Clear message: Adani Go Home!

Stop Adani! Thousands of Australian students march against Adani’s coal mine

Protesters want Australian govt to halt Adani coal mine project in Queensland

Agency Report | Canberra | 8 December, 2018 | 08:20 PM

Thousands of people have protested Indian mining giant Adani's plans to dig a new thermal coal mine in Queensland and have called on Australia’s state and federal governments as well as the federal opposition to stop it going ahead. Protesters marched the streets in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Cairns just a week after upwards of 15,000 school students demonstrated against government inaction on climate change. It follows the announcement last month by Adani it would self-fund the controversial project after scaling back its size and scope.

Thousands of student demonstrators took to the streets of Australia’s main cities on Saturday in their latest protest against the planned launch of a coal mine in Queensland state by Indian conglomerate Adani.

The protesters called on the Australian government to halt the coal mining project, whose construction according to Adani would begin “imminently”, Efe news reported.

Protest Organizers, Stop Adani, estimated that 15,000 people had joined the marches across the country, while the Australian Youth Climate Coalition said that 5,000 people had marched in Melbourne alone.

More than 5000 people marched in Melbourne, with Youth Climate Coalition organiser Alex Fuller saying people were motivated to join the rally after seeing the recent school strikes. “People were feeling really inspired that we could create change but they were also feeling really frustrated,” she said.
Adani Mining said the company recognised there are varied opinions about the Carmichael project and encouraged everyone to voice them safely and respectfully.
“All we ask is that people’s opinions are based on facts and that they don’t put lives at risk through irresponsible, illegal and unsafe protest behaviour,” a spokesperson said in a statement.

The rallies followed last week’s demonstrations urging action on climate change, which saw 15,000 school students walk out of class.

Students and activists then staged a sit-in at Parliament House in Canberra on Wednesday to confront Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who had criticized the student protest movement.

“Kids should go to school. We do not support our schools being turned into Parliaments,” Morrison said in November. “What we want is more learning in schools and less activism in schools.”

Australia has pledged to reduce total emissions to 26-28 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030, but a recent UN report revealed no improvement in the country’s climate policy since 2017.

The document said the latest projections published by the government indicated that emissions would remain high rather than being reduced in line with the 2030 targets. (IANS)

Climate change has historically been a thorny issue in Australia, which has seen several of its governments make policies on eliminating taxes on polluting gases or the national energy plan.

This responds to a strong conservative political sector that seeks to keep up the exploitation of fossil fuels, arguing that alternative energies or measures to mitigate climate change will raise electric tariffs.