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Pittsburgh-based Alcoa will pay the Australian government a settlement the company put at $36 million for “unlawfully” clearing tracts of endangered forest without approvals between 2019 and 2025.

The metals giant began mining bauxite — the raw ingredient for aluminum — from beneath Australia’s Northern Jarrah forest in the 1960s, but its footprint has swelled in recent years, drawing new scrutiny from regulators and the public.

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[-] digitalFatteh@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

And so now they’ll be made to restore and replant the area cleared as well as the fine right ?

Article doesn’t make it clear other than being an Oops my bad have some money type reconciliation.

[Edit]

The company runs a rehabilitation program to restore former mined sites, but a prominent botanist who once tried to aid those efforts now maintains it’s ineffective, and a growing chorus of Australian scientists join those criticisms.

Advertisements the company sponsored last summer promoting its rehabilitation program drew the attention of an ad standards watchdog, which issued a report stating “the advertisement was inaccurate and likely to mislead or deceive target consumers.”

this post was submitted on 19 Feb 2026
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