The Invasive Species Council says mining companies should step in to cover the cost of fire ant outbreaks linked to their operations, after new detections confirmed infestations across 5 mine sites in Queensland’s Central Highlands and Isaac Council regions.
‘This is a catastrophic breach – shipments from just one infested site have triggered a major regional outbreak. But every dollar and every drone we have should be focused on wiping out fire ants at the frontlines near Brisbane, not cleaning up after corporate carelessness,’ Invasive Species Council Advocacy Manager Reece Pianta said.
‘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.
‘BHP did the right thing reporting and supporting fire ant surveillance work, now they are uniquely well placed to support the response.
‘Fire ant laws are meaningless if they’re not enforced. Most businesses are doing the right thing – but this shows how just one breach, one contaminated load, can unleash an outbreak across an entire region. That’s exactly what we’re seeing play out in Central Queensland.
‘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.
‘Even though bricks are not a usual carrier material and the nests detected so far appear weak, eradication will still be costly and resource-intensive.
‘We’ve been warning for years that glaring gaps in suppression and containment would lead to exactly this outcome. Well, here it is – fire ants are slipping through the cracks and turning up in places they’ve never been before.
‘Every delay in funding and suppression increases the chance of a permanent fire ant future.
‘We need to see enforcement against companies that breach movement restrictions, and governments must urgently consider cost recovery to pay for outlier detections.’
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Fire ant images are available here.