Bushfire survivors will use burnt debris to create a "trail of destruction" from Parliament House to the Canberra offices of a mining lobby group.
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They will also deliver the Minerals Council of Australia a $1.3 billion invoice on Tuesday, based off one estimated cost of the bushfire crisis.
Environmental activists are using the stunt to urge businesses and politicians to cut ties with mining lobbyists.
Jack Egan lost his house when a fireball tore through the NSW south coast.
He believes the coal lobby is holding back action on climate change.
Organiser Lucy Manne claims Scott Morrison has also refused to take action on the climate crisis.
Ms Manne argued the prime minister's "utter failure" to respond made sense, given his chief of staff had come from the Minerals Council.
A woman who lost her home in the NSW bushfires made a similar protest outside parliament in December, spreading the charred remains out across the front of the building.
At the time, Melinda Plesman said the Labor Party had also gone missing on climate change.
Australian Associated Press