Life in the shadow of coal central
By NICK O’MALLEY INVESTIGATIONS
March 19, 2010 THE massive expansion of the mining industry in the Upper Hunter Valley is making people sick, say concerned residents who have campaigned for a decade for the government to establish independent air-quality monitoring and to conduct a proper health study. One resident, Di Gee, from Jerrys Plains, worries that the mines have caused the asthma her three youngest children suffer. Her two eldest children, born before the mines nearest her family’s dairy farm expanded, do not have respiratory problems Tuan Au, a local doctor, has been so frustrated by the government’s inaction in the region that he has begun his own study, spending $5000 so far in testing the lung function of students from 10 schools, after he noticed his asthma patients seemed to improve while on holiday. He claims to have found preliminary evidence linking lower-lung function in children to proximity to the mines. In November the environmental scientist John Drinin from the Singleton Shire Healthy Environment Group sent a detailed submission to the government outlining its fears over the area’s two power stations and 34 mines — facilities from which the government will this year earn an estimated $1.5 billion in royalties and fees. The government did not even acknowledge receipt of the submission, nor of two follow-up letters sent on its behalf by a senior solicitor in the Environmental Defender’s Office until Wednesday, the day the Herald series on mining in the region began. ”Presumably this is just a response to the stories that have been in the Herald,” Dr Drinin said. … In 2008 alone, 113 tonnes of toxic metals and their compounds (including antimony, arsenic, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, lead, manganese, mercury, nickel, selenium and zinc) were emitted into the air of the upper Hunter from mines and electricity generators, along with 132,700 tonnes of sulphur dioxide and 62,600 tonnes of oxides of nitrogen.