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PAGE ONE :: WORLD NEWS :: INDUSTRY

Dive operators may sue Port of Melbourne

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by CLAY LUCAS

MELBOURNE, Australia (5 Nov 2007) — DIVING operators are gearing up to sue the Port of Melbourne Corporation over the damage they say will be done to their industry by channel deepening.

Premier John Brumby said yesterday he expected bay dredging to start in January. The Port Corporation had put together a "watertight" case for channel deepening, he said, and should be allowed to proceed.

But the diving industry disagrees. Divers reacted angrily this week to the State Government's decision to give conditional approval to the project, which will enable larger ships to enter Port Phillip Bay.

The Government has admitted that the diving industry faces up to $14.6 million in economic damage.

"We will have a pretty clear-cut case for compensation," said Jason Salter, director of Dive Victoria, which is the state's largest employer of diving instructors with around 50 staff.

"In Portsea and Queenscliff, where we are, we are directly in the line of the dredge," he said. "But even suburban dive shops are going to be affected."

Diving sites around the bay will be affected for up to 15 months, because of huge plumes of sediment that will be stirred up by dredging.

Underwater noise — caused by ripping half-a-million tonnes of sandstone and limestone from Port Phillip Heads — will also stop diving at some bay sites.

Some sites within the dredged area will be "lost permanently" to divers, the Port of Melbourne Corporation has said.

Dive Victoria is among 30 peninsula dive companies that have employed Portsea lawyer Michael Morehead. He said he would launch legal action against the Port Corporation if bay diving businesses were damaged by dredging.

 

 

HMNZS Canterbury
Huge plumes of sediment from the Port of Melbourne dredging project could permanently destroy diving areas in Port Phillip Bay.

Discussing channel deepening in Parliament in 2004, then transport minister Peter Batchelor said the State Government was adamant "businesses operating in the bay such as … diving and fishing could seek compensation for any … losses arising from this project".

A spokesman for the Port Corporation said yesterday it could not comment on potential litigation, but would continue to liaise with divers.

SOURCE - The Age

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