Mining giant BHP should foot the bill for a major fire ant outbreak in Queensland, an advocacy group says.
It comes after odour detection dog teams found the presence of fire ants at several mine sites in the Central Highlands and Isaac Council regions, including at the BHP Broadmeadow Mine west of Mackay.
Much of the country is at high risk of infestation, according to data from the National Fire Ant Eradication Program.
Fire ants can have a serious impact on Australia’s ecosystem.
In light of the latest detection, Reece Pianta from the Invasive Species Council believes BHP should be the ones to pay for the treatment required across their sites that were impacted by the fire ant infestation.
“When a mining company moves contaminated material and sparks an outbreak, taxpayers shouldn’t be left footing the bill – the companies responsible must pay to have their mess cleaned up, no different from an oil spill,” he said.
Pianta insists it is not a matter of punishing companies such as BHP in this instance, rather than forcing public funds to be used would undermine efforts to deal with the fire ants issue.
“This isn’t about companies footing the bill for everything. But if governments allow outbreaks like this to suck resources away from where they’re needed most, we risk undermining the eradication effort across the whole country,” he said.
“BHP did the right thing reporting and supporting fire ant surveillance work, now they are uniquely well-placed to support the response.”
BHP has been contacted for comment.
Nine News
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