The Latrobe Valley has powered Victoria for over a century.
Now we are left with a legacy of polluting coal ash dumps and three enormous brown coal mines that must be made safe, stable, and rehabilitated.
Decisions made now will determine the viability of the region’s economy, livability, and environment for many decades to come. To ensure the very best outcomes, transparency and informed community participation must be at the heart of the rehabilitation planning process.
The future of our region should not be determined by what mining companies are willing to pay.
Take Action
We wish to acknowledge the thousands of years of traditional governance and culture practiced by Gunaikurnai peoples across these vast lands and waters.
We pay our respects to Elders past and present, recognise their continuing contribution to caring for Country.
The Latrobe Valley is home to three enormous coal mines – Hazelwood, Yallourn and Loy Yang. Hazelwood is the only one to have ceased mining. It is the first to undergo full rehabilitation and will set a precedent for those that follow.
A billion cubic meters of mass was removed in the process of mining at Hazelwood coal mine, ¾ of which was brown coal, the rest was overburden. Due to the coal being found at a relatively shallow depth, there is very little material to use to fill the pit, which is, at its deepest point 60m below sea level.
The owners of the Hazelwood mine pit, the French owned company ENGIE, were allowed to dig right up to the Princes Freeway, a major highway which is flanked on the other side by the township of Morwell.
After the mine caught fire in 2014, blanketing the Morwell residents in toxic smoke for 45 days, two Inquiries found that the disaster was due to company negligence and that ENGIE must produce a plan for rehabilitation.
ENGIE’s current plan relies on natural water sources, which they would use to flood the pit and the several toxic coal ash dumps – one of which, the HARA (or Hazelwood Ash Retention Area) is not adequately lined and is known to be currently leaching contamination into local groundwater.
In addition to this, ENGIE plans to divert the Morwell River into their pit, destroying a major river and removing the essential nutrients and services which it provides to the Durt’Yowan/Latrobe River, wetlands and Gippsland Lakes.
Let Rivers be Rivers
The Concerned Waterways Alliance (CWA) is a network of community and environment groups from Gippsland to the Otways. We share a deep concern over the deterioration of our rivers, waterways and wetlands and poor water management in southern Victoria. We come from many different catchments and yet we see the same tragedies unfolding: rivers depleted by over-extraction; wetlands on the brink of collapse due to insufficient flows; groundwater dependent ecosystems drying and dying; and contaminants leaching into our waterways. We come together now to raise a united voice for the rivers and waterways of southern Victoria.
Latest News
A Wrap on the Year that has been
In concurrence with the global health pandemic, our region has been facing another great challenge. Whilst this year will mark most of our lives, it is also a milestone for the rehabilitation of our coal mines here in the Latrobe Valley. In the public sphere the...
Engie’s Concept Master Plan and what it means for water
Engie have released their Concept Master Plan for rehabilitation of the Hazelwood mine, and envisions the Morwell River being re-diverted through the mine land “once fill [water] is assured”. Yallourn also plans to interconnect their full pit lake with the Morwell...
Community Response to a Problem of Massive Proportions
When a group of local residents met at a summit earlier this year to discuss mine rehabilitation in the Latrobe Valley, they held serious concerns. Chiefly, contamination leaching from inadequately managed coal ash dumps; and the enormous amount of fresh water from...