Sun. Oct 6th, 2024
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A water scientist is warning a Lithgow coal mine’s plan to release five Olympic-sized swimming pools of partially-treated water a day into Sydney’s drinking catchment will make its pollution worse.

Centennial Coal has lodged an application with the NSW Department of Planning and Environment to pump 10 megalitres a day from Angus Place Colliery into the Wangcol Creek.

The plan would increase the average release into the waterway from roughly one Olympic-sized swimming pool a day to five.

The company’s modification report said it needed to discharge the additional water because its water treatment plant was operating at capacity.

“The ongoing inflows … [have reached] emergency storage capacity,” the mine’s planning documents said.

“Centennial Angus Place needs to urgently dewater the mine to manage the imminent risk of flooding.

“If flooding does occur, the mine may cease to be feasibly operated in the future.”

The mine has been dormant since 2015, but Centennial has plans to reopen its operations under a new proposal called Angus Place West.

It said that project would secure the supply of coal to the nearby Mount Piper Power Station and safeguard the state’s energy security until that plant’s closure in 2040.

Energy Australia, which owns Mount Piper, said the water changes were essential for coal supply.

Elevated pollutants in treated mine water

Water flowing over a bricked channel through wire fencing
The water from this discharge point will flow from Wangcol Creek into the Coxs River, which runs into Warragamba Dam.(
ABC News: Lani Oataway
)

Water already released into Wangcol Creek has elevated levels of heavy metals like cobalt, iron, nickel, and zinc.

The planning document said diluting these flows with more water from Angus Place would result in lower concentrations of the contaminants and “improve” the water quality.

But Ian Wright, an associate professor in environmental science at Western Sydney University, said it would do the opposite.

“The actual mass, the physical amount of pollutants, is actually likely to increase,” Dr Wright said.

“In the whole of the Warragamba drinking catchment that is the worst point source of waste I have ever measured.”

Man in red t-shirt tests water at a green creek with a cup on a long pole

Dr Ian Wright says the licence which allows Centennial to release the water isn’t tough enough.(
ABC News: Lani Oataway
)

Dr Wright said the salt, nickel, and zinc pollutants in the mine water was most poisonous to aquatic life.

By his calculations, although less concentrated, the amount of salt would increase from roughly six to eight tonnes a day.

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