Australia protest forces ship to abort arrival at coal port, 170 arrested

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Hundreds of activists were in the harbour near the Port of Newcastle, as part of a 50-hour blockade that started on Nov 22.

Hundreds of activists were in the harbour near the Port of Newcastle, as part of a 50-hour blockade that started on Nov 22.

PHOTO: RISING TIDE AUSTRALIA/X

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- A climate change protest off the coast of Australia’s New South Wales State forced an inbound ship to turn back from the country’s largest terminal for coal exports on Nov 24, the port operator said.

New South Wales police said 170 protesters were arrested on Nov 24 for refusing to move from the shipping channel near the Port of Newcastle.

The port, some 170km from the state capital Sydney, is the largest bulk shipping port on Australia’s east coast.

A Port of Newcastle spokesperson said disruption due to the protest was “minimal” but that an inbound vessel “aborted due to people in the channel and has been rescheduled to come in”.

Port operations would continue as normal on Nov 24 if police were able to keep the shipping channel clear, he said. Police said the harbour remained open despite “some serious disruptions”.

The climate activist group Rising Tide, which organised the 50-hour protest that started on Nov 22, said the vessel forced to turn around was a coal ship.

Three people were arrested on Nov 23 after being removed from the water.

Climate change is a divisive issue in Australia, the world’s second-biggest exporter of thermal coal and the largest exporter of coking coal.

A similar protest in November last year disrupted operations at the Port of Newcastle, forcing all shipping movements to cease temporarily. REUTERS

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