The Living Wonders climate cases have generated considerable public interest. These legal updates provide factual information about the 2023 Federal Court proceedings.
Federal Court Judge Justice Shaun McElwaine has dismissed the Living Wonders climate cases - the first court challenges to a coal or gas decision made by Australia’s current Environment Minister.
The Environment Council of Central Queensland (ECoCeQ), represented by Environmental Justice Australia, had sought judicial review of the Minister’s climate risk assessment of two giant coal mines in NSW: Narrabri and Mount Pleasant.
Justice McElwaine found Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek had not acted unlawfully in her application of Australia’s national environment laws as they stand.
He said that because of the way the law is currently written, whether or not the Minister should explicitly consider climate change when making decisions under national environmental laws was a matter for the parliament.
In doing so, the Court explicitly noted the considerable public interest in these cases.
Unless it is appealed, the judgment effectively clears the way for the Minister to ignore climate change in her risk assessment of all new coal and gas projects on her desk – of which there are 25.
ECoCeQ is awaiting an assurance from the Minister that she will not rush to approve these and the other pending coal and gas projects on her desk while it considers its appeal rights.
In her risk assessments for the mines, the Minister had accepted that the information provided to her by ECoCeQ showed that:
- Greenhouse gas emissions from burning coal and gas have severe adverse consequences for our climate;
- Many Matters of National Environmental Significance (nationally protected threatened plant and animal species, and places like World Heritage properties, the Great Barrier Reef and Ramsar wetlands) have been or will be affected by climate change and its effects;
- There is a linear relationship between increases in human-caused greenhouse gas emissions, and increases in global temperature, such that every tonne of emissions adds to global warming; and that
- To limit global warming, deep reductions in greenhouse gas emissions are required.
However, the Minister did not accept that the emissions from these coal mines would have an “impact” on the places and ecosystems protected by the national environmental law, within the definition of “impact” as the law is currently written.
In these circumstances, the Court considered that the case wasn’t about whether the Minister does or doesn’t accept the impacts of climate change on threatened species and protected places.
His Honour considered that, as it is currently written, Australian environmental law gives the Minister “considerable power” to choose how she decides what risks fossil fuel projects pose to the environment.
This considerable power allowed the Minister to employ reasoning that is colloquially known as the “market substitution” or “drug-dealers defence” as well as the “drop in the ocean” logic when making her decision.
Justice McElwaine concluded that the Minister, in deciding that the emissions from these coal mines did not count as an “impact” on places and species protected by the law, had acted in line with what the law allowed her to do.
Ultimately, the Judge stated that:
Ultimately, the applicant’s arguments, anchored by the extensive scientific material relied on, raise matters for Parliament to consider whether the Minister’s powers must be exercised to explicitly consider the anthropogenic effects of climate change in the manner the applicant submits they must.
Decision due in landmark climate cases against Australia’s Environment Minster and two mining companies
The Federal Court will hand down its ruling in the landmark Living Wonders climate cases in Melbourne tomorrow.
Australia’s Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek and two giant coal mining companies are being taken to court over their failure to protect Australia’s living wonders – including the Great Barrier Reef and koalas – from climate harm.
The two proceedings are the first court challenges to a coal or gas decision made by Australia’s current Environment Minister and the outcome of the cases is likely to affect all pending coal and gas decisions on the Minister’s desk.
Since May 2022, the Environment Minister has approved four new or expanded coal mines, despite the world’s leading scientists issuing their ‘final warning’ that there can be no more coal mines from this year.
What: Interview and vision opportunities following the judgment with the Environment Council of Central Queensland and lawyers from Environmental Justice Australia.
Where: Outside the Federal Court, 305 William Street Melbourne
When: Judgement at 2.15pm Wednesday, 11 October 2023
Who:
- President of the Environment Council of Central Queensland, Christine Carlisle
- Elizabeth McKinnon, Co-CEO, Environmental Justice Australia.
For media enquiries, please call Jem Wilson on (03) 8341 3110 or email [email protected]
Unpacking the drug dealers' defence and the legal challenge to it
It’s an argument that has been used repeatedly by fossil fuel companies to deflect responsibility for the harm that coal and gas is doing to our environment.
The market substitution argument – also known as the drug dealer’s defence – has been deployed for decades to defend massive coal mines – from Adani’s Carmichael Coal Mine to Clive Palmer’s Waratah Coal project.
It’s based on a simple but, our clients argue, flawed premise: if we didn’t supply the coal, another mine would, so the harm of our coal doesn’t matter.
But of course, digging up and burning coal is the single biggest cause of climate damage, which is causing vast and irreversible harm to the animals, plants and places we all love. And when we do it, we are likely to cause that harm. This, in simple terms, is part of the logic behind the Living Wonders legal intervention.
Refusing to accept responsibility for damaging our climate.
The Environment Council of Central Queensland (ECoCeQ), represented by Environmental Justice Australia, is taking on this argument to court in two landmark Living Wonders climate cases.
The environment council is challenging federal Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek and two coal mining companies (a Whitehaven subsidiary and MACH Energy) over the asserted climate harms of their coal mines.
ECoCeQ argues the ‘drug dealer’s defence’ is a dangerous logic that is out of step with the law, and the Minister acted unlawfully and irrationally by accepting it and refusing to act on the risk of climate damage. The case also challenges the Minister’s risk assessment of these two coal mines on multiple other bases including that the Minister was not legally permitted to effectively write off the significance of these mines because they are each but one source of greenhouse gas emissions (known as the ‘drop in the ocean defence’).
Day 3 in the Federal Court
20 September 2023
The Living Wonders climate cases concluded today.
The cases, brought by the Environment Council of Central Queensland (ECoCeQ), challenged the Federal Environment Minister’s risk assessment decisions for the proposed Mount Pleasant and Narrabri Underground coal mine extensions.
In the morning, Mr Emmett SC continued his submissions on behalf of the coal mine proponents. Mr Emmett referred to some previous cases about the EPBC Act, and argued that the Minister was able, consistently with the law, to use substitution reasoning to decide that there would be no net increase in greenhouse gas emissions resulting from the mine extensions.
Mr Emmett also argued that the Minister applied the precautionary principle appropriately, and pointed out that the Minister had said in her reasons, “I took the precautionary principle into account in my decision”. Mr Emmett said the Minister considered the likelihood of future emissions from the mine through a “certain geopolitical lens” – referring to the future market for thermal coal – and that this was not a matter of ‘scientific uncertainty’. In these circumstances, Mr Emmett said, the precautionary principle had “no mandatory work to do”.
Mr Stephen Lloyd SC then made his arguments on behalf of the Minister for the Environment. Mr Lloyd began by attempting to summarise ECoCeQ’s case into five “propositions”, and then sought to rebut each of these propositions.
Mr Lloyd said that the Minister accepted that there was a ‘causal chain’ between mining the coal in these mine extensions and, for example, coral bleaching that would harm the Great Barrier Reef. This was said by Mr Lloyd to be an ‘indirect consequence’ of the coal mine extensions. However, Mr Lloyd said that the Minister was allowed, under the law, to decide that there was “no necessary link” between this coal mine extension and an increase in greenhouse gas emissions, because the demand for coal could be met by other mines.
At this point, the Judge, his Honour Justice McElwaine said, “If that’s right, every new coal mine would be assessed on the same basis, so we just keep on approving coal mines”.
Mr Lloyd replied that that was not what the Minister was saying, and that the EPBC Act “is not directed to having the assessment schemes under the Act be directed to greenhouse gas emissions in relation to coal mines”. Mr Lloyd referred to the assessment of these matters under state laws, and said that the EPBC Act “is not the only Act which considers these environmental assessments”.
His Honour noted that this Act is the Act “that deals with matters of national environmental significance”.
Mr Lloyd responded by saying that while the Act “deals with matters of national environmental significance for actions that are a substantial cause of harm to matters of national environmental significance, the Act was not sculpted for or designed for a matter where the driver is a historic rise in the amount of carbon dioxide by – at a global level – by a million different causes in which each individual source is relatively small”.
After lunch, Mr Nekvapil SC made the arguments in reply to the submissions made on behalf of the Minister and the coal mine proponents.
Mr Nekvapil clarified ECoCeQ’s arguments and responded to the points made by Mr Emmett and Mr Lloyd. Mr Nekvapil emphasised the breadth of the species, places and ecological communities potentially impacted by climate change, and reiterated ECoCeQ’s argument that the Minister’s reasons did not indicate she had understood, as required by law, that there are different future scenarios that could play out as to the extent and severity of the climate change impacts on these species, places and ecosystems protected by the law.
In response to Mr Emmett’s argument that the precautionary principle did not have work to do because the future coal market was a “geopolitical” consideration, Mr Nekvapil took the Court to the work of the IPCC Working Group III. This work which modelled many different scenarios assuming different types of action across industries like transport and energy.
Mr Nekvapil said that this work of the IPCC Working Group III, where many different feasible scenarios had been modelled and no one scenario could be said to be more ‘probable’ than another showed that the extent to which coal would form part of the future energy mix was a matter of “scientific uncertainty”, and therefore the precautionary principle did apply to this part of the Minister’s reasoning.
Mr Emmett for the mines said that if the Act was interpreted in line with ECoCeQ’s argument, then other high-emitting industries, including agriculture, concrete and so on, would need to work out whether their projects were required to be referred under the EPBC Act (as in, whether their resulting greenhouse gas emissions could have a “significant impact” on all the species and places protected by the law).
In response to this, and in closing ECoCeQ’s case, Mr Nekvapil argued that if the Minister and the coal mines approach was accepted, then climate change, “the greatest threat to the entire suite of matters of national significance goes completely ignored by the national environmental protection Act”.
Day 2 in the Federal Court
19 September 2023
The Living Wonders climate cases continued for Day 2 in the Federal Court today before Justice McElwaine.
The cases, brought by the Environment Council of Central Queensland (ECoCeQ), challenge the Federal Environment Minister’s risk assessment decisions for the proposed Mount Pleasant and Narrabri Underground coal mine extensions.
Three key things happened in Court today:
1. The Court ruled on whether climate evidence can be part of the cases.
His Honour Justice McElwaine ruled that an expert report about climate modelling filed by ECoCeQ would be admitted into evidence in the cases (subject to whether the argument it relates to is successful).
Another expert report filed by ECoCeQ by an energy market economics expert was not admitted into evidence.
2. The final elements of ECoCeQ’s arguments were made by their barristers.
Mr Nekvapil SC finished presenting the remaining grounds in ECoCeQ’s challenge.
This included argument about why they say the Minister didn’t properly apply the ‘precautionary principle’.
The precautionary principle is a key concept in federal environment law, which says that a ‘lack of full scientific certainty should not be used as a reason for postponing a measure to prevent degradation of the environment when there are threats of serious or irreversible environmental damage’.
Mr Nekvapil argued that, although the Minister accepted that she was required to take the precautionary principle into account, she was not properly guided by it when she made findings about the impacts the mines could have on the species and places protected by the law.
Mr Nekvapil said this was because the Minister’s reasons show that she reached her conclusion that the mines would not impact these species and places first, and only considered the precautionary principle after reaching that conclusion.
The argument was that this approach incorrectly ‘put the cart before the horse’, and didn’t leave the principle with any work to do in guiding the Minister’s decision-making process. ECoCeQ’s argument is that this is the wrong application of the law.
ECoCeQ also made the argument that the Minister did not comply with what was required by federal environment law when determining whether the emissions from each of the coal projects would be a ‘substantial cause’ of the serious harm to threatened species and places protected by the law.
In her reasons, the Minister accepted that climate change would cause serious harm to threatened species and special places protected by the national environmental law. However, the Minister said that if the mines caused any net increase in greenhouse gas emissions, the additional amount of submissions would only be ‘very small’ compared to the annual quantity of greenhouse gas emissions produced in recent years. Therefore, the Minister said she was not satisfied that the emissions from burning the coal would be a ‘substantial cause’ (within the terms of the law) of the events like coral bleaching and habitat loss that would impact on the species and places protected by the law.
ECoCeQ submitted that when the Minister assumed that if they went ahead, the emissions from these mines would create only a ‘very small’ amount of emissions compared to the total greenhouse gas emissions in the future, she was assuming a future world in which global greenhouse gas emission continue to be very high.
ECoCeQ’s argument included that it was not logical for the Minister to only assume such a world for the purpose of her findings. In ECoCeQ’s argument, this is not a valid approach to the Minister’s task under the law.
3. Coal mine proponents’ arguments began
In the afternoon, the senior barrister for the two mine proponents, Mr James Emmett SC, also began making the proponents’ arguments in response to ECoCeQ’s challenge. He also addressed the Court on the urgency of the matter being resolved.
The coal mine companies commenced by answering a question from Justice McElwaine about the urgency of the cases. In arguing that the resolution of these matters is urgent, Mr Emmett noted that the proponent for Narrabri, a subsidiary of Whitehaven Coal, said that: ‘before the [NSW Land and Environment Court decision of July 2023 relating to the proposed mine] had been handed down … draft conditions were being discussed with the Minister, the Federal Minister in relation to Narrabri.’ Mr Emmett then clarified that these were ‘draft conditions for the EPBC Act approval’.
In relation to the Mount Pleasant project, Mr Emmett said that: ‘there is an existing approval from 1999 that permits mining in an area which is described as the north pit that cannot be utilised until the approval of the proposed action’.
However, Mr Emmett also noted that there is a separate hearing in the NSW Land and Environment Court in November 2023, challenging the State-level approval of this proposed mine.
Mr Emmett then began making the proponents’ arguments against ECoCeQ’s challenge, and will continue those submissions tomorrow morning. In particular, these were focussed submissions on why the mining companies say that the Minister was permitted to use substitution reasoning.
Substitution reasoning is as follows: if these two projects don’t go ahead, other companies will dig up and sell an equivalent amount of coal anyway, so approving these two projects won’t cause a ‘net increase’ in global greenhouse gas emissions.
The hearing will resume at 10.15 am AEST tomorrow.
Day 1 in the Federal Court
18 September 2023
The Living Wonders climate cases started in the Federal Court today before Justice McElwaine. The Environment Council of Central Queensland (ECoCeQ) is challenging Federal Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek’s environmental risk assessment of the Mount Pleasant and Narrabri Underground coal mine extension projects.
In Court, Senior Counsel for ECoCeQ, Emrys Nekvapil SC, started the opening submissions for ECoCeQ’s case.
In the decisions under challenge, the Minister relied on substitution reasoning. In short, this reasoning says: if these two projects do not go ahead, other companies will dig up and sell an equivalent amount of coal anyway, so approving these two projects won’t cause a ‘net increase’ in global greenhouse gas emissions.
ECoCeQ’s barrister made several arguments about the legal problem with the Minister using substitution reasoning in her decisions about risk of harm under Australia’s national environmental law.
ECoCeQ’s first argument is that the Minister’s task under the law is to assess the likely harm of the project itself, in a world where this project did go ahead. And, not, what would happen if it didn’t.
This argument is a legal one about the proper question the Minister is required by the law to ask herself when doing risk assessments.
Mr Nekvapil used the example of a cutting down a forest and destroying threatened species habitat. If substitution reasoning was allowed then the person who cut down the forest would be able to say, “Well, I didn’t impact the forest because if I hadn’t cut it down, someone else would have.”
ECoCeQ also argued the reasoning is flawed because it is impossible to predict definitively what will happen in the future, in the cases of these two mines.
ECoCeQ’s argument here is that the Minister cannot logically assume that if these coal mines do not go ahead, other equivalent coal will be extracted somewhere else. It’s one possible scenario – but there are many other ‘really possible’ scenarios, including better futures where the world phases out thermal coal and global warming does not exceed 1.5 degrees.
In support of this argument, the Court was taken to the analysis of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which represents the work of the world’s eminent climate science community. The IPCC does not make predictions about what exact scenario will happen in the future, because it is impossible to predict the future resolution of many different variables including human behaviour with certainty. Instead, the IPCC uses modelling to consider what the world could look like if certain things happen, like continuing to burn fossil fuels for energy or switching to renewables.
Mr Nekvapil asked the question if the world’s entire collection of scientific experts cannot be sure what is going to happen, how could the Minister be certain that if these projects did not go ahead, the same amount of coal will be dug up anyway?
The day wrapped with arguments about whether ECoCeQ’s expert evidence should be allowed into the proceeding. Justice McElwaine will make a decision about this tomorrow morning. ECoCeQ’s barristers will then continue their arguments.
Pre-hearing summary
July 2023
The Living Wonders climate cases are due to be considered by the Federal Court in Melbourne in September 2023.
The cases have generated a lot of public interest, so the purpose of these updates is to provide factual information about the proceedings and where they are up to.
The two proceedings filed by the Environment Centre of Central Queensland (ECoCeQ) are the first court challenges to a coal or gas decision made by Australia’s current Environment Minister.
ECoCeQ is seeking a judicial review of the Minister’s decisions, which effectively refused to recognise the climate risk associated with plans to extend Mount Pleasant and Narrabri coal mines in NSW for decades to come.
Mining companies join proceedings
A case management hearing was held in Melbourne on 21 June 2023 before the Hon Justice McElwaine.
Narrabri Coal Operations Pty Ltd, the proponent of the Narrabri underground coal mine extension, and MACH Energy Australia Pty Ltd, the proponent of the Mount Pleasant Optimisation Project, successfully applied to be joined as respondents in each of the Living Wonders cases.
During the case management hearing, the Minister’s legal representatives indicated to the Court that following the companies joining as Respondents, the Minister would take on a Hardiman position* at the substantive hearing of the matters and take a less active role in relation to the questions of fact at the hearing.
The matters have been listed to be heard together before the Hon Justice McElwaine in the Federal Court in Melbourne from 18 September 2023, estimated to run until 22 September 2023.
* See R v Australian Broadcasting Tribunal; Ex parte Hardiman (1980) 144 CLR 13.
Parties involved in the Federal Court proceedings:
The two applications are referred to as the Mt Pleasant judicial review proceeding and the Narrabri judicial review proceeding.
MOUNT PLEASANT JUDICIAL REVIEW PROCEEDING
Applicant: Environment Council of Central Queensland Inc.
First Respondent: Minister for the Environment and Water, The Hon Tanya Plibersek MP
Second Respondent: MACH Energy Australia Pty Ltd
NARRABRI JUDICIAL REVIEW PROCEEDING
Applicant: Environment Council of Central Queensland Inc.
First Respondent: Minister for the Environment and Water, The Hon Tanya Plibersek MP
Second Respondent: Narrabri Coal Operations Pty Ltd
Other proceedings
Bushfire Survivors for Climate Action, represented by EDO lawyers, previously launched separate judicial review proceedings in the Land and Environment Court of NSW challenging the Independent Planning Commission’s approval for the extension of the Narrabri Underground coal mine extension.
The judicial review application was heard in February 2023 and was dismissed by the Land and Environment Court on 5 July 2023.
The Denman, Aberdeen, Muswellbrook, Scone Healthy Environment Group Inc, represented by EDO lawyers, has also commenced proceedings against MACH Energy and the Independent Planning Commission of NSW, in the Land and Environment Court of NSW, in relation to the Mount Pleasant Optimisation Project. The hearing is currently listed for 10 November 2023.
About Narrabri
A Whitehaven subsidiary wants to extend underground mining operations at the existing Narrabri Underground mine near Narrabri, NSW, in the Gunnedah Coalfield.
Narrabri Coal Operations Pty Limited is proposing an extension to the approved underground mining area to gain access to additional coal reserves which would increase the mine life to 2044, an additional 13 years. The Proposed Project will involve the extraction of an additional approximately 82 million tonnes of coal.
About Mount Pleasant
MACH Energy proposes to mine deeper at its Muswellbrook Mount Pleasant mine site in the Upper Hunter Valley in NSW, in its bid to double its annual extraction and extend mine operations by more than 20 years.
It wants to increase the open cut coal extraction within its existing open cut coal mine, including accessing deeper coal reserves and continued use of the controlled release dam and associated infrastructure that was approved through Bengalla Mine State and Federal approvals, and to extend the life of the mine from 2026 to 2048.