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Ramsar listed Macquarie Marshes under threat from mining

MEDIA RELEASE
15 July, 2024 

The Nature Conservation Council of New South Wales (NCC), the state’s leading environmental advocacy organisation, has today expressed outrage at news of gold and copper mining exploration occurring in the Macquarie Marshes. 

The Resources Regulator has approved the exploration for copper and gold by Australian Consolidated Gold Holdings after taking at face value the company’s statement that: “There are no areas of critical habitat or areas of outstanding biodiversity value within the proposed drilling area.”

The Macquarie Marshes is a Ramsar listed wetland, one of the largest remaining semi-permanent wetlands in Southern Australia, and a critically important site for water bird breeding in Australia.   

Macquarie Marshes Graziers, Garry and Leanne Hall are landholders of the area that includes Mole Marsh – one of the proposed drill sites. Mole Marsh is part of the Macquarie Marshes and connects to the protected nature reserve.

With less than a week left to challenge the Regulator's decision, they say, they need more time to try to get this mining activity stopped in its tracks.

“As landholders around the Macquarie Marshes Nature Reserve, we abide by strict guidelines before doing so much as constructing a fence, and yet a gold miner can start drilling without any proper assessment of the land’s cultural values and biodiversity,” said Macquarie Marshes grazier, Garry Hall.

“This approval from a desktop study is a classic example of apathetic box ticking by a disconnected bureaucrat without any knowledge of the land.

“This is an area full of life and home to many endangered, threatened and vulnerable species.

“Brolgas, magpie geese, painted snipe and countless other endangered and vulnerable listed birds, breed and nest right where they want to drill.

“Most of the sites where they want to drill are currently under water – this makes no sense.”

Statements attributable to NCC Water Campaigner Mel Gray:

“It’s obscene to hear that a mining exploration license has been granted in one of the most biologically diverse wetlands in the Murray-Darling Basin,” said NCC Water Campaigner Mel Gray.

“The Macquarie Marshes is an awe-inspiring patchwork of interconnected miniature habitats, all of them bursting with life. 

“The impact of this drilling would have unforeseeable consequences for the whole wetland system and the myriad of life it supports. 

“The area is home to an incredible diversity of native birds and fish and it is beyond belief that the Regulator would allow mining exploration here.” 

Statement ends 

Media contact: Anna Greer
E:
[email protected] M: 0493 733 529 PH: (02) 7208 9482  

Note: Mel Gray and Garry and Leanne Hall are available for comment on request  

Wildlife photos taken in Mole Marsh, included in the Accessible Prospecting Operations (APO) area, are available here and are attributable to Leanne Hall.

Photos include:

Australasian bittern Botaurus poiciloptilus E E V 

Magpie goose Anseranas semipalmata LC V

Brolga Grus rubicundus LC V

Australian painted snipe Rostratula australis LC V V

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