Australian mining magnate Gina Rinehart’s Hancock Prospecting is hoping a charm offensive, from annual fundraising parties to local refurbishments at a golf course, will help overcome opposition to a massive new coal mine in Canada’s Rocky Mountains.
Hancock unit Riversdale Resources’ Grassy Mountain mine, which is forecast to produce 4.5-million tonnes of steelmaking coal per year, would span 2,800 hectares and could set a precedent for new projects in the region. Opponents say the project would harm wildlife and water in the area.
In June, the province of Alberta, home to most of Canada’s oil reserves, rolled back 1970s-era restrictions on openpit coal mining to jumpstart an economy hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic and plunging oil prices.
The proposal for Grassy Mountain predates that change. But Alberta’s move is at odds with Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s effort to wean the country from coal and comes as a growing number of banks, insurers and investors shun the fossil fuel due to climate concerns.