Carmichael City Selfie Time!
Over the past six months or so, I have been
active in protesting the Australian Government’s support for developing Adani’s
Carmichael coal mine in central Queensland. Paving the way with moneyed
infrastructure and free water to dig a filthy great pit of poor quality coal to
ship in huge quantities in dubious rustbuckets through the Great Barrier Reef
to burn in Indian power stations that are barely profitable is just wrong and
indefensible on so many levels. The Australian and Queensland Government’s
strategy to date has been to rely on sheer inertia, and a catch cry of “ten
thousand jobs” (which are inflated ten-fold, on Adani’s own figures. And never
mind the 90,000 jobs at risk from damaging GBR tourism).
However, I
don’t want to go through the full details here. For that. I will refer you to
the Stop Adani site. Instead, I want to offer another perspective: how big *is*
this biggest mine in Australian history?
From a recent conference I attended, I have
learned that many activists speak of arguing from the head and from the heart. Students
of Socrates would immediately recognise these traditions as logos (appeals to
logic) and pathos (appeals to emotion). In practical terms, you will have
difficulty persuading the head until you engage the heart. This article is an
appeal to the heart.
In giving presentations to audiences, one thing
that strikes me is how abstract it seems to talk about the biggest coal mine in
Australian history, and then wave vaguely in the direction of central
Queensland, which covers a vast amount of territory. I find it helps to offer
some visual perspective on whereabouts and size.
So, here goes.
I will begin with a simple map of Queensland. It
shows the Wangan/Jagalingou lands, the Galillee Basin (where even more coal
resides), the location of the Carmichael Mining lease, Abbotts Point, and the
railway being proposed to connect the two.
Zooming in a bit, we can see whereabouts in the
Wangan/Jagalingou land the lease is located.
A little bit more, and we have the lease footprint itself, plastered
over the Carmichael river.
Now you know where it is. So what does it mean to
call it the largest proposed mine in Australian history? I think it highly
instructive to take Carmichael on a national tour, and have some ‘city selfies’
to see what Carmichael would look like in the back yard.
Let’s begin with the City of Bowen, conveniently close
to Point Abbott. Carmichael snuggles in nicely. Who needs a billion dollar
railway now? Maybe it would look better cutting the reef off?
Next stop: Brisbane! Who needs Moreton Bay when
you can have a pit, eh @AnnastaciaMP?
Moving down to Sydney! Spans Cronulla to Richmond.
Canberra, and Queanbeyan would be swallowed
without a trace. Is that a metaphor I spy?
In Melbourne, Carmichael may not fit in Port
Phillip Bay, but you could use it to travel from Frankston to Tullamarine.
From New Norfolk to Hobart and beyond: Carmichael
on the Derwent.
Adelaide, Elizabeth, Mount Barker, and (nearly) Strathalbyn.
Perth: what’s that off Fremantle, and Kwinana,
and Rottnest Island, and... ?
Darwin to Humpty Doo is only the halfway mark!
So now you know what they mean by the biggest
(but certainly not the best) coal mine in Australian history. What do you want to do about it?
Labels: #StopAdani