Updated
Updated · BBC.com · May 12
Yindjibarndi Win Record A$150.1 Million From Fortescue Over 2,700-Sq-Km Unauthorized Mining
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · May 12

Yindjibarndi Win Record A$150.1 Million From Fortescue Over 2,700-Sq-Km Unauthorized Mining

2 articles · Updated · BBC.com · May 12
  • A Federal Court judge awarded the Yindjibarndi people A$150.1 million after finding Fortescue mined on their Pilbara land without permission, setting Australia’s largest native title compensation payout.
  • A$150 million of the award covers cultural loss and just A$150,000 economic loss, with the court citing the group’s “deep and visceral connection” to country and damage to traditional attachment and spiritual sustenance.
  • The case capped a fight stretching nearly 20 years: Yindjibarndi secured exclusive native title over 2,700 sq km in 2017, but Fortescue had already developed its Solomon Hub mines with government and another Aboriginal group’s approval, not YNAC’s.
  • Yindjibarndi had sought A$1.8 billion—arguing for 1% of mine production value and compensation tied to about 250 cultural sites—while some elders called the final sum “peanuts” against Fortescue’s tens of billions in revenue since 2013.
A record A$150M payout is called 'peanuts.' What is the true price for destroying sacred land?
Will the green energy transition now be built on Indigenous co-ownership, not just compensation payouts?