21 November Outline of new state legislation November 21, 2023 By AMPLA Admin General Legislation 0 New legislation has been proposed across several states in Australia. These cover a range of issues including climate change and the development of hydrogen and renewable energy industries. In this article we outline the latest changes in New South Wales, South Australia, Queensland and the Northern Territory. New legislation has been proposed across several states in Australia. These cover a range of issues including climate change and the development of hydrogen and renewable energy industries. In this article we outline the latest changes in New South Wales, South Australia, Queensland and the Northern Territory. New South Wales The Climate (Net Zero Future) Bill 2023 seeks to legislate emission reduction targets for the State. The Bill also introduces a Net Zero Commission to monitor progress against the targets of at least 50% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and net zero by 2050. How these targets are implemented, calculated and assessed will be subject to regulations that are yet to be released. The Net Zero Commission will be an independent body that will: Provide advice on how NSW is progressing on their targets (including energy use targets) and adapting to climate change; Monitor and review what actions are being taken; Provide advice to the NSW Government on strategies, policies and programs for implementation; and Educate and inform the government, businesses, organisations and individuals to promote action to address climate change. The NSW Government has also indicated that they will establish a new Department of Climate Change, Energy, Environment and Water but the extent of its powers is unknown yet. South Australia The Hydrogen and Renewable Energy Bill 2023 was passed in the South Australian Parliament recently. It introduces a licensing and regulatory regime to cover renewable energy projects end to end. The Bill seeks to regulate large scale projects that involve generating hydrogen and renewable energy resource projects. This doesn’t include the storage of hydrogen or operation of transmission pipelines. The Act introduces six different categories of licences to cover regulated activities including: Hydrogen Generation Licence to contract, install, operate, maintain and decommission a hydrogen generation facility or generate hydrogen for a commercial purpose; Renewable Energy Infrastructure Licence to generate or obtain energy from a renewable energy resource, construct, install, operate, maintain or decommission renewable energy infrastructure or store, transmit or convey energy obtained from a renewable energy resource; Renewable Energy Feasibility Licence to assess the feasibility of exploiting a renewable energy resource and to construct, install, operate, maintain and decommission renewable energy infrastructure to explore a renewable energy resources; Renewable Energy Research Licence to explore and assess the feasibility of exploiting a new renewable energy resources, research the capabilities of a technology system or process for generating renewable energy and constructing, installing, operating, maintaining and decommissioning renewable energy infrastructure as part of the research; Special Enterprise Licence to undertake regulated activities including the construction and operation of a commercial facility to generate hydrogen and/or renewable energy infrastructure; Associated Infrastructure Licence for the construction, installation, operation, maintenance, management and decommissioning of a hydrogen power plant, any ports, wharves or jetties associated with the import or export of hydrogen or renewable energy, desalination plants used to supply water in generating hydrogen or any other infrastructure prescribed by regulations. The Act applies to projects on pastoral land, State waters, prescribed Crown Land and freehold land. It also gives owners rights, with owners including native title holders, pastoral lessees and resources tenement holders. The Minister can also declare an area for the operation of renewable energy infrastructure so there is a competitive tender process. Queensland The Gas Supply and Other Legislation (Hydrogen Industry Development) Amendment Bill 2023 has been passed by the Queensland Government. The legislation enables hydrogen and hydrogen carriers like ammonia and methanol to be transported under a pipeline licence granted under the Petroleum and Gas (Production and Safety) Act 2004. It also amends the Gas Supply Act 2003 by expanding it to include hydrogen, hydrogen blends, bio methane and other covered gases. While the legislation allows for hydrogen to be transported in pipelines it doesn’t authorise hydrogen processing or storage facilities. It is expected that these will be regulated under the State’s planning framework. The Department of Energy and Public Works is currently undertaking a regulatory assessment of these projects and a consultation paper is expected to be released later this year. Northern Territory The Environment Protection Legislation Amendment (Mining) Bill 2023 was recently released by the NT Government for consultation. The Bill seeks to repeal the Mining Management Act 2011 and gives responsibility for the environmental regulation of mining to the Environment Protection Act 2019. It is proposed that a new licensing system would be introduced that has general environmental duties along with compliance and enforcement powers. In addition the Government has released a draft of the Legacy Mines Remediation Bill 2023. This legislation is proposed to change the way legacy mines and mine features are managed while enabling flexible and effective options for the remediation of legacy mines and legacy mine features. The Bill also seeks to encourage research, collaboration and opportunities for remediation of legacy mines and legacy mine features. Consultation on both Bills has now been closed and they are under review and evaluation. Related Articles COMMUNITY LEGAL RIGHTS IN MINE CLOSURE PLANNING; A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THREE AUSTRALIAN STATES Professor Alex Gardner, University of Western Australia Law School, and Laura Hamblin, formerly research associate at the UWA Law School, 2021 Why does the Mining Act 1978 (WA) not provide secure legal rights for community consultation in relation to mining lease proposals and mine closure plans? Addressing this question presents an important theme for this comparative review of some core features of the regulatory frameworks for mine closure in three Australian States. It also raises important questions for future legal research. Western Australia, Queensland and Victoria have prominent but vastly different, and thus uniquely significant, mining industries. Western Australia’s mining industry has a long history of large and smaller scale mining of a diverse range of minerals by various methods that pose significant mine rehabilitation challenges.[i] Queensland’s mining industry is similarly large and diverse, dominated by export coal production, and planning future minerals development in a decarbonising world.[ii] Victoria has a smaller mining industry with a large historical legacy dominated by a coal mining industry for domestic electricity generation in the Latrobe Valley, which is closing as the State actively transitions to renewable power sources.[iii] These States also have significant differences in the regulation of their mining industries. What all three States do have in common is the significance of their mining industries to both the State economy and the communities who depend on or live near mining operations. Importantly, all three States are confronting large legal and regulatory challenges in managing mine rehabilitation and closure. The key to addressing these challenges is effective mine closure planning: the closure of a mine site has ripple effects that are not merely environmental and economic, but social and cultural too. The initial approval of a mine closure plan occurs before any mining has begun and, with the life cycle of a mine often spanning decades, regulatory bodies are approving hypothetical closure scenarios, potentially subject to vast changes. Regulatory bodies may then seek to enforce closure requirements enshrined in a plan that may wane in relevance as mining operations progress, the updating of which may depend on the miner. Yet remedying the regulatory system so that it creates adaptable but consistently effective mine closure outcomes for affected communities still begins at planning. Although that planning is an iterative process across the life of the mine, it is very important at the initial stage of approval. Recent legislative reforms in all three States are adding to the regulatory rigour and adaptability of mine closure planning, though there are very different legal requirements for community consultation. This article aims to explain and assess the regulatory reforms by undertaking a comparative analysis of mine closure planning across Western Australia, Queensland and Victoria, with a focus on the initial approval stage and how stakeholders and communities are brought into that process. The facilitation of continuous and comprehensive community engagement is critical to ensuring that mine closure planning accounts for environmental, economic, social, cultural and safety outcomes after mine closure, but it has not been possible to consider here the process of ongoing mine closure planning, especially for amending mine closure plans and determining satisfaction of mine closure plans leading to resource tenure relinquishment.[iv] The article begins by considering core concepts of mine closure planning and the regulatory goals that inform it. It then provides a comparative overview of each State’s mine closure planning requirements under the mineral resources, environmental and land use planning laws and draws out some of the different regulatory structures and processes for mine closure within each State. The third step in our analysis compares the ways in which those laws provide for local communities’ participation in mine closure planning, with specific attention to whether the regulatory provisions create legally enforceable rights for effective community engagement. The article concludes with a summary of the key points from the discussion of three themes in our analysis: (i) the importance of clear definitions of core concepts and key goals, (ii) mine closure planning as an essential part of a mining proposal, and (iii) the legal definition of community engagement and consultation rights. Mine closure planning and implementation is necessarily influenced by many other spheres of law including taxation law, investment law, water law, and the rights of traditional owners, to name a few. A potentially directly relevant Commonwealth law is the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (Cth), which may require environmental impact assessment of a mining proposal and closure plan and lead to approval conditions supplementing State requirements.[v] Whilst acknowledging the importance of these adjacent spheres of the regulatory frameworks for effective mine closure planning, this article does not attempt to address their impact. In particular, the rights of Traditional Custodians are a crucial part of mine closure planning that are only briefly noted here and that would benefit from future research. WA Department of Mines, Industry Regulation and Safety, Major Commodities Review 2022-23”. Qld Government, Department of Resources, Queensland Resources Industry Development Plan, June 022. Vic Government, Department of Jobs, Precincts and Regions, Latrobe Valley Regional Rehabilitation Strategy. See L Hamblin, A Gardner, Y Haigh, Mapping the Regulatory Framework of Mine Closure, May 2022, CRC TiME, for a broader exploration of the full life cycle of mine closure regulation. In Buzzacott v Minister for Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities [2013] FCAFC 111; (2013) 214 FCR 301, [144], [227]-[230], referring to the range of approval conditions, which included mine closure. In setting conditions under the EPBC Act, the Commonwealth Minister must consider any relevant conditions under State or Territory law: at [80] citing Lansen v Minister for Environment and Heritage (2008) 174 FCR 14. FORREST AND FORREST PTY LTD AND MINISTER FOR ABORIGINAL AFFAIRS [2023] WASAT 28 Western Australia’s State Administrative Tribunal (SAT) has rejected a review, by Forrest & Forrest Pty Ltd, against the refusal of consent to impact an Aboriginal site in constructing weirs across the Ashburton River. A unanimous three-member panel published its decision in April 2023. SAT’s decision and reasoning has direct significance and use for anyone involved in processes for a s 18 consent under the Aboriginal Heritage Act 1972 and broader relevance for the law around protection of Aboriginal heritage in Western Australia. With the WA Government announcing the reversal of recent statutory changes and a return to the 1972 legislation, SAT’s decision has increased relevance. Submission - DISER Consultation Paper December 2020 ‘Enhancing Australia’s decommissioning framework for offshore oil and gas activities’ The states boost the energy and resources sector This year will be remembered for the many challenges that it brought to both individuals and industry. As Australia starts to return to some normality, many states are looking to boost industry, increase jobs and innovate for the future. In this article, we look at various state initiatives designed to boost the energy and resources sector. Victorian and Western Australian State Budgets In recent weeks we’ve seen both the Victorian and Western Australian Governments deliver budgets for their State. Both have included significant investments in the energy and resources sector. In Victoria, the budget has signalled the importance of the mineral industry to regional development. Victorian mines directly contribute $510 million into the state economy in 2020-21. The States continue to invest in the industry As a testament to the importance of the energy and resources industry to the economy and job growth, State governments continue to invest in the industry as part of their COVID-19 recovery plans Showing 0 Comment Add New CommentReply CommentName*Email*CommentsHtmlPreviewb i u quoteNotify me when new comments are addedSave Comment