The Ipswich City Council and the Department of Environment and Science were unaware of the leak until it was reported to both the council and the department by Fairfax Media on Friday. “We have been made aware of it today and we have just sent a team out to investigate it onsite,” a Department of Environment and Science spokesman said on Friday. He said the department did not monitor the site because there was no environmental authority agreement between the government and company for activity at the site. The storage facility on the site of the proposed super dump at Ipswich near a suburb called New Chum. It is at this stage unclear if the company was legally required to report the leak as the department was still unaware of what the substance was.

“But any pollution should be reported to our environmental hotline on our 1300 130 372 hotline number,” the department spokesman said. According to neighbouring property owner Tony Halpin, the leak occurred at the site of explosives storage company Sun Mining, which leases land on Austin Street in New Chum from the large garbage contractor, BMI Group, owned by entrepreneur Balfour Irvine. Liquid can be seen leaking towards the water-filled mine site, which runs into Six Mile Creek. Liquid leaking for an explosives storage facility beside the site of a proposed super dump at Ipswich on April 1. Jim Dodrill, who leads the community group IRATE (Ipswich Residents Against Toxic Environments) also confirmed the site was leased by Sun Mining and said he was very worried the leak had not been reported.

“That site is leased by Sun Mining and they provide explosives to the mining industry,” Mr Dodrill said. “And they have a storage and manufacturing facility up on the bank of the big water-filled mining void there.” Mr Dodrill said that storage site was part of the proposed super dump site at New Chum. “That storage area is actually on the site where they are going to put that super dump,” he said. “In that development application, they (BMI) said they would just move that Sun Mining storage plant to a different site if they get approval.”

In February 2018 a company owned by BMI Group called Austin BMI Pty Ltd submitted a development application to Ipswich City Council for a dump at New Chum. The proposed super dump site at New Chum near Ipswich, which appears to include the storage site featured in the previous photographs. BMI bought the site, which is now an abandoned coal mine, in 2013. The plan is for the dump to take 650,000 tonnes of mostly construction and demolition waste each year. That would increase to more than a million tonnes a year over the 18- to 20-year life of the site.

The proposed dump would fill the former coal mine on Austin Street at New Chum, which includes the site of the leak leased by Sun Mining. However, when Sun Mining was contacted by Fairfax Media at its Dinmore office listed on its website, it said it had no knowledge of the New Chum site. The leak from an explosives storage area at New Chum where a tank bears the brand Wala. One of the tanks in the photographs from the New Chum leak and sent to Fairfax Media bears the brand Wala, which is shown on the Sun Mining website.