Conservation group Coast and Country, which had filed an appeal in theSupreme Court for a judicial review, will argue that the stategovernment's approval to the controversialproject was not made lawfully and should be overturned.
The green group's spokesperson Derec Davies said, "C&C is of the view that the Queensland Department of Environment and Heritage Protection made an error of law and did not comply with an important environmental obligation when approving construction of one of the world's biggest coal mines."
CEO ofEnvironmental Defenders Office Queensland (EDO Qld), the state's non-profit community legal centre for environment and lawyers forC&C, Jo-Anne Bragg said, "The licence, called an environmental authority, was granted by the state government department on February2,2016, and is one of two main Queensland Government licences the project for Central Queensland's Galilee Basin needed before it could commence operation."
Bragg said today'sjudicial review was an opportunity for
the lawfulness of the government's decision-making on this matter to be scrutinised by the independent Supreme Court of Queensland.
Issuing asharp response to the latest legal hurdle,Adani company in a statement said, "The suggestion by serial litigant Land Services of Coast and Country in statements that a five-year approvals process is rushed, or that approvals sought and given under successive governments of both political persuasions is anti-democratic, or that the government has erred in applying the legislation, defies common sense."
The statement further stressed that the company wouldnot be deterred by such"delaying tactics", and once these challenges are resolved, it wouldstandready to build its long term future with Queensland and expressed confidence in state and federal processes.
A federal court in August last year had revoked the original approval due toenvironmental concerns. In October last year, the project got a new lease of life after the Australian government gave its re-approval.
