Across regional Australia councils quietly scramble
as coal and gas revenues face irreversible decline

| Key
Points |
- Under current planning approvals,
32 of NSW's 39 coal mines are expected to close by 2040,
directly threatening 25,000 jobs and the finances of every
council in the Hunter and Central West regions. 1
- BHP has committed to closing Mt
Arthur Coal, NSW's largest mine, by 2030, leaving
Muswellbrook facing economic and social upheaval with
limited legally binding corporate obligations to the
community. 2
- The Latrobe Valley received over
$1.6 billion in transition investment after Hazelwood closed
in 2017, yet reporting transparency from the Latrobe Valley
Authority has remained seriously deficient. 3
- Auditor-general reports across
Australian jurisdictions consistently identify shortfalls in
mine rehabilitation bond provisions, leaving State
governments and communities exposed to unfunded
environmental liabilities. 4
- NSW coal generates $2.7 billion in
annual royalties, but no direct funding stream currently
flows to mining-impacted communities for economic
transformation planning. 5
- Isaac Regional Council,
Australia's largest resource region by area, has called for
a formal Queensland Government authority to manage coal
region transformation, signalling the scale of transition
risk it cannot manage alone. 6
|
In Moranbah, Queensland, the town pub still
fills on a Friday afternoon. The fly-in, fly-out rosters still tick
over. The mines around the Bowen Basin still move coal.
But inside the
offices of Isaac Regional Council, the conversations have shifted.
Council moved a motion at the Local Government Association of
Queensland's annual conference last year calling on the State Government to establish a formal regional authority to manage what it
called "transformational changes in coal mining regions". 6
For a Council that governs Australia's
self-described largest resource region, that motion was not abstract
advocacy. It was an admission that the forces reshaping global energy
markets are moving faster than any single Local Government can absorb.
Stranded assets, so often framed
as a problem for institutional investors and company balance sheets, lands differently on a rate roll.
When a coal mine's
assessed capital value falls, so does the rateable value the Council
depends on. When a company mothballs or writes down assets, the Local Government area that built its roads, sewers, and sporting facilities
on that rate base does not get a matching write-down of its
obligations.
The liability stays. The income does not.
Australia is entering a period in which that
gap, between what resource-dependent councils owe and what they can
collect, will become one of the defining fiscal pressures of regional
governance. Few councils, and fewer State Governments, have stated
this plainly.
The Scale of What Is Coming
The numbers in New South Wales alone are
stark. Under existing planning approvals, all four of the
tate's
coal-fired power stations and 32 of its 39 coal mines are projected to
close by 2040. 1
Around 25,000 people work directly in NSW
coal mining. When indirect employment, contractors, logistics, and the
hospitality and retail that follows mine wages around is included, the
Hunter Valley region alone faces the potential loss of close to 50,000
direct and indirect jobs over the next two decades. 7
NSW coal generated $2.7 billion in royalties
for the State Government in the 2025 financial year and $23.4 billion
in export revenue. 5
Almost none of that royalty flows directly
back to the councils whose roads carry the coal trucks, whose
hospitals treat the miners, or whose water systems serve the towns
built around extraction. The NSW Government's own Royalties for
Rejuvenation scheme, which directed funds back to coal communities,
was effectively frozen under the previous Liberal-National Government,
with more than $100 million sitting unspent while councils deferred
maintenance and watched their infrastructure backlogs grow.
Queensland presents a different but related
picture. Isaac Regional Council covers 58,709 square kilometres of
central Queensland coalfields, encompassing towns such as Moranbah,
Dysart, Middlemount, and Glenden. Its rate base is overwhelmingly tied
to mining sector ratepayers. The Council's financial statements for
the year ended June 2024 reveal a remediation provision of more than
$38 million, an obligation growing steadily each year. 8
The Council's broader financial
sustainability depends on mining rates income remaining at or near
current levels. No publicly available document maps what happens to
that budget if two or three major Bowen Basin mines reduce production
or close within the same five-year window.
Muswellbrook: A Town That
Knows the Clock Is Running
Of all the towns facing a defined countdown,
Muswellbrook in the Upper Hunter Valley of NSW is the most legible.
BHP has committed to transitioning its Mt Arthur Coal mine, NSW's
largest, to closure by 2030. 2
The mine currently employs around 2,200
people. Many live locally. It has shaped the town since the 1960s.
When University of Newcastle researchers from the Institute for
Regional Futures spoke to 69 community members between March and
December 2024, the responses carried a quality that no economic impact
statement captures. "We're not going anywhere. We love our house and
our land," one participant said. Another: "I'm gonna get carried out
of here in a box, too."
The researchers published their findings in
late 2025, urging BHP to leave a positive and lasting legacy and
recommending a place-based, community-endorsed closure strategy. 2
The language of the report is careful. It
does not say BHP's existing commitments are sufficient. It says the
community has hopes. That distinction matters. The question of whether
BHP's transition commitments to Muswellbrook Shire Council are legally
binding obligations or reputational statements remains, for practical
purposes, unanswered in any public document. Planning approval
conditions can bind companies to rehabilitation timelines. They rarely
bind them to employment outcomes, school maintenance contributions, or
community fund continuity after closure.
The asymmetry here is structural. A company
can disclose in its sustainability report that it is committed to a
just transition. It can also, without breaching that statement, reduce
its workforce progressively over five years, shift contractors
off-site, and allow community sponsorships to lapse. By the time
formal closure arrives, the economic drawdown has already occurred.
Muswellbrook's central business district will not register that loss
on a single date.
The Rehabilitation Bond
Problem
Running alongside the employment question is
one that receives even less public attention: who pays for the mess.
Mine rehabilitation in Australia is supposed to be funded by bonds
held by State governments, calibrated to cover the full cost of
restoring land to a safe condition after operations cease. The
calibration has, across multiple jurisdictions and repeated audits,
been found wanting.
Auditor-general reports across Australian
jurisdictions have consistently identified shortfalls between the
bonds held and the true cost of rehabilitation. 4
Queensland's Mine Rehabilitation
Commissioner, in the 2024-25 annual report, tracks the industry-wide
Environmental Rehabilitation Cost liability as a figure that has grown
substantially since 2019, with progressive rehabilitation performance
across coal mines persistently lagging behind what mine plans
projected. 9
Queensland has, by its own account, achieved
only one successful coal mine lease surrender under contemporary
environmental regulations. That is one completed rehabilitation,
against a field of dozens of operating mines, many of which have no
publicly stated closure date.
If bonds are inadequate and rehabilitation
costs fall to State governments, the fiscal consequences reach beyond
environment departments. They reach the councils in those communities,
which may find themselves managing degraded landscapes and reduced
rateable land values for decades after the mines close. The cost does
not disappear. It disperses.
The Latrobe Valley: A
Lesson in What Sufficient Funding Looks Like, and Doesn't
The most studied transition case in
Australian history remains the Latrobe Valley in Victoria, where the
Hazelwood power station closed without warning in March 2017,
eliminating around 750 direct jobs and triggering a cascade of
secondary employment losses. The Victorian State Government responded
by establishing the Latrobe Valley Authority and committing, over
subsequent years, to more than $1.6 billion in programs and
infrastructure investment. 3
Regional Development Victoria reports that
employment in Gippsland is now higher than it was a decade ago, and
that an economic growth reimbursement scheme supported 374 businesses
and created 1,156 jobs.
ANU researchers who evaluated the transition
in its first three years found "promising initial progress," noting
that the programme worked best where it combined proactive industry
policy, respectful community engagement, and adequately funded
coordinated investment. 10
Those conditions, the authors stressed,
needed to be in place simultaneously. Any one of them alone was
insufficient.
But the Latrobe Valley transition also
reveals the fragility of political commitment. The Latrobe Valley
Authority's reporting transparency was subsequently criticised in a
Victorian parliamentary committee inquiry, which noted that no
community performance report had been published since 2019 despite the
LVA being funded to deliver ongoing transition support. State
opposition members cited an inability to assess whether job creation
targets were being met or whether the programme had achieved its
stated goals.
A transition funded at scale still depends on
institutions that are accountable and transparent about outcomes. When
accountability lapses, community confidence in the process erodes
precisely when it is most needed.
The Policy Gap: Royalties,
Risk, and Responsibility
The NSW Government launched its Future Jobs
and Investment Authority in June 2025, backed by $27.3 million over
four years and a mandate to work across the Hunter, Central West,
Illawarra, and North West regions. 1
The authority will also unlock the previously frozen Royalties for
Rejuvenation funds. It is, on paper, a serious institutional response.
Mandatory three-year mine closure notifications will now require
operators to give communities and governments advance warning before
shutting down.
Whether $27.3 million across four years,
covering four distinct regions and potentially dozens of closing
mines, is adequate to the scale of the task is a question the Government has not answered directly. The Hunter Valley's own advocacy
body estimated in September 2025 that the closure of just two mines by
2030 would eliminate close to 12,000 direct and indirect jobs in the
region alone. 7
The arithmetic
is uncomfortable. The funding envelope, against that employment
exposure, is not a transition programme. It is a planning exercise.
Royalties sit at the centre of this problem.
In NSW, mining royalties exceeded $3 billion in the 2025-26 State
budget. 5
Communities in coal regions host the
operations, bear the noise, the dust, the road wear, and the social
complexity of transient workforces, and contribute decisively to a State revenue stream that flows overwhelmingly to consolidated revenue
in Sydney. The principle that a share of resource royalties should be
retained in origin communities is not radical. It is routine in
Western Australia, where Royalties for Regions redistributes a portion
of State royalties back to regional areas. The NSW equivalent was
allowed to stagnate.
Councils like those in the Hunter Valley pursued
FOI requests, submitted motions to the Local Government NSW annual
conference, and lobbied through the Hunter Joint Organisation for a
dedicated community transformation fund. What they received was a
$27.3 million authority and an unlocked legacy fund.
Workers and the Invisible
Countdown
Behind the fiscal arguments, the human
exposure is different in character. A coal miner in the Bowen Basin or
Upper Hunter with fifteen years of tenure is often in their forties,
carrying a mortgage on a house whose value is tied to the mine that
pays it, and accumulating superannuation entitlements that assume
continued employment to retirement. Redundancy at 48, in a regional
town where alternative employment at equivalent wages does not exist,
is a financial event with consequences that ripple through decades,
not years.
Research on the social impacts of mine
closures in comparable settings, including the Hazelwood closure
studies and international literature on Appalachian coal communities,
consistently identifies elevated mental health presentations,
increased financial counselling demand, and rising domestic violence
incidents in the period immediately following major closures or
significant workforce reductions.
The causal pathway is not
mysterious. Financial stress, loss of occupational identity, and
community population decline interact in ways that primary health
networks in resource regions are already, in many cases,
under-resourced to manage.
The fly-in, fly-out workforce complicates the
picture. A significant proportion of workers at any given Bowen Basin
mine live not in Moranbah or Dysart but in Mackay, Townsville, or
Brisbane. When the mine closes, they do not leave a ghost town behind.
They vanish from that community's payroll without ever having appeared
in its census figures.
The towns that will feel the closure most
severely are those with the highest proportion of resident workers,
long-tenure families, and locally-owned businesses that depend on foot traffic from mine wages. Identifying those towns with precision,
before the closure, is precisely the kind of modelling that no State Government has publicly released.
What Accountability Would
Actually Look Like
A coherent accountability framework for
stranded asset risk in Australian Local Government does not currently
exist. Councils in coal and gas regions are not required to disclose
to ratepayers the proportion of their rate base derived from resource
sector ratepayers, the contingency scenarios they have modelled for
revenue decline, or the infrastructure backlog they are carrying
against an uncertain revenue future.
Listed companies with equivalent
concentration risks face mandatory disclosure under ASX continuous
disclosure obligations and, from January 2025, mandatory
climate-related financial disclosure requirements. Councils do not.
Community benefit agreements between mining
companies and Local Governments or State agencies are, in most cases
in Australia, not publicly registered, not independently monitored,
and not enforceable in a manner that has ever been successfully tested
in court. The commitments companies make at the time of project
approval, to local employment, community funds, infrastructure
maintenance, often sit in planning approval conditions that are
monitored, if at all, by resources departments with limited capacity
and lower political priority.
Isaac Regional Council's call for a
Queensland regional authority to manage transformation represents an
acknowledgement that Local Government, on its own, cannot hold the
pieces together. 6
Muswellbrook's residents, speaking to researchers who asked them
plainly what they hoped for, said they wanted industry to leave a
positive legacy. Not as charity. As obligation. That language, legacy
as obligation, is the gap between where Australian policy currently
sits and where it needs to arrive.
The Reckoning
The stranded asset crisis in Australia's coal
and gas towns is not a future event to be modelled. It is an unfolding
process, unevenly distributed across communities that have little
capacity to manage it alone and governments that have, in most cases,
not yet told them the full shape of what is coming. The German coal
transition committed EUR 40 billion over 20 years to the Ruhr and
Lausitz regions, building new infrastructure, retraining workers, and
cushioning the fiscal collapse of municipalities that had been built
around extraction. Australia's current commitments are not in that
register.
What happens to a town when its major
employer closes is not a mystery. The Latrobe Valley documented it.
Appalachian communities in the United States documented it. Regional
cities in the Ruhr documented it. The pattern, depopulation,
infrastructure deterioration, health system pressure, property value
decline, school enrolment shrinkage, is well established in the
evidence base. The question for Australia is not what happens.
The
question is whether State and Federal Governments will choose, before
the closures arrive at scale, to make legally enforceable commitments
proportionate to the scale of the disruption.
The towns are already
deciding. The governments have not.
References
1. NSW Government. 2025. Future
Jobs and Investment Authority Model to Secure Jobs and Economic
Opportunities in Coal Mining Communities. NSW Government Media
Release.
2. Askland, H. et al. 2025.
We're
Not Going Anywhere: Muswellbrook Faces Transition Beyond Coal Head
On. University of Newcastle Institute for Regional Futures.
3. Regional Development
Victoria. 2025. Latrobe
Valley Economic Transition. Victorian Government.
4. Discovery Alert. 2025. Queensland
Mine Rehabilitation: Complete 2025 Guide. Discovery Alert.
5. Hunter Joint
Organisation. 2025. Post
Mining Land Use: 2025-26 Advocacy Factsheet. Hunter Joint
Organisation of Councils.
6. Isaac Regional Council.
2024. Queensland's
Largest Mining Council Calls for Regional Authority to Manage
Transformation. Isaac Regional Council Media Release.
7. Clayton Utz. 2026. A
New Chapter: What the NSW Coal Industry 2026-50 Policy Means for the
Future of Coal Mining in New South Wales. Clayton Utz Insights.
8. Isaac Regional Council.
2024. Financial
Statements for the Year Ended 30 June 2024. Isaac Regional
Council.
9. Queensland Mine
Rehabilitation Commissioner. 2025. 2024-25
Annual Report. Queensland Government.
10. Wiseman, J., Workman,
A., Fastenrath, S., and Jotzo, F. 2020. After
the Hazelwood Coal Fired Power Station Closure: Latrobe Valley
Regional Transition Policies and Outcomes 2017-2020. ANU
Crawford School of Public Policy.
11. NSW Government. 2024. $37.7
Million to Support Regional Communities and Protect Workers. NSW
Budget 2024-25 Media Release.
12. Bland Shire Council.
2025. Bland
Shire Council Seeks Support for Return of Mining Royalties to Local
Communities. Bland Shire Council Media Release.
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