Loading
The government says Victoria needs a ready supply of raw materials as the state grows and embarks on its unprecedented “big build” of new infrastructure. Victoria’s population is forecast to reach 10 million before 2050.
After the application was lodged with the council in 2020, Planning Minister Richard Wynne removed the decision from the council’s hands and referred it to an independent planning panel. There were about 80 objections on the grounds the plan was inconsistent with the council’s biodiversity strategy and its impact on threatened species.
“This approval sends a strong signal that the government is putting mining ahead of the environment, and ahead of the people who live near the sand mine,” said Catherine Watson, a spokesperson for the Save Western Port Woodlands group, which has 350 members.
The group had presented a petition to parliament with 4000 signatures. Ultimately, it wants the woodlands to be turned into a national park, to be co-managed by the Bunurong Land Council and Parks Victoria.
The planning panel found the native vegetation corridor was likely to be “irreversibly damaged” by clearing, saying it was “critical” that ongoing habitat connectivity was provided between the nearby Gurdies Nature Conservation Reserve and Grantville Bushland Reserve.
“The issue of policy balance has been challenging for the panel, and there is a direct tension particularly between policies relating to extractive industries and native vegetation,” the panel’s report said.
But the panel also noted the sand resource had been identified as a priority project on the state’s extractive industry list. Globally, demand for sand is growing because of urbanisation and extraction locations are shifting to fragile environments, such as rivers, coastlines and oceans, which is severely impacting these ecosystems.
Jordan Crook, a nature campaigner with the Victorian National Parks Association, said the decision to “sever” the Western Port Woodlands with sand mining showed the government did not value Victoria’s natural resources.
“It’s death by a thousand cuts for the Western Port Woodlands and the amazing array of plant, animal and fungi species that call it home,” he said.
The panel found the company should integrate a biodiversity and vegetation management plan into the site, saying these aspects be resolved before vegetation removal begins.
Proportionately, Victoria is the state with the most cleared native vegetation, according to a report this week from the state’s auditor -general. Two thirds of Victoria is private land, and 80 per cent of this has been cleared. Illegal land clearing continues to take place across the state, and this undermines the investments in protecting the quality and cover of Victorian native vegetation, the report found.
In a statement, Dandy Premix Quarries said the new permit contained a raft of conditions that comprehensively address all environmental risks associated with the quarry. The business has been in operation since 2013 and is expected to employ 20 people under expanded operations.
In total, Dandy Premix has committed to protecting more than 117 hectares of private, uncleared land that abuts two existing public nature conservation reserves, it said.
“The final approval was shaped by the community feedback, with protections in place to ensure we can maintain access to the these vital resources without compromising the environment,” a government spokesperson said.
Cut through the noise of the federal election campaign with news, views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Sign up to our Australia Votes 2022 newsletter here.