. It’s used to produce a popular traditional white liquor called baijiu.

But another Australian commodity that lies beneath the black soil plains is dividing local residents, threatening a political upset at the state election in March, and causing big headaches for the federal government.

Guardian Australia understands the agriculture minister, Barnaby Joyce, and environment minister, Greg Hunt, will both make a flying visit to the plains within days.

Shenhua Watermark Coal, a subsidiary of the Chinese state-owned Shenhua Group, is waiting for final approval from Hunt for a $1.2bn open-cut coalmine on the edge of the plains, a little more than three kilometres from Hamparsum’s property.

A coal train crosses the Liverpool Plains.

“This is about dining versus mining,” Hamparsum says. “We grow everything from durum wheat for premium pasta manufacturing to the corn in corn chips.”

Agricultural production on the Liverpool Plains was worth $2.4bn in 2013-14. The soils are 40% more productive on average than other farming regions in Australia.

The stakes are high, and Shenhua, the world’s largest coal producer, is champing at the bit.

This week, Shenhua Australia chairman, Liu Xiang, turned up the pressure on Hunt, telling Guardian Australia that, after eight years, “Shenhua has spent $700m and has little tangible progress to show for this investment in NSW.”

If Hunt gives the green light, Shenhua will begin work on the first of three pits covering 3,500 hectares, from which it will export nearly 270m tonnes of coal over the next 30 years. Most of it will be burned in power stations in China.

Local farmers, community groups and the NSW Farmers Federation are mounting a last-ditch offensive to stop the mine. And if that means inviting journalists to eat dirt, so be it.

“You’ve really got to taste the soil to know how good it is,” Hamparsum says, offering me a morsel.

The Sydney radio presenter Alan Jones, who has given fierce backing to the campaign, repeated that invitation on the ABC’s Q&A program last week, telling the audience “this is soil you could eat”.

Jones is just one of a chorus of voices who have joined farmers in opposing the mine – including AustralianSuper and Reserve Bank board member Heather Ridout – and state and federal National party politicians are starting to feel the heat.

Last week the NSW deputy premier, Troy Grant, and the state member for Tamworth, Kevin Anderson, flew up for a meeting at the home of Andrew Pursehouse, another prominent Liverpool Plains farmer.

“They probably thought they had the answers before they were here, but I think there were a lot of question marks in their minds when they left,” says Pursehouse, speaking to me on the veranda of his house. He likes to joke that he shares three boundaries with the Chinese government; land belonging to his neighbours was acquired by Shenhua at up to 10 times the market price.

Some of those questions will be about the mine’s impact on the NSW state election. Anderson holds the seat on a margin of 6.8% but local sources say National party polling shows Anderson is vulnerable and could lose to independent Peter Draper.

Draper is not a farmer; he makes his living as a driving instructor. He has held Tamworth twice before, and says he has never experienced such a groundswell of support, which he attributes to his opposition to the mine.

Draper is scathing about the state government’s Planning Assessment Commission (Pac), which gave its final approval for the mine in late January. The PAC found that protection of the black soil plains was “critically important”, but that the mine’s location on the hills above the plains “should not jeopardise” agricultural production.

“The [PAC] process is designed to rubber stamp mines so that the government can get money in,” says Draper, after a rally outside Shenhua’s headquarters in Gunnedah to mark Chinese New Year.

The rally was organised by local Gomeroi traditional owners, who are angry that grinding grooves in rocks on the mine site will be moved if the mine goes ahead. The grooves were used by the Gomeroi to sharpen axes and spears.

Speaking at that rally, Pursehouse called Draper “a champion”, and urged voters to support him.

It can’t have come easy: Pursehouse’s father was heavily involved in the National party and treasurer of the local branch. But Pursehouse says farmers feel abandoned by the Nationals.

“I just can’t believe that we have farmers now that are having to support the Greens,” he says. “We know we should be voting for the National party, but how can you vote for a National party that won’t support protecting the Liverpool Plains?”

The message must be getting through to Joyce, the federal deputy leader of the Nationals. He told local ABC radio shortly after the Pac decision was announced that he had “never agreed” with coal mining on the Breeza plain, south of Gunnedah, and that the Shenhua mine was “anathema”.

Last week Joyce wrote to his cabinet colleague Hunt asking if “urgent consideration” could be given to stopping the mine in light of community concerns. Joyce is also pressing the minister to reconsider the Namoi catchment water study conducted by Schlumberger Water Services in 2012.

Shenhua has consistently argued that the Watermark mine would not affect the plains’ alluvial aquifers, which feed the Namoi catchment, because the three open-cut pits will be on ridges above the plains.

But those ridges are only 50m high, and opponents of the mine argue that none of the water modelling done so far, including an independent study commissioned by the Pac, addresses the connection between the ridges and the plains.

The highly productive agricultural region of the Liverpool Plains produces an annual average of more 233,175 tonnes of sorghum.

“We need to understand the connectivity between the plains, the Great Artesian Basin and the Gunnedah Basin aquifers before we can determine the impact of such large-scale coal mining on the Namoi catchment,” says Hugh Price of the Namoi Community Network, “but we still don’t have enough data to do that.”

Shenhua’s project director in Gunnedah, Paul Jackson, maintains “the science has been peer-reviewed to death”.

Jackson says that if Hunt gives the mine the go-ahead, construction will begin early in 2016. The first wagon of coal will head down the rail line to Newcastle in December 2017, and from there to China.

“That means 425 new jobs at start-up, ramping up to 600 when we hit full production,” he says.

Jackson says none of those jobs will be fly-in fly-out. “There’s a culture of mining in this region. There’s been coal mining in Gunnedah since 1885. We don’t believe it’ll be a problem to employ locals on the project.”

That’s music to the ears of Colleen Fuller, the president of the Miners’ Support Group NSW, and a local councillor in Gunnedah.

“We need those jobs,” says Fuller, whose husband was a coalminer for 40 years. She remembers all too vividly the last downturn in the mining industry in the early 1990s. “There were suicides and attempted suicides across the region. Half the shops were closed in Gunnedah. We lost a lot of business.”

Thanks to the mining boom, Fuller says, times have never been better for local business. But she says the Watermark mine is needed to secure the future and keep young people in the region.

Others have questioned the economic rationale for the mine, citing falling world coal prices, a supply glut and a commitment by the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, to reduce emissions and his country’s dependence on coal.

Rory Simington, the principal Asia Pacific coal analyst with Woods Mackenzie, says that at today’s prices, “very few coal projects in Australia make a lot of sense”.

Despite this, he expects coal consumption in China to increase at 3% a year over the next 10 years, and coal imports to increase 6%.

Simington says the Watermark project is a resource of high-energy, high-quality thermal coal, which makes it highly attractive for Beijing in the longer term.

“Despite the leadership’s move to reduce coal’s share in power generation, the absolute level of coal consumption will increase, and coal will still be a key fuel,” he says.

If Simington is right, there would be a strong incentive for Shenhua to extend its mining operations out into the vast reserves of coal that lie under the Liverpool Plains. Many farmers believe that is Shenhua’s long-term plan.

Hamparsum says Shenhua is the largest underground miner of coal in the world. “The big concern is that they’ll get this approval and then they’ll ask for a modification to go underground because that’s where the good coal is, very deep and there’s lots of it,” he says.

But Jackson maintains that an extension of the mine is “never going to get a guernsey”. He says Shenhua’s exploration licence rules out long-wall mining under the black soil plains.

The Liverpool Plains brings more 365m loaves of bread and 62.5m packets of pasta to the table annually through its wheat production alone.

The war of attrition between Shenhua and the mine’s opponents has taken its toll on local people. “Emotionally in the community it’s very divided”, says Andrew Hope, the mayor of Liverpool Plains Shire Council. Hope runs a signwriting business in Quirindi, on the south-east edge of the plains, and supports the mine. He says whichever way Hunt decides in March, mending bridges between the two sides will be “socially and emotionally challenging”.

Pursehouse admits there’s a perception the fight is all about a small group of wealthy farmers defending their acreage. “I have friends in town who say to me quite often that we are selfish. They say: ‘Andrew, it’s OK for you, your children have got a future in your business, our children have to go to Sydney or Newcastle or Brisbane for a job.’ ”

He acknowledges they have a point. But he says the local community must look beyond the 30-year lifespan of the mine. “This is not about me, and it’s not about them. It’s about their children and their grandchildren. These farms will produce food and fibre for hundreds and hundreds of years ahead.”

If Hunt approves the mine there will be rejoicing in Shenhua’s Beijing boardroom – and perhaps a round of toasts using baijiu made from sorghum grown on the plains. But the battle on the ground may be just beginning

“This will not be the end,” Pursehouse says. “This farming community has fought hard for the last nine years. We fought a blockade for 620 days against BHP when they first came here, and we won. It was the best thing that ever happened to the community. If you’ve seen the blockades of [coalmines] at Maules Creek and the Pilliga state forest, you’ve seen nothing compared to what’ll happen on the Liverpool Plains.”

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