This was published 7 months ago
WA government to spend $10m monitoring Alcoa’s mining near Perth’s dams
By Peter Milne
Alcoa’s troubled bauxite mining in WA’s jarrah forest will have extra government scrutiny costing $10.5 million over four years as the US miner seeks to repair its tarnished environmental credentials.
The funding for the Alcoa Assurance Plan in the upcoming state budget will allow the Department of Water and Environmental Regulation to check that Alcoa’s mining near many of Perth’s water supply dams meets the conditions imposed on it.
Environment minister Reece Whitby said he had high expectations of Alcoa’s environmental performance and the funding would ensure it was adequately monitored.
“Let me be clear, protecting our state’s drinking water remains paramount,” he said.
In early 2023, Alcoa’s 60th year of mining in Western Australia, the miner’s reputation was rocked by revelations from this masthead.
It was reported Water Corporation was concerned Alcoa’s forest clearing risked putting Serpentine Dam out of action for years, Alcoa had piped water containing toxic forever chemical PFAS over a drinking water dam with no regulatory approval, and the miner has not completed any rehabilitation of the 280 square kilometres of jarrah forest it has mined.
“Let me be clear, protecting our state’s drinking water remains paramount.”
WA environment minister Reece Whitby
In December, the state’s independent Environmental Protection Agency decided to review Alcoa’s mining plans which are normally approved behind closed doors by a committee of bureaucrats under legislative exemptions granted to the miner.
Typically, that action would have halted all mining in the areas being assessed because it is illegal to progress any activity on new projects under EPA assessment.
To ward off job losses the state government granted Alcoa an exemption from having to shut down its operations, imposing additional restrictions on its activities to protect the environment.
Whitby said the government was committed to supporting employment at Alcoa while its environmental conditions were upgraded to meet modern standards.
But he said the state’s backing required the company to meet its obligations.
“That included a $100 million financial guarantee from Alcoa should the state government need to respond if Perth’s drinking water dams are affected,” he said.
“Let me be clear, protecting our state’s drinking water remains paramount.”
“This funding will secure the staff and resources needed to ensure Alcoa is adequately monitored and maintain our State’s high standard of environmental protection.”
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