
Better together: Push for Federal Government to force mining and green energy to co-exist
A new report by the Association of Mining and Exploration Companies is warning that priority access for green energy developers is putting the lucrative mining industry at risk, thrusting the issue on the agenda ahead of this month's national economic roundtable.
'We have many more competing uses for the land, no consistent rules and established industries that provide the foundational base of our economy forced to play second fiddle,' AMEC chief executive Warren Pearce said.
'It's paralysing mining development, sterilising resources and it's entirely avoidable.'
The AMEC report, Congested & Contested - Co-existence The Key to Unlocking Productivity, warns that tax and royalty revenue of $493 billion is at stake, due to 'uncertainty, delays and conflict' over land use.
It reports that a preference for exclusive rights is locking mining exploration out, including in WA's Mid-West.
Toolonga Mineral Sand's tenements for coccolith chalk near Kalbarri were terminated, to make way for the foreign-owned Murchison Green Hydrogen Project that has been awarded major project status from the Federal Government and received $814 million in Headstart funding.
'We have stated that we we can coexist. But no, the Minister has ignored that request,' Toolonga Mineral Sands managing director Ann Conlan-Nash said.
'As far as the Murchison green hydrogen project, we know that they're not going to do anything up there for probably five to six years.
'We could have been moving forward since 2020. It's been five years that we've been waiting, fighting.'
AMEC said it's an example of the rush to renewable energy 'running roughshod' over regional communities and risking a backlash from locals.
The AMEC report found meeting demand from both industries would require an equivalent of 'two Australia's' if exclusive rights are applied to all 77 million square kilometres of land.
Mr Pearce said the solution was diversification leases that had been attempted, but not often taken up, in WA.
'This has actually become a really big problem in regional WA,' he said.
'Despite the fact that all of these renewable energy project proponents say they don't require exclusive licences, not one of them are using the diversification leases. They're opting for a section 79 lease which provides exclusive tenure.
'It means they're pursuing a path that tries to lock out other users and that's the worst possible outcome.'
He's lobbying for a national model, to ensure consistency and offer investors certainty.
'Everyone benefits, because the highest value land use is multiple land use,' Mr Pearce said.
'The reality is you can do these things without actually ruining the overall purpose or economic benefit of the wind farm. 99 per cent of it will remain untouched. You just need to take a piece out of it.
'That piece creates jobs, taxation, revenues and, of course, royalties, as well as what's going on with the wind farm.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
21 hours ago
- ABC News
There is 'precedent' to recognise countries under terrorist occupation, minister says
The home affairs minister says there is "precedent" for Australia to recognise countries occupied by terrorist forces, even as the federal government maintains Hamas can play no role in a future Palestinian state. Australia has not followed France, the United Kingdom and Canada in a commitment to move to recognise Palestine at the United Nations General Assembly in September. Those nations have stipulated their endorsement of a Palestinian state is conditional on Hamas playing no role in its governance, a position the federal government also holds. However speaking on Sky News, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said there had been cases in the past in which Australia maintained relations with nations even while terror groups had controlled them. "There have frequently been countries where part of that nation has been occupied by a terrorist group and we haven't ceased to recognise the country," Mr Burke said. "Both Syria and Iraq had a long period where parts of those countries were being occupied and realistically controlled by ISIS. It didn't stop us from recognising and having diplomatic relations with those countries themselves. In that same interview, Mr Burke said Hamas was a terror group that stood "condemned" and which had caused unspeakable harm to Israelis and Palestinians. Hamas has controlled Gaza since 2007, when it took over the strip shortly after defeating rival faction Fatah in the final elections held in Gaza. The Fatah-led Palestinian Authority exercises partial control in the West Bank, though it is also administered by Israel. In a joint statement yesterday, the foreign ministers of Australia, Germany, Italy, New Zealand and the UK said they were united in their commitment to implementing a "negotiated" two-state solution as the only way to guarantee both Israelis and Palestinians could live side by side in peace. "A political resolution based on a negotiated two-state solution requires the total demilitarisation of Hamas and its complete exclusion from any form of governance in the Gaza Strip, where the Palestinian Authority must have a central role," the statement read. Shadow Home Affairs Minister Andrew Hastie said the prospect of a two-state solution that excluded Hamas was "deeply unrealistic". "Hamas still enjoys widespread grassroots support among the Palestinian people," Mr Hastie told Sky News. He pointed to polling by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research, which operates out of Ramallah in the West Bank. Its most recent poll of 1,200 people in the West Bank and Gaza, conducted in September last year, found a moderate drop in support for Hamas and in the favourability of its October 7 terror attack against Israel, though about a third expressed support for Hamas, and more than half still believed its 2023 offensive against Israel was a "correct" decision. "We saw last year in Beijing Hamas and Fatah meet, facilitated by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and sign the Beijing Declaration, which committed to a government of national unity," Mr Hastie said. "So in fact the war in Gaza has brought Hamas and Fatah together. "In order for a two-state solution to work, you have got to exclude Hamas, and that will be very difficult." The 2024 Beijing Declaration agrees to a "comprehensive Palestinian national unity that includes all Palestinian factions" and a temporary national unity government after the war — which would defy international conditions for recognition that Hamas play no role in Palestine's governance. Mr Hastie said the global community must temper its aims with realism, saying "some sort of settlement" must be pursued. "We won't have a lasting peace, that is true, there is always outbreaks in the Middle East," he said. "But we do need to move towards a peace settlement, and this is going to involve compromise and it is going to be uncomfortable. "It is trite to come up with easy solutions on a statement, this is going to be a lot of hard work. If there was an easy solution we would already be there." Defence Minister Richard Marles told ABC Insiders the only way to secure lasting peace was through recognition of both Israeli and Palestinian states. He said recognition would not be a reward for Hamas, because the terror group could play no role in a future state. "We have consistently said that Hamas can have no role in any future Palestinian state," he said.


The Advertiser
a day ago
- The Advertiser
Renew: Switching to an all-electric home is a powerful move
We hear a lot about moving to renewable energy, installing rooftop solar or getting off gas. But saving the planet is not a priority for those of us desperate to save money on our energy bills. And yes, you can do both! Australia is a world leader in rooftop solar with more than four million installed around the country, yet only one in 40 households has installed batteries. The high upfront cost of batteries means they have been out of reach for many households and businesses. But that's all changing right now. Last week, Chris Bowen announced that 20,000 new batteries were installed in July 2025. That is three times the rate of last year, and is largely due to the Federal Government's much anticipated 30% Cheaper Home Batteries Program which kicked in on 1 July, making batteries more affordable for more households. For those of us who have solar panels, investing in a battery means our home appliances will likely be free to run. Instead of buying relatively expensive electricity from providers, we will be using our solar stored energy when we need it most, such as at dinner time or for air-con in the evenings and overnight. Renewable energy technology continues to develop, and electricity has become the cheapest way to power our homes. You'll find some of your neighbours already have all-electric homes, and quite soon, other alternatives will be too expensive or no longer available. While it can be hard to find independent advice, this is where a community network like Renew can help. We are an independent, not-for-profit organisation that does not benefit or receive commission from anyone. We have experts and resources to point you in the right direction so you don't get lost. You can find out how to add a battery to your home at A few months ago, Rewiring Australia published a report showing that Australia has reached the electrification tipping point. What this means is that when it's time for us to replace an appliance, it is now better value to buy an electric one than the fossil fuel alternative, even when you include the cost of purchase and installation. According to Rewiring Australia, the average fossil fuel home could save $4400 per year if switched to all-electric. If you are building a new house, it makes economic sense to go all-electric from the start. If you have an existing home, you can replace gas appliances one by one as needed to suit your priorities and budget. The energy savings you make by replacing one appliance can help pay for the next one. For instance, when your gas hot water goes cold, don't just replace it with the same. Times have changed since you last looked - hot water heat pumps have joined traditional solar hot water as one of the most reliable and efficient hot water systems. If your gas hob is fried, get an electric induction cooktop. It's fast and efficient, and easy to clean. In our household, we don't know how we ever managed without one - I couldn't cook before, and now I can boil an egg perfectly! Above all, keep an eye on available rebates and incentives; they change frequently, and some are for limited times only. Make changes that are beneficial to your situation, as every household has different uses and needs. If you'd like to know more about this topic, talk to your local Renew branch about your home energy needs. A great opportunity to meet us is coming up this Friday, as I am coordinating the Newcastle leg of the Faster and Fairer Tour with Dr Saul Griffith, one of Australia's leading advocates on home electrification. As chief scientist at Rewiring Australia, Dr Griffith will discuss the importance and inevitability of all-electric homes. Local members will share their home electrification journeys. Come join us for a drink from 5pm this Friday, August 15, 2025, at 'The Station' in Newcastle. Tickets $10, bookings: Ewa Meyer is the Convenor of Renew's Hunter Region Branch. hunterregion@ We hear a lot about moving to renewable energy, installing rooftop solar or getting off gas. But saving the planet is not a priority for those of us desperate to save money on our energy bills. And yes, you can do both! Australia is a world leader in rooftop solar with more than four million installed around the country, yet only one in 40 households has installed batteries. The high upfront cost of batteries means they have been out of reach for many households and businesses. But that's all changing right now. Last week, Chris Bowen announced that 20,000 new batteries were installed in July 2025. That is three times the rate of last year, and is largely due to the Federal Government's much anticipated 30% Cheaper Home Batteries Program which kicked in on 1 July, making batteries more affordable for more households. For those of us who have solar panels, investing in a battery means our home appliances will likely be free to run. Instead of buying relatively expensive electricity from providers, we will be using our solar stored energy when we need it most, such as at dinner time or for air-con in the evenings and overnight. Renewable energy technology continues to develop, and electricity has become the cheapest way to power our homes. You'll find some of your neighbours already have all-electric homes, and quite soon, other alternatives will be too expensive or no longer available. While it can be hard to find independent advice, this is where a community network like Renew can help. We are an independent, not-for-profit organisation that does not benefit or receive commission from anyone. We have experts and resources to point you in the right direction so you don't get lost. You can find out how to add a battery to your home at A few months ago, Rewiring Australia published a report showing that Australia has reached the electrification tipping point. What this means is that when it's time for us to replace an appliance, it is now better value to buy an electric one than the fossil fuel alternative, even when you include the cost of purchase and installation. According to Rewiring Australia, the average fossil fuel home could save $4400 per year if switched to all-electric. If you are building a new house, it makes economic sense to go all-electric from the start. If you have an existing home, you can replace gas appliances one by one as needed to suit your priorities and budget. The energy savings you make by replacing one appliance can help pay for the next one. For instance, when your gas hot water goes cold, don't just replace it with the same. Times have changed since you last looked - hot water heat pumps have joined traditional solar hot water as one of the most reliable and efficient hot water systems. If your gas hob is fried, get an electric induction cooktop. It's fast and efficient, and easy to clean. In our household, we don't know how we ever managed without one - I couldn't cook before, and now I can boil an egg perfectly! Above all, keep an eye on available rebates and incentives; they change frequently, and some are for limited times only. Make changes that are beneficial to your situation, as every household has different uses and needs. If you'd like to know more about this topic, talk to your local Renew branch about your home energy needs. A great opportunity to meet us is coming up this Friday, as I am coordinating the Newcastle leg of the Faster and Fairer Tour with Dr Saul Griffith, one of Australia's leading advocates on home electrification. As chief scientist at Rewiring Australia, Dr Griffith will discuss the importance and inevitability of all-electric homes. Local members will share their home electrification journeys. Come join us for a drink from 5pm this Friday, August 15, 2025, at 'The Station' in Newcastle. Tickets $10, bookings: Ewa Meyer is the Convenor of Renew's Hunter Region Branch. hunterregion@ We hear a lot about moving to renewable energy, installing rooftop solar or getting off gas. But saving the planet is not a priority for those of us desperate to save money on our energy bills. And yes, you can do both! Australia is a world leader in rooftop solar with more than four million installed around the country, yet only one in 40 households has installed batteries. The high upfront cost of batteries means they have been out of reach for many households and businesses. But that's all changing right now. Last week, Chris Bowen announced that 20,000 new batteries were installed in July 2025. That is three times the rate of last year, and is largely due to the Federal Government's much anticipated 30% Cheaper Home Batteries Program which kicked in on 1 July, making batteries more affordable for more households. For those of us who have solar panels, investing in a battery means our home appliances will likely be free to run. Instead of buying relatively expensive electricity from providers, we will be using our solar stored energy when we need it most, such as at dinner time or for air-con in the evenings and overnight. Renewable energy technology continues to develop, and electricity has become the cheapest way to power our homes. You'll find some of your neighbours already have all-electric homes, and quite soon, other alternatives will be too expensive or no longer available. While it can be hard to find independent advice, this is where a community network like Renew can help. We are an independent, not-for-profit organisation that does not benefit or receive commission from anyone. We have experts and resources to point you in the right direction so you don't get lost. You can find out how to add a battery to your home at A few months ago, Rewiring Australia published a report showing that Australia has reached the electrification tipping point. What this means is that when it's time for us to replace an appliance, it is now better value to buy an electric one than the fossil fuel alternative, even when you include the cost of purchase and installation. According to Rewiring Australia, the average fossil fuel home could save $4400 per year if switched to all-electric. If you are building a new house, it makes economic sense to go all-electric from the start. If you have an existing home, you can replace gas appliances one by one as needed to suit your priorities and budget. The energy savings you make by replacing one appliance can help pay for the next one. For instance, when your gas hot water goes cold, don't just replace it with the same. Times have changed since you last looked - hot water heat pumps have joined traditional solar hot water as one of the most reliable and efficient hot water systems. If your gas hob is fried, get an electric induction cooktop. It's fast and efficient, and easy to clean. In our household, we don't know how we ever managed without one - I couldn't cook before, and now I can boil an egg perfectly! Above all, keep an eye on available rebates and incentives; they change frequently, and some are for limited times only. Make changes that are beneficial to your situation, as every household has different uses and needs. If you'd like to know more about this topic, talk to your local Renew branch about your home energy needs. A great opportunity to meet us is coming up this Friday, as I am coordinating the Newcastle leg of the Faster and Fairer Tour with Dr Saul Griffith, one of Australia's leading advocates on home electrification. As chief scientist at Rewiring Australia, Dr Griffith will discuss the importance and inevitability of all-electric homes. Local members will share their home electrification journeys. Come join us for a drink from 5pm this Friday, August 15, 2025, at 'The Station' in Newcastle. Tickets $10, bookings: Ewa Meyer is the Convenor of Renew's Hunter Region Branch. hunterregion@ We hear a lot about moving to renewable energy, installing rooftop solar or getting off gas. But saving the planet is not a priority for those of us desperate to save money on our energy bills. And yes, you can do both! Australia is a world leader in rooftop solar with more than four million installed around the country, yet only one in 40 households has installed batteries. The high upfront cost of batteries means they have been out of reach for many households and businesses. But that's all changing right now. Last week, Chris Bowen announced that 20,000 new batteries were installed in July 2025. That is three times the rate of last year, and is largely due to the Federal Government's much anticipated 30% Cheaper Home Batteries Program which kicked in on 1 July, making batteries more affordable for more households. For those of us who have solar panels, investing in a battery means our home appliances will likely be free to run. Instead of buying relatively expensive electricity from providers, we will be using our solar stored energy when we need it most, such as at dinner time or for air-con in the evenings and overnight. Renewable energy technology continues to develop, and electricity has become the cheapest way to power our homes. You'll find some of your neighbours already have all-electric homes, and quite soon, other alternatives will be too expensive or no longer available. While it can be hard to find independent advice, this is where a community network like Renew can help. We are an independent, not-for-profit organisation that does not benefit or receive commission from anyone. We have experts and resources to point you in the right direction so you don't get lost. You can find out how to add a battery to your home at A few months ago, Rewiring Australia published a report showing that Australia has reached the electrification tipping point. What this means is that when it's time for us to replace an appliance, it is now better value to buy an electric one than the fossil fuel alternative, even when you include the cost of purchase and installation. According to Rewiring Australia, the average fossil fuel home could save $4400 per year if switched to all-electric. If you are building a new house, it makes economic sense to go all-electric from the start. If you have an existing home, you can replace gas appliances one by one as needed to suit your priorities and budget. The energy savings you make by replacing one appliance can help pay for the next one. For instance, when your gas hot water goes cold, don't just replace it with the same. Times have changed since you last looked - hot water heat pumps have joined traditional solar hot water as one of the most reliable and efficient hot water systems. If your gas hob is fried, get an electric induction cooktop. It's fast and efficient, and easy to clean. In our household, we don't know how we ever managed without one - I couldn't cook before, and now I can boil an egg perfectly! Above all, keep an eye on available rebates and incentives; they change frequently, and some are for limited times only. Make changes that are beneficial to your situation, as every household has different uses and needs. If you'd like to know more about this topic, talk to your local Renew branch about your home energy needs. A great opportunity to meet us is coming up this Friday, as I am coordinating the Newcastle leg of the Faster and Fairer Tour with Dr Saul Griffith, one of Australia's leading advocates on home electrification. As chief scientist at Rewiring Australia, Dr Griffith will discuss the importance and inevitability of all-electric homes. Local members will share their home electrification journeys. Come join us for a drink from 5pm this Friday, August 15, 2025, at 'The Station' in Newcastle. Tickets $10, bookings: Ewa Meyer is the Convenor of Renew's Hunter Region Branch. hunterregion@

Sky News AU
2 days ago
- Sky News AU
Cosy chat between Albanese, raving anti-Semite Mahmoud Abbas 'validates' the October 7 massacre as a stepping stone to Palestinian statehood
Minister for Foreign Affairs Penny Wong this week implored that 'there will be no Palestine left to recognise' if the world doesn't act now and intervene. But perhaps the Senator for South Australia should ask herself this: what exactly are we recognising and what price will we ultimately pay, especially from the relative safety of the southern hemisphere? Her remark chafed even more when it was revealed that our Prime Minister Anthony Albanese chose, in the shadow of the Harbour Bridge pro-Palestinian march, to ring Holocaust revisionist Mahmoud Abbas for a chat to share his vision for a two-state solution in the region. In the call, Mr Abbas said Australia could help foster peace by formally recognising Palestine, according to the official readout. Our PM, with Ms Wong in tow, is preparing to hand legitimacy to those in Palestine who traffic bloodlust and terror. Not peace. This curious decision demands examination of a time when politicians had spines and held our Western values so very tightly and respected them as precious. Not the era we are experiencing now where Jewish people who have sought refuge in Western democracies, believing they would be safe, now question this safety. Every. Single. Day. Let's take one example, such as when the then British PM Margaret Thatcher warned on November 10, 1980 that the scourge of international terrorism lurks forever in the background. 'There are people exercising power in a few countries and leading political factions in others who seem to be moved by narrow, brutal and irrational impulses,' the Iron Lady told the Lord Mayor's Banquet at London's Guildhall. For background, this annual Banquet is always a lustrous event in the capital's calendar, bristling with the posh and powerful and the weight of the keynote speeches can linger for generations. Which is exactly what happened here. Mrs Thatcher continued: 'Their view of their own self-interest is so blinkered as to leave no space for purely human values, for peaceful negotiation or for economic advancement. 'They are bent on the destruction of the established order and of civilised ways of doing business.' Albanese's fear of being called Islamophobic by inner-city elites comes through loud and clear in his attempt to frame Holocaust revisionist Mahmoud Abbas as a partner in reconciliation rather than the enabler of hate, writes Louise Roberts. Pictures: NewsWire/ Zizi Averill,/AFP Mrs Thatcher ended this part of her speech with the type of succinct footnote that typically skewered her critics: those who trade in terror 'must never be allowed to succeed'. And 45 years later, here we are. A so-called progressive Australian government in 2025, nodding along with the very forces the Iron Lady warned against. But instead of heeding her hard-fought wisdom, our Federal Government prepares to recognise a Palestinian state while Hamas holds hostages, tourniquets the Gaza area and promises to never surrender. It will quite simply validate the October 7, 2023 massacre as a stepping stone to statehood. As President of the State of Palestine, the 89-year-old Mr Abbas is being treated like a partner in reconciliation rather than an enabler of hate. He famously authored a doctoral thesis 'The other side: the secret relationship between Nazism and Zionism' which challenged the number of Jewish victims of the Holocaust as around one million rather than six million, among other claims. Should we accept that our government is more concerned about being branded Islamophobic by urban elites than about standing strong for Western values? Mr Abbas is a 20-year autocrat who shares the same vision, incidentally, that Hamas has always used as cover for its ultimate goal: the eradication of Israel. 'From the river to the sea" is the genocidal chant, echoed by some voices in Sydney to the offices of the Palestinian leadership. And yes, Mr Albanese knows this. Or he should. For a moment, just contrast the pandering to Mr Abbas to how the PM interacts with our actual ally - US President Donald Trump. The well-known historical insults, the spectacle of anti-Trump Kevin Rudd continuing as US Ambassador and Mr Albanese's lacklustre energy on meeting with his American counterpart are alarming in comparison. And when questioned on whether he would consult Trump before deciding on recognition of a Palestinian state, the Prime Minister said: 'We're a sovereign government.' Why not pick up the phone to Mr Trump to discuss the Gaza conflict like he did to Mr Abbas? Mrs Thatcher did not equivocate and understood a fundamental truth that rewarding terrorism with diplomacy is simply to encourage more of it. I wonder what she would say now as countries such as France and Canada 'recognise' a Palestinian state bereft of clear borders and a democracy whilst Australia gets in line to do the same. Louise Roberts is a journalist and editor who has worked as a TV and radio commentator in Australia, the UK and the US. Louise is a winner of the Peter Ruehl Award for Outstanding Columnist in the NRMA Kennedy Awards for Excellence in Journalism and has been shortlisted in other awards for her opinion work.