Just 7 per cent of voters want money from the federal government's northern Australia investment used to prop up Adani's giant coalmine, while nine times that number say they would prefer taxpayer cash going towards renewable energy or education infrastructure.
A new poll ReachTEL poll has found just 6.8 per cent of people support the idea of using public money to support coal mine projects such as the Indian mining conglomerate's controversial Carmichael proposal, which would be Australia's biggest coalmine.
Adani Group founder Gautam Adani with Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull in India earlier this year. Photo: AAP |
But the new poll of nearly 3000 people – commissioned by the Australian Conservation Foundation – suggests the public wants NAIF investments made elsewhere. Even among Coalition voters there was only 10.5 per cent support for public money going into coalmine infrastructure.
The Adani mine by itself will push global temperatures above the threshold increase of two degrees. Photo: Robert Rough |
The polling accompanies a new ACF research paper on the "opportunity cost" to northern Australia of funding the mine in Queensland's Galilee Basin, identifying scores of other job-creating projects.
ACF economist Matt Rose says across Queensland, Western Australian and the Northern Territory there are 20 alternative proposals for jobs-rich large-scale solar plants.
There are 20 potential higher education campuses, 67 Indigenous ranger groups with no certainty of long-term funding and hundreds of locations with poor phones or internet.
Bob Brown returned to Parliament House in Canberra with Geoff Cousins and environmental groups to protest against the Adani coal mine. Photo: Andrew Meares |
"Public investment in Adani coal would cheat Australians in the north out of jobs in renewable energy, better education facilities and tourism."
Respondents to the poll also showed support for strong restrictions on any NAIF lending, with 60 per cent saying they agreed the government should "only provide funding to companies that meet minimum social and environmental standards".
The ReachTEL poll surveyed 2984 residents across Australia in late April.
ACF is one of 130 groups involved in trying to stop the $21 billion mine, which is shaping up as one of the country's big environmental battles.
The big four banks have all ruled out funding for the mine, angering Resources Minister Matt Canavan. But Mr Turnbull has defended the potential use of the NAIF, saying the mine would create "tens of thousands" of jobs and boost state and federal budgets.
The Queensland Labor government last week flagged it may provide Adani with a $320m "royalty holiday" to help get the mine up and running. It has also offered it free water in the form of an unlimited water licence.
At a federal level, Opposition Leader Bill Shorten has suggested the mine should only go ahead if it stacks up environmentally and commercially – and that means no federal loan. However some federal Labor MPs do not believe the mine should go ahead at all.
Links
- Queensland Government Offers Adani Mining Group A 'Royalties Holiday' That Could Cost State $320 Million
- This Is Not Rhetoric: Approving The Adani Coal Mine Will Kill People
- Climate Council: Climate, Health And Economics Are Against Carmichael Mine
- Adani May Face Fine Over Sediment Released In Floodwaters After Cyclone Debbie
- Westpac's Anti-Coal Stance Exposes A Coalition Out Of Sync With Business And Public On Climate
- Big Four Banks Distance Themselves From Adani Coalmine As Westpac Rules Out Loan
- Adani Coalmine At Heightened Risk Of Becoming A Stranded Asset, Report Says
- Adani Is Not Just Another Coalmine, It Is A Turning Point For The Nation
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