LNP backs community call for Labor to end Adani delays
Categories: Shadow Minsterial
- LNP repeats calls for Annastacia Palaszczuk to guarantee no further delays to Adani projec
- Annastacia Palaszczuk must listen to business and community leaders who say Labor’s groundwater laws will kill vital job-creating projects
- Labor can’t keep changing the goal posts on advanced projects that have already received state and federal approvals, including the Acland coal mine
The LNP Opposition has repeated its calls for Annastacia Palaszczuk to guarantee the people of North and Central Queensland that Labor’s new environmental legislation won’t delay Adani’s Carmichael mine, following the release of an open letter from regional community leaders and businesses today.
Shadow Mines Minister Andrew Cripps said the open letter – signed by business and community leaders from Rockhampton, Townsville, Whitsunday, Charters Towers, Mackay and the Central Highlands – was a clear message that Labor must guarantee an end to further roadblocks and delays.
“When community leaders right across North and Central Queensland publicly plead with the government not to allow its new environmental legislation to kill this project, surely Annastacia Palaszczuk and her local Labor MPs must listen and act,” Mr Cripps said.
“These industry and civic leaders are on the ground in these regions and will be left to pick up the pieces in their local communities if these projects are jeopardised by further lengthy court appeals.
“These 17 recognised leaders from business, industry and local government all agree that Adani’s project will deliver thousands of much-needed jobs and investment to their region.”
“Labor must put an end to the uncertainty and guarantee their latest green tape scheme won’t delay this project, which has already been subjected to lengthy and stringent environmental assessment.
“If Ms Palaszczuk doesn’t give that guarantee, she is straight out ignoring the Central and North Queensland community leaders who have put their name to paper today and she is putting local jobs at risk.”
Mr Cripps said other vital projects were also being held to ransom by green activists who have replaced resource sector unions as the primary drivers of the Palaszczuk Labor Government’s mining policies, threatening the security of the jobs of their members.
“The last thing we need is major projects like New Hope’s Stage 3 at Acland, which has overwhelming support from the local community, facing further delays because of the Palaszczuk Labor Government’s proposed groundwater laws,” he said.
“With Labor’s State Conference this weekend, it will be interesting to see if the CFMEU puts up a fight for the jobs of its members at Acland, or if the union is silenced to preserve Labor’s preference deal with the Greens.”
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