Podcasts about carmichael mine

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Latest podcast episodes about carmichael mine

Behind the Lines / Align in the Sound - New Economy Network
Wangan - Jagalingou against Adani - Bravus Mine - Poor Reception - Coedie McAvoy 2022 - 04 - 15 BTL

Behind the Lines / Align in the Sound - New Economy Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2022 75:51


This Friday we have Coedie McAvoy, Wangan / Jagalingu man joining us live via phone from the Waddananggu camp in central Queensland. The frontiers of climate crisis and First Nations dispossession are being pushed beyond their limits by the centuries old coalition of party political government and big business - once again. The Adani-Bravus mega coal mine at Carmichael is just the first of many planned for the galilee basin, laying down the infrastructure which can only lead to more intense climate chaos, expanding an industry with no future. Coedie will talk with us from Waddananggu, a cultural ceremony taking place across the road from Adani-Bravus's Carmichael Mine - the biggest coal mine in this continent's history.

Business Standard Podcast
Market wrap: Sensex gains 969 points from day's low, ends 296 points up

Business Standard Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2021 5:09


Top headlines   ·       Sensex gains 969 points from day's low, ends 296 points up ·       HP Adhesives makes strong debut at 16% premium, ends 22% higher ·       RBL Bank tanks 20% as Vishwavir Ahuja goes on leave; analysts sound caution ·       Tech Mahindra gains 4% to touch new all-time high ·       Adani Group nears first coal shipment from shunned Australian mine   The key benchmark indices closed higher after starting on a muted note and staying in the red zone for a while. However, by close, they recouped losses and finished with steady gains on the back of support from select pharma and private banking shares. IT stocks also logged notable gains.   BSE benchmark Sensex rallied to a high of 57,512, up 969 points from the day's low. It finally ended 296 points higher at 57,420.   The NSE Nifty surged 279 points from the day's low to hit a high of 17,112. The index eventually settled with a gain of 82 points at 17,086.   On an immediate basis, the index has formed a support zone near the 17,000-16,900 level. If it manages to sustain above this level, one can expect a swift extension in current pullback towards the hurdle zone of 17,150-17,220, according to Rohit Singre, senior technical analyst at LKP Securities.   Among stocks, RBL Bank garnered a lot of attention today as the scrip hit a 52-week low, crashing over 20%. The RBI appointed Yogesh K Dayal as an additional director after the private sector bank's managing director and chief executive officer Vishwavir Ahuja went on a medical leave.   Later, in a clarification, the RBI said that the bank was well capitalised and its financial position remained satisfactory. Analysts believe that this development will create uncertainty and will be negative for the stock – at least in the short to medium term. The stock closed 18.3% lower on the BSE.    That apart, Tech Mahindra was the leading gainer. It rallied 4% to hit a new high of Rs 1,792 on the expectation of strong earnings in the December quarter. The stock has surged 12% in the past week, against a 2.8% rise in the Sensex.   The company remains confident of delivering double-digit organic revenue growth in FY22, given broad-based demand, strong deal wins, improving win rates and steady progress on client mining.   Further, the shares of GMR Infrastructure also rose 12% on the BSE after the GMR Group signed a shareholders agreement with Indonesia's Angkasa Pura II for the development of Medan Airport.   Adding to the continuous trail of IPO debuts, HP Adhesives made a decent market debut, with its shares getting listed at Rs 319 on the BSE, a 16% premium over the issue price. The stock, which got locked in the 5% upper circuit in early trade, closed 22% higher on the exchange at Rs 335.   The broader markets also finished with notable gains. The BSE Midcap and Smallcap closed 0.3% and 0.5% up, respectively.   Among sectors, the Nifty Pharma index saw the biggest gains amid a fresh surge in Covid cases in some states, possibly led by the Omicron variant. The index closed 1.6% higher. The Bankex, the other notable gainer on the BSE, ended 0.7% up.   Meanwhile, in other news, the Adani Group is preparing to ship the first coal cargo from Australia's most controversial mine, after battling a seven-year campaign by climate activists and defying a global push away from fossil fuels.   The Carmichael mine in the outback Queensland state of Australia is likely to be the last new thermal coal mine to be built in that country. But it will be a vital source of supply for importers such as power plants in India. According to a spokesperson for Adani Group's Australian subsidiary Bravus Mining & Resources, the company has secured the market for 10 million tonnes of coal per annum which will be produced at the Carmichael Mine.

Solidarity Breakfast
The Budget II Adani

Solidarity Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2020


Today we are going to look at the budget. Today we will go through some of the key points using a presentation given by Ali Pennington and Matt Grundnoff from a webinare put on  by the Australia Institute.We will follow  with two areas that missed out Aged Care and the environment Lloyd Williams from the Health Services Union will talk about Aged Care May House from the Australian Conservation Foundation gives us some idea how the big pollutors were given free kicks despite the Governments talk of a new transition economy.Kevin will round up the week.Andy Paine from Front Line Action on Coal gives us an update at the Adani Protest at the Carmichael Mine frontline

Skool Of Stoke
SoS #3

Skool Of Stoke

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2020 10:29


A raw as yarn with Dhagaan Zac from @Movement Media. This is a sos call for help and support from all is needed. Zac is on the frontlines filming and documenting the truth and I’m very thankful of the collaborative efforts to get these vital truths out there. Below is copied from the Wangan & Jagalingou website and a chance for others to sign the petition, please share and keep the fire burning we must protect and fight for land and our sovereign birth rights to Country and our sacred Lore and Culture. Please share the link below. https:wanganjagalingou.com.au/our-fight/ “We will PROTECT and DEFEND our Country and our connection to it.” Why is this important? We are gravely concerned about the push by Adani and the Queensland and Federal Governments to open up the Carmichael Mine on our traditional lands. Our traditional lands are an interconnected and living whole; a vital cultural landscape. It is central to us as a People, and to the maintenance of our identity, laws and consequent rights. If the Carmichael mine were to proceed it would tear the heart out of the land. The scale of this mine means it would have devastating impacts on our native title, ancestral lands and waters, our totemic plants and animals, and our environmental and cultural heritage. It would pollute and drain billions of litres of groundwater, and obliterate important springs systems. It would potentially wipe out threatened and endangered species. It would literally leave a huge black hole, monumental in proportions, where there were once our homelands. These effects are irreversible. Our land will be “disappeared”. Nor would the direct impacts be limited to our lands – they would have cascading effects on the neighbouring lands and waters of other Traditional Owners and other landholders in the region. And the mine would cause damage to climate, with the burning of the coal unleashing a mass of carbon into the atmosphere and propelling dangerous global warming. We could not in all conscience consent to such wholesale destruction. Nor could we allow such a project to contribute to the dire unfolding effects of climate change that pose such great risks to all peoples. We know that many other people who care deeply about conserving natural places, vital water resources, the great fauna and flora of central Queensland, and a health planet share our concerns about this mine. Please stand with us in our Defence of Country. When we say No, we mean No.

Connecting Industry
#2 Lucas Dow: Adani Carmichael Mine and Rail – June 2, 2020

Connecting Industry

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2020 23:25


Lucas Dow, CEO of Adani Australia, is an experienced senior executive who oversees the strategic direction and activities of the Carmichael Mine and Rail. He joined Adani Group in April 2018. Lucas is an experienced senior executive and has managed full profit and loss accountability for multibillion-dollar businesses and capital projects. Prior to joining Adani in April 2018, Lucas held senior roles in global organisations including CEO and Asset President for BHP Billiton Mitsubishi Alliance, VP of Operations and Director at South 32. He holds a Bachelor of Engineering and in his early career held operational and management roles in thermal and metallurgical coal operations.

Weltzeit - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Umstrittene Carmichael-Mine - Australische Kohle für Indien

Weltzeit - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2020 22:08


Mitten durchs Weltnaturerbe Great Barrier Reef will der Rohstoffkonzern Adani jährlich Millionen Tonnen Kohle aus der Carmichael-Mine nach Indien verschiffen. Auch mit Hilfe von Siemens. Klimaschützer protestieren. Doch Australiens Kohlelobby ist stark. Von Andreas Stummer www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Weltzeit Hören bis: 19.01.2038 04:14 Direkter Link zur Audiodatei

Finance & Fury Podcast
Adani Coal Mine; we dig deeper and look more closely at the pros and cons

Finance & Fury Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2018 28:39


Welcome to Say What Wednesday. Today's question is from our listener, Sam. "Hi Louis, love the podcast! I’m wondering if you could do an episode on Adani. I’ve seen lots of protests over this and am just wondering what your thoughts are? Why are people so opposed to it? Seen the school kids striking or the media saying it will be the end of the world?" A wide range of groups are opposed to the project for different reasons – So let us go through each one in detail – not platitudes Let's get into it! What is it? - Adani Group is an Indian multinational conglomerate – diverse businesses include energy, resources, logistics, agribusiness, real estate, financial services, and defence and aerospace. Carmichael Mine in QLD - Adani has said that over a 60-year lifetime, the company expects to extract 2.3bn tonnes of coal, which would make it equivalent to the biggest mine in the US. Six open-cut pits as well as five underground mines - area more than 30km long. first mine in the giant untapped Galilee coal basin - production rate of 25m tonnes a year (originally 60m)   Opposition to the mine present climate and environmental claims  Climate: “Average emissions from burning the coal extracted will amount to about 77m tonnes of CO2 each year.” That is the CO2 from burning it – Not the extraction – This coal will mostly be exported to India But why are CO2 emissions such a big deal? - The worry is that CO2 emissions are leading to climate change and global warming – “keep less than 2C – 90% of coal reserves need to stay in the ground” Question: Are CO2 emissions bad? If they are, how are they bad? To remove all carbon – Everything dies! Forgotten fact - inhaled air/atmosphere is 78.08% nitrogen, 20.95% oxygen,

Monday Breakfast
Smashing the Fash in Broady; Stopping Adani with Christian Slattery of the ACF; Over the Wall; Dr Maria Pallota-Chiarolli on the importance of Safe Schools.

Monday Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2018


7.00 am Acknowledgement of Country7.05 am Song "Treaty 18" - Yothu Yindi, Gavin Campbell and Baker Boy  7.10 am We speak about Campaign Against Racism and Fascism's action in Broadmeadows on Friday, as well as the meeting Lockout Lockheed had with University of Melbounre. 7.30 am Christian Slattery from the Aus Conservation Foundation talks about the Adani Campaign, sucess thus far and what's next in the fight against the Carmichael Mine and towards a Green Energy future. 7.50 am Over the Wall continues to look at changes to the Victorian Tenancy Act. 8:00 am Dr Maria Pallota-Chiarolli on why Safe Schools matters and Matthew Guy shouldn't scrap it if he wins the state election. 

Lucky Roland
GO #35 - Bulletin [22.6.18]

Lucky Roland

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2018 66:31


Newcastle produced some savage studio views of the worlds biggest coal port for this environment news bulletin. Headlines: 1. Would you drive 14 hours to catch one critically endangered fish? Nah? Me neither (some people do but) 2. Conservation commitment creates community cohesion, confirmation courtesy of Ningaloo Reef 3. Adani’s Carmichael Mine is essentially an enviro-bomb about to detonate and obliterate countless Australian ecologies into a new dimension 4. Drinking water in the NT has uranium in it. Uranium! Yep, life in the east is pretty bloody rosy 5. The world’s oldest captive orangutan just died at age 62. And you know how I mentioned bluefin tuna? They can live up to 40 years old! Here I was thinking I’m all grown up but 26 is feeling pretty juvenile right now. 6. Palm oil is the absolute pits - no news there - but some companies are trying to drown the world in it. Sad times 7. WA actually came pretty close to a walking-dead style evacuation due to water shortages had sufficient contingency not been installed over a decade ago (phew eh!) 8. Is trash washing up in untouched Australian environments from overseas actually balancing the eco-ledger in a creepy sort of way? 9. “Pumped storage hydro is the most efficient mature technology to store energy, and integrating this with solar and potentially wind over time, we can deliver the holy grail of renewable which is dispatchable, reliable energy” References on blog, tell ya friends! www.everydaygreen.org

Earth Matters
Adani Carmichael mine - Reapproved but not without Resistance

Earth Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2015


On October 16th, the Federal Government re-approved the Adani Carmichael coal and railway project. Federal Environment Minister Greg Hunt, or Minister for Coal, released a statement of reasons for the approval. The Australian Conservation Foundation launched a Federal Court challenge to the Environment Minister Greg Hunt's, arguing that the mine's emissions would contribute to climate change and effect the Great Barrier Reef.Basha Stasak talks about the Federal Court challenge that the Australian Conservation Foundation launched, and Patricia Julian speaks on behalf of the Mackay Conservation Group who initially challenged the mine in a judicial review in January this year.