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Report No. 46, 56th Parliament - Mineral and Energy Resources and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2020
Committee's report
The committee tabled its report on 27 March 2020. The government's response to the committee's report was tabled on 19 May 2020. The Bill was passed with amendments by the Queensland Parliament on 20 May 2020.
View: | Report |
View: | Debate of the Bill in Parliament: Transcript 19/05/2020 (pages 879-883, 888-890, 907-926) Transcript 20/05/2020 (pages 974-984, 986-989) The debate can be viewed by clicking on the movie icon within the transcripts. |
View: | Mineral and Energy Resources and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2020 |
View: | Explanatory Notes Explanatory Notes for Amendments during consideration in detail |
View: | Explanatory Speech |
View: | Statement of Compatibility Statement of Compatibility for Amendments during consideration in detail |
About the Bill
On 4 February 2020, Hon Dr Anthony Lynham, Minister for Natural Resources, Mines and Energy, introduced the Mineral and Energy Resources and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2020 (Bill). The Bill was referred to the State Development, Natural Resources and Agricultural Industry Development Committee for detailed consideration and report by Friday 27 March 2020.
According to the explanatory notes the principal policy objectives of the Bill relate to three priorities of the Queensland Government:
- Safety and health – to strengthen the safety culture in the resources sector by introducing industrial manslaughter offences in the Coal Mining Safety and Health Act 1999, the Mining and Quarrying Safety and Health Act 1999, the Explosives Act 1999 and the Petroleum and Gas (Production and Safety) Act 2004; requiring that persons appointed to critical safety statutory roles for coal mining operations must be an employee of the coal mine operator; and enabling regulations to be made, under the Explosives Act 1999, about conditions and other requirements that apply to a security clearance for a person with access to explosives
- Financial assurance – to implement legislative changes that support mine rehabilitation and financial assurance reforms that mitigate the financial risk to the state and improve rehabilitation outcomes for Queensland. The amendments follow on from the Mineral and Energy Resources (Financial Provisioning) Act 2018 which commenced in April 2019 and include:
- the introduction of provisions to increase the state’s oversight of a resource authority holder when there is a change in ownership
- introduction of disqualification criteria to be used in the state’s assessment of tenure applications for a resource authority
- a requirement for significant mineral mining lease holders to prepare and comply with development plans
- provisions to allow the state to run competitive tenders to re-commercialise abandoned mine sites
- Regulatory efficiency – to improve the administration and effectiveness of the regulatory framework applying to resource projects. The Bill introduces:
- a dispute resolution framework to resolve commercial disputes for overlapping tenure applications or activities
- provisions to consolidate conference provisions throughout the resources acts into one framework under the Mineral and Energy Resources (Common Provisions) Act 2014
- provisions which allow the amalgamation of tenures when they are transitioned from the Petroleum Act 1923 to the Petroleum and Gas (Production and Safety) Act 2004
- changes to the requirements for coordination arrangements when the same entity will hold both a petroleum and a mineral tenure.
The Bill also amends several other Acts and Regulations within the Natural Resources, Mines and Energy portfolio, including removal of the time limit on the existing ban on certain fees and charges for customers on standard retail electricity contracts, and requiring greater transparency about infrastructure charges levied and collected by the south east Queensland water distributor-retailers. Other provisions relate to circumstances in which water storage infrastructure operators can reduce storage capacity, the Energy and Water Ombudsman, and appointment of a Queensland controlling authority for the New South Wales-Queensland Border Rivers.
Timeline
Submissions closed: | Thursday 27 February 2020 at 9.00 am |
Public briefing: | Monday 17 February 2020 at 11:30 am - Transcript - Broadcast |
Public hearings: | Tuesday 3 March 2020 - Brisbane - Transcript - Broadcast Part 1 - Part 2 - Part 3 Tuesday 3 March 2020 - Moranbah - Transcript |
Report tabled: | Friday 27 March 2020 - Report |
Related Publications
Publication Details | Type | Published Date | Tabled Date | Committee Name |
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Submissions
- 1 - Darth Clemerson
- 2 - Karl Barnsdale
- 3 - Shane Anderson
- 4 - Darren Heck
- 5 - Aaron Curtis
- 6 - John Phillips
- 7 - Steffan Ryder
- 8 - Salani Mudongo
- 9 - Australasian Explosives Industry Safety Group Inc.
- 10 - Scott Cooper
- 11 - Dan Cawte
- 12 - Joel Treasure
- 13 - Name withheld
- 14 - Tony Hokins
- 15 - Glen Alsemgeest
- 16 - Wade Klowss
- 17 - Mark Norris
- 18 - John Anger
- 19 - Neville Stanton
- 20 - Terry Young
- 21 - Andrew Ede
- 22 - Paul Hetherington
- 23 - Legh Thomasson
- 24 - David Brosnan
- 25 - Bernard Corden
- 26 - Mark Turner
- 27 - Australian Institute of Health and Safety
- 28 - Arrow Energy
- 29 - Unitywater
- 30 - Glencore Coal Assets Australia Pty Limited
- 31 - Damien Wynn
- 32 - Queensland Law Society
- 33 - Idemitsu Australia Resources Pty Ltd
- 34 - Australian Manufacturing Workers’ Union
- 35 - Graham Gardner
- 36 - Clayton Stansbie
- 37 - BMC and BMA Site Senior Executives
- 38 - Paul Sear
- 39 - Mark Clarkson
- 40 - Brendan Lynn
- 41 - Benjamin Lang
- 42 - Dr Anne Smith
- 43 - Ken Singer, Queensland Coal Site Senior Executives Forum
- 44 - Andrew McDonald
- 45 - Megan Kline
- 46 - Daniel Proffitt
- 47 - Mine Managers’ Association of Australia Inc.
- 48 - Ian Cooper
- 49 - WWF-Australia
- 50 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- 51 - Cement Concrete and Aggregates Australia
- 52 - Elizabeth Watts
- 53 - Environmental Defenders Office
- 54 - Queensland Resources Council
- 55 - Stewart Euston
- 56 - BHP Group
- 57 - Jason Andersen
- 58 - Westside Corporation Pty Ltd
- 59 - Peabody Energy Australia Pty Ltd
- 60 - The Australian Workers’ Union Queensland Branch
- 61 - Mine Ventilation Society of Australia
- 62 - Anglo American Metallurgical Coal Pty Ltd
- 63 - Phillip Nobes
- 64 - Kestrel Coal Resources Site Senior Executives and senior managers
- 65 - Urban Utilities
- 66 - Association of Mining and Exploration Companies
- 67 - Kestrel Coal Resources Pty Ltd
- 68 - Bridget McCall
- 69 - Australian Petroleum Production & Exploration Association Limited
- 70 - Jason Meikle
- 71 - Senex Energy Limited
- 72 - Garth Tongue
- 73 - Electrical Trade Union of Employees Queensland
- 74 - Origin Energy Upstream Operator Pty Ltd
- 75 - Ian Adams
- 76 - QGC Pty Ltd
- 77 - Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union, Mining and Energy Division, Queensland District Branch
- 78 - Paul Goldsbrough
- 79 - Dr Ray Parkin OAM
- 80 - John Ninness