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The Climate Litigation Database

Queensland Conservation Council Inc. v. Xstrata Coal

Geography
Year
2006
Document Type
Litigation

About this case

Filing year
2006
Status
Decided
Court/admin entity
AustraliaQueenslandCourt of Appeal
Case category
Suits against governments (Global)Environmental assessment and permitting (Global)Natural resource extraction (Global)
Principal law
AustraliaEnvironmental Protection Act 1994 (Qld)AustraliaMineral Resources Act 1989 (Qld)AustraliaMining and other Legislation Amendments Act 2007 (Qld)
At issue
Whether there was a breach of natural justice due to the Tribunal’s consideration of the new material doubting the existence of anthropogenic climate change.
Topics
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Documents

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Document
Type
Topics 
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Summary

An Australian state court reversed a lower tribunal’s decision, which granted an extension to Xstrata’s mining lease and denied Queensland Conservation Council (QCC) the ability to amend the conditions of the extension. The tribunal, concluding that the causal link between the mine’s greenhouse gas emissions and harms caused by global warming is an assumption, relied on evidence that was raised in neither Xstrata nor the QCC’s case. The court of appeals held that the tribunal, by merely informing the parties that it had become aware of documents which might be relevant to its decision, did not satisfy its obligation to afford the parties procedural fairness by giving them a real opportunity to present information or argument on a matter not already obvious but in fact regarded as important by the decision-maker. The Queensland Court of Appeal ordered a retrial.

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Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Just transition
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Finance