By - Press Release
Category - Projects
Source - http://tribune.com.pk
Category - Projects
Source - http://tribune.com.pk
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| Projects |
Environment Minister Tony Burke said GVK, a conglomerate with
interests in airports, hotels and transportation as well as energy, must
work with national authorities to secure approval for the project,
vital to its coal ambitions.
The government of Queensland last week gave the go-ahead for GVK’s
Alpha project in a move that would normally trigger a 30-day deadline
for approval from the national government. But Burke said the new state
government was “shambolic” and that its approval fell short of national
standards. “I am stopping the clock on the Alpha project,” Burke told
reporters. “We have no interest in a delayed process. But we are not
willing to compromise environmental standards.”Burke said officials from
GVK were already working with the federal government and that he was
confident a decision could be made ahead of the company’s planned final
investment decision on the Alpha project later this year.
The scheme is the front-runner among several projects in the untapped
Galilee Basin in Queensland, where rival Indian group Adani Enterprises
is planning an A$10.9 billion coal and rail project.
The decision reflects a tougher national approach to projects which
could impact on the Great Barrier Reef off the Queensland coast, and
follows a U.N. report warning of threats to the reef posed by industrial
developments.
Galilee Basin projects have been slow to win approvals and face
strong opposition from environmentalists worried about coal burning,
port dredging and ship traffic along the fragile reef. But the
conservative Queensland government, elected in March, is keen to clear a
backlog of resource schemes, with around A$51 billion of projects
awaiting approval.
The resources industry and national and state governments have been
working to streamline the environment approvals by setting up uniform
standards, so companies only need to go through environment assessments
once. But Burke said the new Queensland state government had done a
“hopeless level of work” on the Alpha project, putting the streamlined
approval process at risk. “I’m not prepared in the name of cooperation
to abandon environmental protection,” Burke said. “In terms of the
company, it is a significant inconvenience.” ($1 = A$1.0288)
Source - http://tribune.com.pk/story/389017/australia-delays-approval-of-9-7b-coal-project-by-indias-gvk/

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