31 October 2013 | 11:04

Australia probes Great Barrier Reef board over 'mining links'

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©Reuters/Stephen Frink ©Reuters/Stephen Frink

Australia launched a probe Wednesday into the agency responsible for protecting the Great Barrier Reef after some board members were urged to resign over alleged conflicts of interest related to the mining industry, AFP reports. Environment Minister Greg Hunt ordered an investigation after the Australian Broadcasting Corporation aired allegations that coal and gas industry ties had seen the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority (GBRMPA) relax its stance on industrial development. "I have ordered an immediate independent probity inquiry into the allegations that have been raised," Hunt told reporters. "The inquirer will report to the chairman of the board at GBRMPA who will in turn report jointly to the secretary of the department and myself." GBRMPA is a statutory authority charged with overseeing the protection and use of the reef. According to the ABC, two of GBRMPA's five board members have close links to the resources sector -- Tony Mooney, an executive with Guildford Coal and Jon Grayson, who owns a stake in Gasfields Water and Waste Services. Both men were at a critical meeting last year where the GBRMPA board turned its back on advice from in-house scientists that it oppose port development in areas with "potential to degrade inshore diversity". Instead, the board issued a watered-down statement saying such biodiversity impact should be a "key consideration" in port approvals, while calling for further consultations with the mining industry on the issue. The reef is facing a world heritage downgrade from UNESCO next year due to concerns about rampant coastal development proposed in the region, particularly port, gas and coal operations. The role of individual board members in the statement on ports is unknown, but conservationists called for Mooney and Grayson to resign in order to address perceptions of a conflict of interest. "Anyone with coal and gas interests should simply be precluded from serving on the board of management for the Great Barrier Reef," said Senator Larissa Waters from the Greens party. "It's an international embarrassment that mining interests are allegedly influencing the GBRMPA board, while UNESCO is warning that the Great Barrier Reef could be added to the World Heritage list of sites in danger within a year." Hunt noted that both Mooney and Grayson "have strong reputations and I don't want to draw any judgement in any direction". He said he expected the inquiry would be completed by the end of the year. GBRMPA did not respond to AFP requests for comment, but defended the ports stance changes in a statement to ABC.


Australia launched a probe Wednesday into the agency responsible for protecting the Great Barrier Reef after some board members were urged to resign over alleged conflicts of interest related to the mining industry, AFP reports. Environment Minister Greg Hunt ordered an investigation after the Australian Broadcasting Corporation aired allegations that coal and gas industry ties had seen the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority (GBRMPA) relax its stance on industrial development. "I have ordered an immediate independent probity inquiry into the allegations that have been raised," Hunt told reporters. "The inquirer will report to the chairman of the board at GBRMPA who will in turn report jointly to the secretary of the department and myself." GBRMPA is a statutory authority charged with overseeing the protection and use of the reef. According to the ABC, two of GBRMPA's five board members have close links to the resources sector -- Tony Mooney, an executive with Guildford Coal and Jon Grayson, who owns a stake in Gasfields Water and Waste Services. Both men were at a critical meeting last year where the GBRMPA board turned its back on advice from in-house scientists that it oppose port development in areas with "potential to degrade inshore diversity". Instead, the board issued a watered-down statement saying such biodiversity impact should be a "key consideration" in port approvals, while calling for further consultations with the mining industry on the issue. The reef is facing a world heritage downgrade from UNESCO next year due to concerns about rampant coastal development proposed in the region, particularly port, gas and coal operations. The role of individual board members in the statement on ports is unknown, but conservationists called for Mooney and Grayson to resign in order to address perceptions of a conflict of interest. "Anyone with coal and gas interests should simply be precluded from serving on the board of management for the Great Barrier Reef," said Senator Larissa Waters from the Greens party. "It's an international embarrassment that mining interests are allegedly influencing the GBRMPA board, while UNESCO is warning that the Great Barrier Reef could be added to the World Heritage list of sites in danger within a year." Hunt noted that both Mooney and Grayson "have strong reputations and I don't want to draw any judgement in any direction". He said he expected the inquiry would be completed by the end of the year. GBRMPA did not respond to AFP requests for comment, but defended the ports stance changes in a statement to ABC.
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