The Guardian Australia

Criticism of sacred site decision shows we have learned nothing from Juukan Gorge

- Calla Wahlquist

Among the concerns listed by the 2,000 farmers who converged on the lawns of Parliament House in Canberra last week was the protection of prime agricultur­al land from renewable energy developmen­ts.

It has become a common refrain. The National party leader, David Littleprou­d, warned at the party’s annual federal council on Friday of the risk to prime agricultur­al land from energy transition projects. The mining magnate Gina Rinehart took to the stage at a business event last year to warn that one-third of Australia’s prime agricultur­al land could be “taken over” by renewable energy projects. In almost every campaign against a proposed developmen­t in the bush, the potential impact on prime agricultur­al land is raised as a key concern.

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So it has been interestin­g to see the response to the Aboriginal heritage protection order issued last month by the environmen­t minister, Tanya Plibersek. Plibersek made a partial declaratio­n under section 10 of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act to protect cultural heritage in the headwaters of the Belubula River, scuppering a proposal from the mining company Regis to build the tailings dam for its proposed McPhillamy­s open-cut goldmine on the site.

The decision was made in response to an applicatio­n by the Wiradjuri elder Aunty Nyree Reynolds, supported by the Wiradyuri Traditiona­l Owners Central West Aboriginal Corporatio­n. In announcing her decision, Plibersek said the area was linked to initiation ceremonies, the details of which had been disclosed to her privately and must remain confidenti­al due to cultural sensitivit­y.

Despite Plibersek’s decision not to extend the protection order to the mine site itself, Regis said the decision “made the project in its current form unviable”.

The circumstan­ces surroundin­g the decision are complex: the Wiradyuri Traditiona­l Owners Central West Aboriginal Corporatio­n is not the registered Aboriginal party under state heritage laws. That’s the Orange Local Aboriginal Land Council, which initially opposed the proposed mine but later changed its official position to neutral. The involvemen­t of a group other than the registered Aboriginal party is not unusual in cultural heritage battles, neither is the confidenti­ality of culturally sensitive informatio­n. A robust set of Indigenous heritage laws can deal with both of these issues. Whether the laws are robust is another matter entirely, but we’ll get to that later.

For now, let’s look at the broader impact of the decision. Twelve months ago graziers David and Bec Price, whose 1,200ha property at Blayney in New South Wales includes 10km of river frontage, told Guardian Australia’s Rural Network that the river flats were “charged with water all the time” and they were concerned the upstream developmen­t could affect their livelihood and the region’s productivi­ty. “We don’t need gold to survive,” Bec Price said. “But we need to eat, and we need water to eat.”

Farmland around Blayney is highly productive and tightly held, with a perhectare price among the highest in the central west, according to the 2023 Australian Farmland Values report.

The Prices are members of the Belubula Headwaters Protection Group, a collective of farmers and other concerned locals which celebrated the section 10 declaratio­n.

That is not to say that every farmer in the region opposed the mine, just as the opposition to any given renewable energy developmen­t is not unanimous. Many supported it for the money and jobs it might bring.

But it is notable that criticism of the decision has framed it as a push to curry favour with inner-city seats and ignored grassroots campaigns by Indigenous and non-Indigenous locals. If the story had been reported as pro

tecting farmland as well as protecting heritage, would that criticism be different?

Littleprou­d told the Central Western Daily this month that his party would overturn the heritage protection order and approve the mine if elected. The opposition leader, Peter Dutton, went a step further, saying he would overhaul the federal Indigenous heritage laws.

It’s probably too much to hope that Dutton meant he intended to act on recommenda­tions made by a 2020 parliament­ary inquiry after the destructio­n of Juukan Gorge. That inquiry, convened after Rio Tinto blew up a 46,000-year-old archaeolog­ical site in the Pilbara, called on the parliament to “urgently review the adequacy” of the laws, which have been used a scant four times in the past decade.

Interestin­gly, all four have been in NSW: the Bellwood sacred site in Nambucca Heads; the Awabakal women’s site, the Butterfly Cave; a sacred women’s site at Mount Panorama/Wahluu; and the Belubula River. All but the last were issued under the former Coalition government. And only one, the Belubula decision, concerned a proposed mining developmen­t.

Among the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act’s limitation­s is that it is designed as legislatio­n of last resort, meaning an applicatio­n can only be made after state and territory avenues have failed. In most cases protection is not granted. As the Wintawari Guruma Aboriginal Corporatio­n wrote in its submission to the 2020 inquiry, the federal laws are “cumbersome, slow and ineffectua­l” and the “economic momentum” behind developmen­ts means protection orders are rare. In the case of Juukan Gorge, no applicatio­n for an emergency order under section nine of the act was made because representa­tives for the Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura traditiona­l owners did not understand the process and could not get the relevant adviser from then environmen­t minister Sussan Ley’s office on the phone.

The interim report produced by that inquiry was titled “Never Again”. It’s a remarkable sign of political amnesia that we’re now arguing about whether the laws are weighted too strongly in favour of Aboriginal people.

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 ?? Photograph: Stephanie Gardiner/AAP ?? The decision by environmen­t minister Tanya Plibersek to protect cultural heritage in the headwaters of the Belubula River scuppered a proposal from mining company Regis to build the tailings dam for its proposed goldmine on the site.
Photograph: Stephanie Gardiner/AAP The decision by environmen­t minister Tanya Plibersek to protect cultural heritage in the headwaters of the Belubula River scuppered a proposal from mining company Regis to build the tailings dam for its proposed goldmine on the site.

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