25 March, 2018

Hemmed in by big coal: 'A bad feeling is constantly hanging over us’

It’s a hot summer’s afternoon at Riverside station, 50km north of the purpose-built mining town Moranbah in the central Queensland highlands. Jeanette and Allan Williams are drinking tea and eating Christmas cake around the kitchen table with three of their six children. Holly and twins Claire and Charles have returned to live and work on the family’s 80,000-hectare cattle enterprise. Running more than 16,000 Brahman cattle, the family breeds and fattens their stock on prime cattle country that grows brigalow trees and buffel grass.
 Allan and Jeanette Williams, who have coalmines encircling their cattle station. 
The homestead, which sits on top of the world’s highest-quality coal deposits, has been under threat for more than 15 years. A proposed underground mine at the family’s adjoining property, Red Hill, is likely to cut through to Riverside and under the house.


Read Paula Heelan’s story from The Guardian - “Hemmed in by big coal: 'A bad feeling is constantly hanging over us’.”

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