Stop seabed mining in the Cambridge Gulf

    We will send your message to Minister Swinbourn

    Dear Minister Swinbourn,

    The Kimberley coastline is considered by scientists to be among the top 4% of intact coastlines on the planet, comparable to the coasts of Antarctica and the Arctic. 

    Despite its recognised global significance, and without conducting a full assessment, the EPA has recently recommended approval of a damaging seabed mining operation in the Cambridge Gulf, East Kimberley.

    The proposal put forward by Dutch dredging company Boskalis involves mining 70 million m³ of sand from the seabed of the Cambridge Gulf over a duration of 15 years. This equates to around 28,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools of sand over the lifetime of the project. The sand is proposed to be exported for use in international construction projects.

    If approved, this proposal would set a precedent for future seabed mining across the Kimberley, effectively opening the floodgates for resources and minerals to be exploited from sensitive and unique marine ecosystems around the region. Seabed mining is considered a prohibited activity in the Northern Territory, due to the high risks it poses to the surrounding marine environment and the species that depend on it remaining intact.

    I am calling on you to reject the seabed mining proposal by Boskalis for the following reasons:

    1. Given the scale, duration, and location of this proposal, it should have been assessed through a full Public Environmental Review (PER), the highest and most thorough level of environmental assessment. Relying solely on the basic referral information originally submitted by the proponent, with no opportunity for public comment, does not align with the EPA’s statutory role and functions.
    2. The ‘further proponent information’ relied on by the EPA is grossly deficient and provides no sound basis for a recommendation for approval.
    3. In August 2021, the Northern Territory (NT) Minister for Environment exercised section 38 of the Environment Protection Act 2019 (NT EP Act) to formally declare subsea mining a prohibited activity within NT coastal and intertidal waters. The WA Government should follow the NT’s lead and permanently ban destructive seabed mining. 
    4. The extensive list of threatened marine fauna likely or potentially occurring in the area demonstrates the inappropriateness of a high-impact, high-risk proposal in this location. Species include:
      green sawfish, freshwater sawfish, dwarf sawfish, narrow sawfish, speartooth shark, northern river shark, Australian humpback dolphin, Australian snubfin dolphin , flatback turtle, green turtle, olive ridley turtle, and saltwater crocodile.
    5. Neither the proponent nor the EPA have demonstrated to any acceptable level of scientific certainty that this proposal will not have serious impacts on several of the species listed above. 

    I call on you to reject the EPA’s advice and direct the EPA to carry out a full public assessment as it should have done in the first instance in relation to such a highly damaging and risky project in the Kimberley marine environment. The WA government should firmly oppose seabed mining in Western Australia and reject Boskalis’ proposal.

    Yours Sincerely,
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