Newcrest Admits Guilt in Violating Clean Air Regulations at Cadia Goldmine

Newcrest Admits Guilt in Violating Clean Air Regulations at Cadia Goldmine

Mining⁢ company Newcrest has pleaded⁢ guilty to breaching clean⁢ air regulations in the operation ⁢of the ​Cadia ⁤goldmine, near Orange in central west New South⁣ Wales.

The⁣ NSW Environmental ​Protection Authority​ began proceedings against the‌ company in August, alleging that the operation of surface exhaust ‍fans⁤ attached ‍to the main ‍ventilation shaft for the underground‌ goldmine, dubbed ‌vent​ rise 8, had⁤ caused it to exceed ‌the standard ‌concentration of‌ solid particles⁣ under ​air ‍pollution laws.

The allegations related to March 2022.

On Friday the company pleaded guilty ‍at the first directions ⁤hearing⁤ in ⁤the land and‌ environment court to a ⁣breach ⁣of section 128 of the Protection of the Environment Operations ⁣Act 1997.

In a‌ statement, the EPA said ​it welcomed the​ guilty plea.

The regulator began investigating Cadia goldmine in May after a campaign ‌by local environment group the Cadia Community‍ Sustainability Network, which had been testing the water in household rainwater‌ tanks on properties surrounding ⁣the mine.

In July, a NSW upper⁢ house inquiry was established to examine the current ⁢and potential impacts of gold, silver,​ lead and zinc mining on human​ health, ⁣land, air and water ‍quality.

Newcrest appeared before the inquiry on⁤ its first day of hearings, last week. The Cadia general manager, Mick Dewar, told the inquiry that the mine notified the EPA and Department of ‌Planning​ and Environment ⁤in August 2022 that​ they had taken measurements that exceeded the clean air regulations. The mine‍ has⁤ since installed filtration units,‌ called “bag houses”, at a ​cost of $10m per year. ⁢Building​ a permanent filtration system‌ will cost an additional $36m, Dewar said.

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Dewar told the‌ inquiry that none of the mine’s external ‍monitors – an array of particle monitors placed around the mine’s‌ boundary – “were indicating‍ that‌ we were polluting off premises”. He said that “at no​ point in ⁤time has ​there been⁤ any evidence suggesting that VR8 is actually depositing dust or⁣ allowing⁣ dust to escape the mine lease in levels that exceed ⁤any ‍of those accepted standards or ⁢our project approvals”.

The company ⁤received two $15,000 fines from⁤ the EPA in 2022 for ⁢failing to conduct⁤ continuous air quality monitoring⁣ and dust pollution. Newcrest’s ⁣interim⁢ chief executive, ‍Sherry Duhe, rejected a suggestion at ​the inquiry last ⁤week that ⁤the fines were seen as “just ⁣a cost of doing⁤ business”.

“Our very strong aim is never to be penalised and to always be ‍in compliance,” she said. “For us, it’s really very important that ⁢we comply with regulations, that we ⁤are⁣ a⁣ good community ​neighbour and ⁢that we have that ⁢proactive positive relationship for decades to come.”

Hearings in the upper house inquiry are scheduled to continue in Orange on Tuesday and in Mudgee on Wednesday.

A sentencing hearing⁤ will be ‍held‍ in ⁣the NSW land and…

2023-09-29 02:52:05
Source‌ from ​ www.theguardian.com
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