MORE than 100 climate protesters will face court, a 97-year-old minister of religion among them, following a weekend blockade at Port of Newcastle.
Groups of protesters had been taking turns paddling into Newcastle Port’s shipping lane since Saturday morning in action planned to last 30 hours.
But as 4pm passed on Sunday, marking the end of police permission for the protest, scores remained in the water expecting arrest.
As a result, a total of 109 people were arrested, 49 men, 60 women and five juvenile demonstrators, police said on Monday.
Two of the men, aged 23 and 65, were remanded to appear before Newcastle Local Court on Monday, while the five minors will be dealt with under the Young Offenders Act.
The remainder were issued with attendance notices and will face court in January.
Police said it would be alleged in court that protesters purposely entered the harbour channel after the deadline despite warnings and directions.
Protest organiser Alexa Stuart among those arrested was her 97-year-old grandfather, Uniting Church minister Alan Stuart.
“If the government will not take action on climate change, the people will use civil disobedience,” she said on Sunday.
“We wish we did not have to do this, but the Albanese government needs to understand we are serious.”
Rev Stuart said he was doing his duty to his family and the planet.
“I am doing this for my grandchildren and future generations because I don’t want to leave them a world full of increasingly severe and frequent climate disasters,” he said.
“I am so sorry that they will have to suffer the consequences of our inaction.”
Protesters demanded the government stop allowing new coal projects, tax fossil fuel export profits at 75 per cent to fund community and industrial transition, and pay for climate loss and damage.
The action had the support of senior members of the Greens and the party’s former federal leader Bob Brown.
Current federal leader Adam Bandt, who kayaked out with protesters on Saturday, called those taking part heroes.
“They’re fighting to stop more floods and bushfires in this country,” Mr Bandt said.
“People here know that we’re nearing a climate tipping point, and that coal and gas are fuelling the climate crisis.”
But NSW Minerals Council CEO Stephen Galilee said that while everyone had the right to protest, protest leaders had to ensure those participating did it safely and within the law.
He said stopping NSW coal exports would have a major impact on the NSW economy, given the industry supports 25,000 jobs.
“Coal is NSW’s most valuable export by far, and worth more than $70 billion nationally,” he said.
Coal royalties are a key revenue source for the NSW government, earning about $3.5 billion in the year to June 2022.
From July, the state’s cut of coal sales will rise by 2.6 percentage points, raising an extra $2.3 billion over the first three years.
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