Siemens to stay in controversial Aussie coal project


The Siemens CEO promises that the company will create a body to better ‘manage in the future the questions of protecting the environment’. – EPA pic, January 13, 2020.

SIEMENS’ boss yesterday announced that the German conglomerate has decided to remain involved in a controversial coal-mining project in Australia, despite massive environmental criticism as the country faces unprecedented bushfires.

The €18 million (RM81.4 million) contract calls for Siemens to supply rail infrastructure for the Carmichael mine in Queensland, near the Great Barrier Reef.

“We have just finished our special meeting…. We have evaluated all the options and have concluded that we must fulfil our contractual obligations,” said CEO Joe Kaeser on Twitter.

He also promised that Siemens, which supports the Paris climate agreement to curb carbon emissions, will create a body to better “manage in the future the questions of protecting the environment”.

The proposed Carmichael mine, owned by India’s Adani group, has long been controversial, but anger over the project has been fanned by Australia’s catastrophic bushfire season.

Activists from Fridays for Future and Extinction Rebellion staged demonstrations in a dozen German cities against the mine last week, including outside Siemens’ Munich headquarters.

The open-cut Carmichael mine is set to become operational next year and produce up to 27 million tonnes of coal annually.

The troubled project, which has been scaled down since it was first announced, has run into repeated delays caused by legal and regulatory hurdles, as well as funding problems.

Supporters said the mine will bring hundreds of much-needed jobs to rural Queensland in eastern Australia.

But, conservationists argued that it threatens local vulnerable species, and means coal will have to be shipped from a port near the already-damaged Barrier Reef.

The world’s largest coral-reef system faces multiple threats to its survival, most notably rising sea temperatures caused by climate change, water pollution and coral-eating starfish. – AFP, January 13, 2020.


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