Home

Workers hit coal seam at Adani mine in Qld

Tracey FerrierAAP
David Boshoff, CEO of Bravus Mining, holds a lump of coal at the Carmichael mine project.
Camera IconDavid Boshoff, CEO of Bravus Mining, holds a lump of coal at the Carmichael mine project. Credit: AAP

Coal from Adani's controversial Queensland mine should be heading offshore later this year after workers struck the first major seam.

Adani Australia, now known as Bravus, is celebrating the milestone two years after its controversial Carmichael mine and rail project received its final approvals.

Bravus CEO David Boshoff has shared a photo of himself clutching a lump of coal and a coal pick at the mine site.

"We have faced many hurdles along the way, but thanks to the hard work and perseverance of our team, we have now reached the coal seams," he said in a statement on Thursday.

Get in front of tomorrow's news for FREE

Journalism for the curious Australian across politics, business, culture and opinion.

READ NOW

"We're on track to export first coal this year."

The mine will initially export coal to India, where the Adani Group is based.

Mr Boshoff says Bravus has done deals to offload the 10 million tonnes the mine will produce each year.

Pablo Brait is from Market Forces, which campaigns against investment in fossil fuels, and has cast doubt on the company's timeline.

"The project has been delayed by seven years and is still a long way from completion," he said in a statement.

"Over 100 companies have pledged to never support this mine and the economics of coal power keep getting worse. The idea that Adani will viably mine coal at Carmichael for decades to come is fanciful."

News of the milestone comes as the miner heads back to court on Friday over a civil case it has brought against prominent Stop Adani activist Ben Pennings.

Adani has claimed he unlawfully obtained confidential information that was then used to harass contractors working on the project.

In March, it asked the Supreme Court to order that Mr Pennings never be allowed to know what information he is alleged to have received.

Lawyers for Mr Pennings have said it's impossible for him to defend the case if he is not allowed to know exactly what he's accused of.

Supreme Court Justice Susan Brown is due to rule on the matter on Friday.

Get the latest news from thewest.com.au in your inbox.

Sign up for our emails