Skip to content
Energy, Government NSW

NSW Gov now spending more public money on coal boosting than coal transition: new research

The Australia Institute 2 mins read

The NSW Government is currently spending significantly more public money promoting coal than helping regional communities transition away from it, according to new research by the Australia Institute. 

The report, Greenwashing Coal in New South Wales, reveals a stark contrast in funding priorities. State government organisations which are meant to be supporting communities with the transition away from coal have an initial budget of just $5.2 million, while public subsidies for coal research and promotion far exceed this amount. 

Key points:

  • The NSW Government’s proposed Future Jobs and Investment Authorities for the Hunter, Illawarra, Central West and North West regions aim to assist coal-reliant communities' transition. But they are severely underfunded with a collective budget of just $5.2 million for all four authorities.

  • These Authorities are not able to access increased funding from the Future Jobs and Investment Fund until 2028-29.

  • Organisations devoted to promoting and prolonging the NSW coal industry, by contrast, have significantly more resources:

    • Coal Innovation NSW spent $27 million last year and has a balance of $45 million.

    • The coal industry organisation Low Emissions Technology Australia (LETA) is promoted as a $700 million fund. This fund is publicly subsidised, but recently asked to stop receiving contributions due to a significant surplus of funding.

The report calls for the abolition of Coal Innovation NSW and associated funds. It also recommends royalty deduction subsidies to LETA be immediately abolished.

“The NSW Government is far more focused on promoting coal than helping communities move away from it,” said Rod Campbell, Research Director at The Australia Institute. 

“The current approach undermines both the state’s emissions reduction efforts and the future of regional communities.

“What governments do is more important than what they say. Regional communities need funding to transition smoothly, but instead the lion’s share of government funding is used to promote speculative technologies that assist the coal industry. 

“The NSW Government has the opportunity to lead the way by redirecting funds and ensuring these communities thrive in a post-coal economy. It should impose a moratorium on new coal projects, abolish Coal Innovation NSW and end royalty deductions for coal industry promotion.

“In contrast to the meagre funding in NSW, the German Coal Commission budgeted $3.4 billion per year to allow its regions to move past coal. This is what genuine climate leadership and caring for communities looks like. Unfortunately, the NSW Government has a long way to go.

“This research shows that the NSW Government is happy to use the budget to subsidise the coal industry, just as its response to the Newcastle coal port protests showed that it was happy to sacrifice democratic rights for the coal industry.”

Beau Blenman, a 7th generation Hunter Valley local who has worked in mining for over two decades said:  "Coal mining has devastated our once-beautiful agricultural valley, damaging the environment and eroding the fabric of our community.”

"The toll from coal mining in the Hunter has been severe, from polluted air to degraded aquifers. Despite the government’s claims of caring about biodiversity, mining rehabilitation efforts here have been woefully inadequate.

"We're witnessing our weather systems change while foreign-owned companies profit at the expense of our land and people,” Mr Blenman said.

 


Contact details:

Lauren Ferri 0422 581 506

More from this category

  • Energy, Government Federal
  • 04/12/2024
  • 17:16
Friends of the Earth

ADELAIDE DIRECT ACTION TOMORROW MORNING: FILMING AND PHOTO OPPORTUNITY

WHERE:Hotel Grand Chancellor, 65 Hindley St, Adelaide WHEN: 8-9AM Thursday 5 December WHAT: Community leaders and grassroots organisations will gather outside the Parliamentary Inquiry into Nuclear Power Generation in Australia to make clear that South Australia does not need or want nuclear reactors. We will have banners and signs to make sure we are seen and heard. Our shared energy future is renewable, not radioactive. Speakers include: Dr Jim Green, National Nuclear Campaigner, Friends of the Earth Dr Kate Wylie, Executive Director, Doctors for the Environment For more information or to arrange interviews please contact: Dr Jim Green, Friends of…

  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Government NSW
  • 04/12/2024
  • 15:41
Uniting NSW.ACT

*** MEDIA ALERT *** Uniting NSW.ACT available for Drug Summit comment

Uniting NSW.ACT’s General Manager of Advocacy & External Relations Emma Maiden is available for comment following the NSW Drug Summit in Sydney today: Speaking after this morning’s session, she said:“In this morning’s sessions, we heard some powerful stories and a strong reflection that when it comes to how we are dealing with people who use drugs in NSW, the evidence is clear, what we’re doing isn’t working. “We agree with Professor Don Weatherburn when he said, ‘there’s no evidence that prosecuting people for their drug use makes them less likely to use drugs, in fact it causes harm to them,…

  • Energy, Science
  • 04/12/2024
  • 11:46
Charles Darwin University

CDU EXPERT: Ouch! Why do everyday objects keep zapping me?

4 DECEMBER, 2024 Who: AI expert and adjunct Associate Professor at Charles Darwin University in the Faculty of Science and Technology, and Associate Professor at Australian Catholic University Associate Professor Niusha Shafiabady. Associate Professor Shafiabady is an internationally recognised expert and developer of AI data analysis platform Ai-Labz. Topics: The discovery of static electricity, and how it works. How to avoid being zapped by static electricity. Contact details: Call +61 8 8946 6721 or email media@cdu.edu.au to arrange an interview. Quotes attributable to Associate Professor Shafiabady: “Static charge is inconvenient, but it is not dangerous except in places where we…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.