Author
Tony McAvoy, SC, is a Wangan and Jagalingou Traditional Owner, Australia’s first
Indigenous silk and First Nations Clean Energy Network steering group
member.
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In the rush to develop clean energy projects we must not repeat similar mistakes, where the expansion of renewables becomes another action done “to” First Nations people rather than “with” them.
The clean energy boom, while necessary, is not cost free. It would be a terrible irony if the renewables industry was granted the same licence to wreck our land and culture as mining.
An outback solar power station. Credit: Janie Barrett |
We currently negotiate under a native title legal system, which provides no right of veto to destructive development and this needs urgent reform.
Traditional owners very often have no real choice but to allow development, or risk losing country and culture without any compensation. Promised jobs and economic benefits are rarely delivered to a scale that compensates for this loss.
Mining Juukan Gorge inquiry urges national laws to protect sacred
sites
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While pandering to the extractive industry, governments have ignored the problems that First Nations people living in remote communities face in accessing reliable, affordable power.
Families struggle to pay extraordinary power bills from diesel or gas-fired generation. Electricity disconnections are frequent and cause significant social and economic disruption.
Glasgow Summit |
These are some of the drivers behind the new First Nations Clean Energy Network. We will partner with industry, investors, unions, academics and legal and technical experts to boost the capacity of our people to engage with governments and the renewables industry at a structural level.
In Canada, a similar network has joined with government and industry to support nearly 200 medium-to-large renewable energy projects, offering jobs, training and new revenue streams.
Within Indigenous Canadian communities, smaller clean energy projects are flourishing.
We will do the same, ensuring that clean energy developments and the ongoing management, decommissioning and rehabilitation of lands, are respectful of our place on this continent.
The network has the platform, expertise and experience to form strong and equitable working relationships with the renewables industry.
National Australia Bank |
Our sacred sites should be respected and protected, and we reserve the right to say ‘no’ to destruction.
It’s clear the energy transformation is here and First Nations people are critical to this revolution.
While we are optimistic about the gains to be made by the transformation, this time the benefits must be there for all.
Links
- Why Australia's green energy movement needs to include Aboriginal communities
- Native title, rights and interests
- Indigenous communities harness environmental, economic benefits of solar boom
- Rio Tinto investors 'shocked', want answers on rock shelter blast
- Miners vow to come clean as First Nations, climate pressure builds
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