Aboriginal Communities Unite to Stop These Things Wrecking Precious Animal Habitat

The wind industry’s planet saving methods include trashing pristine tropical rainforest and smashing the critters that once peacefully inhabited those forests, including Australia’s iconic koala.

In our recent post – Licenced Exterminators: Government Greenlights Wind Industry’s Mass Koala Kill – we noted the instructions given by a wind farm operator to construction workers in dealing with koalas that impeded progress to club them with a “hard, sharp blow to the base of the back of the skull” using a “blunt metal or heavy wooden bar such as a sledgehammer or crowbar.” And, if that didn’t work the failed clubbing is to be followed up with “cervical dislocation, and decapitation.” How very green?!?

Koalas are not the only creature in for the chop, frogs are also headed for the ‘green’ energy blender. But local Aboriginal communities have other ideas, as this report from Eric Worrall outlines below.

Green on Green: Wilderness Protection Laws and Indigenous Rights are Derailing Renewable Energy Projects
Watts Up With That?
Eric Worrall
23 April 2024

Laws protecting Koalas and “the magnificent brood frog” have prevented a renewable energy company from clearing 500 hectares of native vegetation in the Australian tropics.

Federal environmental laws ‘single biggest challenge’ for delivering renewable energy projects in Australia

By national regional affairs reporter Jane Norman

In far north Queensland, traditional owners, clean energy developers and conservationists had spent three long years sweating on this decision.

Depending on which side you believed, this development would either supply 150,000 homes with clean, green energy or destroy the forest habitat of threatened native species.

Late on Friday, the wait was finally over.

An email from Ark Energy landed in inboxes, announcing the company had “withdrawn the Wooroora Station Wind Farm proposal from the federal environmental assessment process.”

In other words, the proposed project was dead.

The Korean-owned developer had planned to clear more than 500 hectares of native vegetation next to the Wet Tropics of Queensland World Heritage Area, home to animals including the koala and magnificent brood frog.

Read more: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-04-22/environmental-laws-biggest-challenge-for-clean-energy-developers/103750830

This isn’t the only wind farm in trouble in Australia’s far north, WUWT recently reported on the Aboriginal campaign to block the Chalumbin wind farm, which would have despoiled part of the beautiful Australian Atherton Tableland.

Aboriginals are also playing their in other places to derail the green revolution, by demanding fair compensation from any infrastructure which intrudes onto their sacred lands. All those empty looking deserts where entrepreneurs hoped to install vast solar arrays are actually full of protected Aboriginal sites and places of special cultural and spiritual significance.

And let’s not forget farmers and rural people, who have spooked renewable developers with their ferocious campaign to prevent power lines from crossing their land.

I think when the dust settles we’ll all owe a vote of thanks to all of these groups, for their determined effort to stop greens from ruining the landscape with their ugly mechanical monstrosities.

We have to stop these green developers from exploiting the wilderness. The lesson is, if you don’t want a beautiful part of your landscape to be despoiled by greens, and you can’t find a local indigenous group who are prepared to fight for their sacred claims, nesting boxes for rare and endangered species and perhaps a few livestream webcams are your next best line of defence.

Update (EW): Click here to see Ark Energy’s description of Wooroora Station, along with a map showing the location – right in the middle of one of the most beautiful sections of the Atherton Tablelands. Ark Energy claims to have the support of locals for their project.
Watts Up With That?

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