The process of unloading coal from the (inevitably “crippled”) coal carrier Shen Neng is continuing slowly at Hervey Bay, after the ship was moved again over the weekend, this time in closer to Fraser Island to protect it and the vessels unloading it.
The ship ran aground on the Great Barrier Reef at Easter, inflicting significant damage on the Douglas Shoal, in about the most blatant symbol possible of what Australia’s addiction to coal will do to national icons such as the reef.
The charging of the Chinese crew of a Chinese-flagged vessel in relation to the grounding has enabled politicians and the media to pretend the incident is all about foreigners doing the wrong thing by Australia and its great natural heritage. Instead, this is primarily about a nation addicted to coal exports and willing to do whatever is necessary to grow them.
The antics accompanying efforts to get the vessel out of Australian waters since then have shone a light on the clash between Queensland’s obsessive determination to keep pumping out coal exports and not merely environmental concerns but the needs of larger industries such as tourism, which in the Great Barrier Reef region employs 63,000 people.
The Shen Neng was originally to be taken to the port of Gladstone. It lay anchored outside the port for more than a week before the Australian Maritime Safety Authority and Maritime Safety Queensland decided it should wasn’t safe to take it into the port and instead it should be moved over 200 kilometres to the south off Hervey Bay, where it will have its 65,000 tonnes of coal offloaded.
That put it right in the middle of the pristine Great Sandy Marine Park, alarming local conservationists and tourism operators who only found out about the decision by accident on May 7.
Conservationists had claimed that the reason it wasn’t taken into Gladstone was not due to safety concerns, but out of fears that the vessel would sink, potentially blocking access from Gladstone and slowing other coal carriers leaving the port. The vessel has been taking on 10 tonnes of water a day. But this was dismissed by authorities. MSA general manager Patrick Quirk insisted the vessel was structurally sound. A rather dinky animation was produced by MSQ showing how the operation to remove the coal at Hervey Bay would proceed without problem, leaving the vessel free to sail away.
But Quirk admitted last Tuesday “this ship’s got nothing left — she’s on the bones of her arse in terms of having been damaged”. Authorities slapped a two nautical mile exclusion zone around the vessel to prevent Greenpeace and concerned locals from trying to find out more about the vessel’s condition. According to people who saw the vessel on the weekend, it is now sitting perilously low in the water.
Quirk said last week that if the vessel did sink, the environmental impact of sending tens of thousands of tonnes of coal to the bottom of a pristine marine park would be “minimal”. What he didn’t say was that the impact in Gladstone Harbour would be significantly greater — economically, that is.
The intersection of the coal industry and the Queensland environment is of growing concern in the region. At the very end of last year, the Queensland Conservation Council wrote to environment minister Peter Garrett requesting a strategic assessment of the impact of “extractive industries” in the region around Bowen under the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act. Garrett replied in March that while the Commonwealth wanted to pursue such an assessment, the Queensland government had blocked it.
Based on statistics furnished by the Queensland government itself and pulled together by Greenpeace, there are presently port expansion plans that would increase coal loading capacity from 214 million tonnes a year to 424 million tonnes a year by 2020. This will mean a 100-200% increase in coal-carrying vessels such as the Shen Neng, nearly all of which would be moving through the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park area.
You can count on the Shen Neng debacle being repeated.
Why is there no call to sack the head of Maritime Safety Queensland? We have two pristine island national parks oiled in twelve months – Moreton Island and North West Island – and now the Great Sandy Marine Park put at risk.
This is more than just bad luck. There were clear and obvious steps MSQ could have been taken to prevent the original incidents, and there are clear alternatives now. If the head of the safety regulator is not responsible, then who is?
MSQ should have closed the Port of Brisbane while Cyclone Hamish passed in March last year (when the Pacific Adventurer leaked oil all over Moreton Island), and long ago should have insisted on ship control in and out of Gladstone through Barrier Reef waters (where our biggest coral cay, North West Island, was oiled by the Shen Neng last month).
But to decide to unload a seriously damaged bulk carrier in the nearest convenient marine park is just bizarre. It’s plain that our regulator cares more about the interests of wealthy shippers than our special coastal environment.
Patrick has just text me to say that the SH 1 (affectionately known as the Shit House 1 ) is departing our fair park toomorrow afternoon , roger currie President Widebay Burnett Conservation Council .
signing this e- petiton will force the bligh goverment to act .
We would like to let you know that your conforming E-Petition is up on the website for electronic signatures.
http://www.parliament.qld.gov.au/view/EPetitions_qld/CurrentEPetition.aspx?PetNum=1448
To: The Honourable the Speaker and Members of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland
The petition of the residents of the State of Queensland draws to the attention of the House, the grounding of the Shen neng 1 and the subsequent decision to use the Great Sandy Marine Park (GSMP) , as a place of refuge under S 10 & 11 of the Protection of the Sea (Powers of Intervention) Act 1981.
The incident is a pertinent example of the potential for the place of refuge (GSMP) to be considered the ideal safe anchorage for future coal export shipping incidents along the Queensland coastline, which is contrary to the acceptable use of a designated Marine Park.
The petitioners draw to the attention of the House that the Queensland government has declined to participate in a strategic assessment under S 146 of the EPBC Act 1999 for a determination of the likelihood of significant impacts from coal and gas export, to the following Matters of National Environmental Significance (MNES): World Heritage Area Values, National Heritage Values
Wetlands of international importance (Ramsar Wetland values), Listed threatened species and communities, Listed migratory species and the Marine environment.
We the undersigned residents therefore request that the house makes a decision to participate in the said assessment, to ensure that the unfortunate incident is not repeated and that the risks from coal and gas export to the regional economic, ecological and social values derived from the MNES , are identified and mitigated accordingly.
Principal Petitioners:
Roger M Currie 55 Blackbutt Rd Talegalla 4650 ( President )
WBBCC
SHEN NENG 1 EPITHAPH
The most controversial ship to grace the waters of the Great Sandy Marine
Park since Captain James Cook waved at the Butchulla people standing on
Indian Head on Fraser Island in 1770, the stricken Coal Carrier Shen Neng 1
, is close to setting sail as a slow boat to China . How fitting it is that she left before the 24th May , the date the James Cook stopped at the site that became the town of 1770 .
Fare well Mumma Shen , we tolerated you this time , but never again .
A diving assessment team is set to survey the hull tomorrow for prosecution
gathering of evidence before she is tugged north , back to its original safe
anchorage near Gladstone.
A departure around the 29th May is hoped to commence the maritime
equivalent of what Chairman Mao Ze Dong called ‘the long march’, said
roger .
It is without a heavy heart that we farewell this Australian steel made visage
of potential mining impacts to our salty backyard , xiájǔ ( to go a long way
away ), qièmò ( you must not ) , huílai ( return) .
bǎoxiǎn lǚyóu ( safe journey) May she and all who sail in , on and around
her , have a safe journey , don’t call us , we will not call you , said roger
She has been able to get down to her desired ‘coal’ weight, with the able assistance of her personal trainers ( Spitzer Salvage ) and we have crowned her ‘Queensland’s Biggest Coal Loser’ .
We hope to never see again in our lifetimes a coal ship of her girth or larger
Towed to a marine park in Queensland, this can be achieved if the Bligh government participates in a strategic risk assessment with the Federal government under S 146 of the EPBC Act 1999 of that possibility, said roger