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Legal fight steps up against Adani's coal mine in Australia

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January 15, 2015 16:35 IST

An Australian environmental group launched a legal challenge against Adani Enterprises' $7 billion Carmichael coal mine project in the Galilee Basin, renewing the focus on a key issue in a rancorous election campaign in Queensland state.

Conservative state Premier Campbell Newman has put development of the Galilee Basin at the heart of his bid for re-election, in a campaign that is being seen as a guide to the fortunes of Prime Minister Tony Abbott's federal government.

The court fight is the latest in a string of challenges to a project that the national and state governments want to go ahead, but which is opposed by green groups and tourist operators concerned about climate change and potential harm from shipping through the Great Barrier Reef.

Infrastructure conglomerate Adani, whose founder has close ties to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, last year signed a memorandum of understanding for a loan of up to $1 billion from the State Bank of India for the mine, rail and port project, which it aims to build by end-2017.

The Mackay Conservation Group (MCG) is calling for the mine's approval to be rendered invalid on the grounds that Environment Minister Greg Hunt failed to take into account the impact of carbon emissions from burning coal produced by the mine.

All of the coal produced is expected to be exported to India and South Korea. Adani said in a statement the move was not about the merits of the approval process, which led in a string of environmental conditions being imposed on the project, but was "a highly politicised action" aimed at ending the state's coal industry.

Newman called the snap poll this month amid fears his party's grip at the local level is being eroded by Abbott's toxic poll numbers after a first year in office hobbled by missteps and a souring economy.

He has promised to take a minority stake in the railway line needed to bring the coal to port, as well as to develop an onshore disposal site for dredge spoil in a bid to bring in jobs.

The state's opposition Labor Party has said it would not subsidise the project's rail line, and has challenged claims about the amount of revenue the mine would generate for the state.

Analysts and project finance experts believe Adani may have underestimated the challenge of raising funds for the project. Much bigger coal rivals, such as BHP Billiton, have shelved coal developments at a time when a third of Australia's coal output is making losses.

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