Publication
FCA findings from multi-firm review of life insurers' pension transfer process
The FCA published its findings following a multi-firm review of life insurers' pension transfer processes.
Australia | Publication | August 2025
This article was co-authored by Loughlin Gleeson.
On 24 July 2025, the NSW Court of Appeal handed down a landmark decision in Denman Aberdeen Muswellbrook Scone Healthy Environment Group Inc v MACH Energy Australia Pty Ltd [2025] NSWCA 163 (DAMSHEG).
The decision relates to the approval of a project to extend the life of the Mount Pleasant mine in the NSW Hunter Valley from 2026 to 2048 (Project) by the Independent Planning Commission (IPC), and has implications for large-scale development with downstream impacts, including but not limited to resource extraction.
The decision clarifies that certain downstream and cumulative impacts must be considered by consent authorities under s 4.15(1)(b) of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (EPA Act). Section 4.15(b) provides that a consent authority is to take into consideration “the likely impacts of that development, including environmental impacts on both the natural and built environments, and social and economic impacts in the locality.”
The decision also raises questions in relation to how downstream and cumulative impacts from development will need to be assessed and considered in the future.
In this update, we consider what the decision means in relation to what needs to be considered under s 4.15(1) and therefore assessed with respect to downstream impacts.
The Project proposes to extend the operating life of the Mount Pleasant mine for an additional 22 years and extract an additional 406 million tonnes of coal beyond that approved under the existing consent.
The size of the mine is substantial. By comparison, in 2019, Gloucester Resources Limited lost its appeal to the Land and Environment Court in relation to the Rocky Hill Coal Project, an open cut coal mine that would produce 21 million tonnes of coal over a period of 16 years. In that case, Preston CJ refused consent on environmental and social impact grounds and due to downstream or “Scope 3” greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.1
In short, Scope 3 emissions from coal mines are the indirect GHG emissions generated in the wider economy from the burning coal at sources not owned or controlled by the mine operator.
The environmental assessment for the Project indicated that the majority (98 per cent) of the GHG emissions generated by the Project would be Scope 3 emissions arising from the downstream consumption of coal by end users.2
Period | Scope 1 | Scope 2 | Scope 3 |
---|---|---|---|
Annual | 168,540 |
47,111 |
22,671,412 |
Total | 1,685,399 |
471,108 |
226,714,125 |
The Project’s Scope 3 emissions represent approximately 0.06 per cent of yearly global GHG emissions.3
The IPC granted consent to the Project on 6 December 2022 subject to conditions (none of which related to Scope 3 emissions).
The IPC made a range of findings in relation to the Project’s Scope 3 emissions:4
Denman Aberdeen Muswellbrook Scone Healthy Environment Group Inc (Appellant) challenged the IPC’s decision in the Land and Environment Court on eight separate grounds, including the alleged failure by the IPC to consider the impacts of the Project and its Scope 3 emissions on the locality of the mine, as required under s 4.15(1)(b).
Justice Robson dismissed the application and made the following findings in relation to the s 4.15(b) ground (at [109]-[110]):
On appeal, the Appellant submitted that the primary judge had erred, by finding the IPC had not failed to consider the likely impacts of the Project’s Scope 3 emissions in the locality (such as increased bushfires and prolonged droughts) as is required under 4.15(1)(b) of the EPA Act.
The Court of Appeal (Ward P, Price AJA agreeing, with Adamson JA writing separately) allowed the appeal on this ground.
The Court of Appeal accepted the Appellant’s argument that although the IPC accepted that the impact of the Project’s GHG emissions would be “felt globally”, what was required by s 4.15(1)(b) of the EPA Act was a causal enquiry into the likely impacts of climate change on the natural and built environment in the locality.5
Ward P held:
The range of potentially adverse impacts of climate change in the locality that were required to have been considered were outlined by Adamson J at [236] (based on evidence before the IPC) and included, in her Honour’s view, the increased incidence of extreme weather events (flood, bushfire, drought, etc.), increased temperatures and rising sea levels in the locality of the Project.
The Court of Appeal declared that the development consent was invalid for failing to consider a mandatory consideration and remitted the matter to the Land and Environment Court for consideration as to whether orders can or should be made which, if complied with, would validate the development consent.
The Court of Appeal’s decision suggests that where a development has downstream impacts that are responsible for cumulative effects on the environment, consent authorities will need to consider the causal connection between those downstream impacts and impacts in the locality under s 4.15(1)(b), be they impacts on the natural and built environments, or social and economic impacts.
Until now, NSW courts have assessed cumulative impacts, including on climate change, under the public interest consideration in s 4.15(e) of the EPA Act.6
The position of the Court of Appeal in DAMSHEG extends the “likely impacts” that are required to be considered in relation to the locality under s 4.15(1)(b), to those cumulative impacts that occur on a regional or global scale that are contributed to by the project.
This may include a range of other “downstream” impacts that are relevant to environmental impacts at the locality-level, including deforestation, biodiversity loss and water quality degradation, particularly when the locality is particularly susceptible to those impacts.
Should you require further information on the DAMSHEG decision or advice on its application to a project, our Environment & Planning team are able to assist.
Department of Planning, Assessment Report, at [198].
Publication
The FCA published its findings following a multi-firm review of life insurers' pension transfer processes.
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