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Road to COP29: Our insights
The 28th Conference of the Parties on Climate Change (COP28) took place on November 30 - December 12 in Dubai.
Global | Publication | October 2019
In light of recent determinations of mining applications, it is timely to review the Land and Environment Court of NSW’s (Court’s) decision in Rocky Hill.1 This decision has received due attention for its findings regarding greenhouse gas emissions and climate change, and caused concern within the resources industry relating to certainty and delay in the decision-making process.2
However, the decision also highlights the importance of finding the “right” place and receiving and maintaining a “social licence to operate” from the community in order to obtain planning approval.3 “Social licence to operate” is generally considered to mean an ongoing acceptance of a business or project by the community and other important stakeholders.4 Meaningful engagement with the community is therefore crucial to obtain and then maintain this licence. This is a position that has been increasingly promoted by the NSW Government with several community consultation guidelines for major projects being developed in recent years.5
In determining to refuse consent for the coal mine, the Court determined that the assessment undertaken of key environmental and social impacts was inadequate and that the measures proposed to mitigate those impacts were also inadequate.
For the resources sector, and other major projects proponents, the key takeaways from this decision are to ensure that:
Compliance with these requirements will assist project proponents to obtain planning approval and to maintain the ongoing acceptance of their project by the host, and broader community, therefore avoiding costly conflicts and delays.
The Rocky Hill mine was to be located in a high quality landscape and therefore impacts of the mine on the landscape or visual impacts were an important assessment consideration. The Gloucester Valley was described as a “unique topographical feature”, and where the setting was “scenic and serene” or “an idyll”.6
The Court found that:
The decision highlights that projects located in “significant landscapes” will need to demonstrate that they will not have unacceptable adverse impacts on those landscapes during construction and operation, particularly if the landscapes are undisturbed at the time of the application. What will be “unacceptable” will be significantly influenced by the submissions made by community members and organisations. Amenity barriers may not be sufficient as a mitigation measure to reduce visual impacts particularly where the barriers themselves would be visible as additional human-made features and as such have an unacceptable impact.11 Further, proponents must demonstrate that following rehabilitation, the landform will be reinstated and that the recreated landscape will retain the values of the pre-development landscape.
The Court’s lengthy consideration of the social impacts in Rocky Hill highlighted the importance for proponents to have significant regard to the wider social impacts of a project, both actual and perceived. While the project was found to have positive social impacts in terms of local employment and stimulation of the economy, the benefits were still insufficient to outweigh the other negative social impacts.
Justice Preston concluded that many of the social impacts were likely to have a high or extreme social risk rating12 including adverse impacts on:
The decision encourages proponents to ensure that their social impact assessments accurately assess a broad range of social issues, including the impact of a proposal on the community’s sense of place, using an appropriate methodology. This will be particularly important where residents have a deep attachment to an area. Further, proponents will need to consider whether any proposed mitigation strategies will contribute to the negative social impacts of the project, for example, as a result of negatively impacting the scenery or amenity.18
The Court recognised the sizeable public benefits of employment, royalties to the NSW Government, and infrastructure contributions to the local council. However these public benefits were held not to outweigh the significant adverse land use and visual and social impacts (in addition to climate change).
Although Gloucester Resources Limited (GRL) proposed numerous mitigation measures, including a community grants program funded from a total payment of $6.5 million over the life of the mine to address social impacts, the Court found that the proposed mitigation measures would not be effective in mitigating the negative social impacts.19 Further, the Court held that there was inequity in the distribution of the burdens and benefits of the project: the social and environmental burdens were to be borne by the local community, as they were to be in close proximity to the project, but the positive economic benefits would largely flow to others who are more geographically distant from the project, such as GRL’s investors and shareholders, and government entities.20
The decision emphasises the importance of proponents providing measures to minimise impacts and any incompatibility with existing, approved and likely preferred uses in the vicinity, including uses which are likely to occur after decommissioning of the project. This will take on heightened importance where a project is proposed to be located on strategic agricultural land, with the proponent needing to demonstrate that its rehabilitation plan will successfully restore the agricultural capability of the land. Comparable examples of mine rehabilitation will assist, being examples which are of a similar scale to the project, and which have been successfully used over a period of time, for example, cropping or agricultural production.
Where a proponent can provide a bundle of public benefits that can, on balance, outweigh the combined costs of the project and the public benefits of the existing approved and likely preferred uses, the project will likely to be considered assessed and determined differently to the Rocky Hill mine.
“Social licence to operate” is becoming an increasingly topical issue across a broad spectrum of industries. In May 2018, the ASX Corporate Governance Council consulted on a proposal to amend the ASX Corporate Governance Principles for listed companies to “recognise the fundamental importance of a listed entity’s social licence to operate”.21 In November, the Commonwealth Parliament investigated the issue and recommended that minimum standards for mining and resources companies be established to secure and maintain a social licence to operate in regional areas.22 Further, the Hayne Royal Commission Report released early this year identified six norms of conduct which are fundamental precepts reflected in the law. One of those fundamental precepts is to “act fairly”.23 The Royal Commission demonstrates that the community expects organisations to behave in certain ways in order to have a social licence.
The Rocky Hill case demonstrates that having significant community opposition to a project (83% of submissions from the Gloucester local government area opposed the mine),24 can result in lengthy delays in the assessment, and ultimately, refusal of planning approval. There were over 2,000 objections made during the public exhibition of the project’s amended development application.
In this climate, early and meaningful engagement with the community is crucial to limiting some of the risks that arise from sections of the community that oppose a development. Proponents are encouraged by the NSW Government to undertake “a comprehensive, detailed and genuine community consultation process throughout the assessment process, including at the siting and pre-lodgement stage”.25 Community members who lodge an objection to a project during the public exhibition period may have a right of appeal against the decision, which is increasingly exercised.26 Even where such an appeal fails and planning approval is granted for the project, litigation can generate significant costs and lead to delays in the commencement of the project and potential reputational risk.
We are increasingly observing that communities and local councils are seeking to ensure that socio-economic benefits of a project flow directly to them. Where there is significant community opposition, proponents should be minded to provide mitigation programs and community benefits packages which are adapted to the specific community’s needs, and connected to the actual and perceived negative environmental and social impacts caused by the project. This may involve considering innovative management and financial opportunities such as co-ownership or co-investment to build greater local support for a development.
Please contact a member of our team if you wish to discuss this decision and what it may mean for your project.
Gloucester Resources Limited v Minister for Planning [2019] NSWLEC 7 per Preston CJ of the Court (GRL case).
“Mine decision 'risks schools and hospitals'”, The Australian, 30 September 2019.
Australian Institute of Company Directors, KPMG, Maintaining the social licence to operate: 2018 KPMG – AICD Trust Survey (2018).
House of Representatives Standing Committee on Industry, Innovation, Science and Resources, Keep it in the regions: Mining and resources industry support for businesses in regional economies, Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia, November 2018 p 133.
See for example, NSW Department of Industry, Resources and Geoscience, Guideline for community consultation requirements for exploration: Mining Act 1992 and Petroleum (Onshore) Act 1991, 1 March 2016; NSW Department of Planning and Environment, Wind Energy Guideline For State significant wind energy development, December 2016; NSW Department of Planning and Environment, Social impact assessment guideline: For State significant mining, petroleum production and extractive industry development, September 2017; NSW Government, Large-Scale Solar Guideline For State Significant Development, 2018; Further consent authorities will be required to have in place community participation plans by 1 December 2019.
GRL case at [1]-[2].
GRL case at [102] and [123].
GRL case at [217].
GRL case [176], [415]
GRL case at [221]-[222].
GRL case at [162].
GRL case at [417].
GRL case at [261, [262], [268]-[269], [354], [368], [379].
GRL case at [309].
GRL case at [321].
GRL case at [320], [322], [350].
GRL case at [351].
GRL case at [162].
GRL case at [420].
GRL case at [409]-[415].
References to a “social licence to operate” were ultimately replaced with terms such as “reputation” and “standing in the community” in the Corporate Governance Principles and Recommendations (the Fourth Edition).
House of Representatives Standing Committee on Industry, Innovation, Science and Resources, Keep it in the regions: Mining and resources industry support for businesses in regional economies, Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia, November 2018 p 158.
Commonwealth of Australia, Final Report: Royal Commission into Misconduct in the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry (Volume 1), 2019 p 8.
GRL case at [6].
NSW Department of Planning and Environment, Wind Energy Guideline For State significant wind energy development, December 2016 p 15.
This applies to State significant developments which would otherwise be designated development.
Publication
The 28th Conference of the Parties on Climate Change (COP28) took place on November 30 - December 12 in Dubai.
Publication
Miranda Cole, Julien Haverals and Emma Clarke of our Brussels/ London offices are the authors of a chapter on procedural issues in merger control that has been published in the third edition of the Global Competition Review’s The Guide to Life Sciences. This covers a number of significant procedural developments that have affected merger review of life sciences transactions.
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