
After Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced more than a year ago that his pandemicĀ recovery plan would be based around a āgas-ledā recovery, Labor quickly fell into line.
The major parties are both committing a huge amount of public funds to gas projects they deem āessentialā as a ātransitionā to renewable energy (although the projectsĀ look permanent).
Even under lockdown, climate activists have continued to pressure the government and Labor to heed the climate science and pull back from their irresponsible gas plan. They point to the August Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report that reiterated that delays in curbing fossil fuel emissions will lead to catastrophic global warming.
The Climate Council, backed by 55 climate organisations, is pushing for no and for to reach net zero by 2035. However, the pressure has to grow to stop the major partiesā gas plans. While that has been harder under the pandemic, activists are organising.
Narrabri Gas Project
Santosā controversial NarrabriĀ GasĀ Project (NGP) in New South Wales was the first major gas project to receive the go-ahead in the new push for gas. The NSW Independent Planning Commission (IPC) agreed to it last year, despite overwhelming opposition from the Gamilaraay / Gomeroi people, the National Farmers Federation and regional communities.
The NSW Department of Planning received the biggest number of objections to a project: 22,484 or 98% of all submissions it received opposed the NGP.
Santos first proposed drilling for coal seam gas (CSG) in the Pilliga State Forest in 2011 and concerns about how it could damage the Great Artesian Basin groundwater have grown since the salt waste from its pilot projects have killed off Ā鶹“«Ć½ of the forest.
The NSW government and Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration have been backing Santos to the hilt.
The state governmentās recent 16-page reveals it may be feeling some pressure from regional communities.
It agrees with the federal government's push for gas, stating that the plan āwill deliverā on the agreement between it and the federal government to increase gas supply in NSW. It affirms that new Port Kembla and NewcastleĀ LNG gasĀ import terminals are essential to this.
While the plan extinguishes a number of old, unworked Petroleum Exploration Licences (PELS) in the north west, and rules out expandingĀ gasĀ in the far west, a large areaĀ remains open toĀ gasĀ exploration, from Willow Tree in the south, to Wee Waa in the west and beyondĀ Narrabri in the north.
The government desperately wants theĀ to be worked because this will be the only way Santos will be able to get its gas to either Newcastle or the Moomba-Sydney pipeline.
Because the NGP depends on the construction of thousands of kilometres of pipelines across prime agricultural land, it is yet to make a final decision on whether or not to proceed.
Hunter Power Project
TheĀ GasĀ Free Hunter Alliance is the federally-funded at Kurri Kurri. This 750 megawatt (MW) gas-fired power station has been deemed a āstate significantā project, which means local councils have no planning jurisdictions.
Activists are also organising to oppose the , another "state significant" piece of infrastructure, costing around $600 million in public funds.
The Hunter Power Project needs this 17- to 21-kilometre underground pipeline, from the existing Sydney to NewcastleĀ gasĀ pipeline to the proposed Kurri KurriĀ GasĀ Plant. It also needs a compressor station and 14 kilometres of underground storage pipeline.
Legal challenges
TheĀ push for gas could, however, be derailed by recent and current legal cases.
Late last year an appeal was lodged against the IPCās approval of the NGP by the Environmental Defenders Office (EDO) acting for the MullaleyĀ GasĀ and Pipeline Accord. The hearing began inĀ the NSW Land and Environment Court on August 31.
The EDO argues that the NSW IPC was ālegally irresponsibleā when it approved the NGP because it did not adequately consider the impact of greenhouseĀ gasĀ emissions. A decision is expected later this year.
A on August 26 may have a bearing on the Santos appeal.Ā Bushfire Survivors For Climate Action took the Environment Protection AuthorityĀ (EPA) to the Land and Environment Court over its climate change policy, arguing the authority had failed to stop pollution with greenhouse gases. Justice Brian Preston ordered the EPA āto develop environmental quality objectives, guidelines and policies to ensure environment protection from climate changeā.
Nature Conservation Council chief executive Chris Gambian said the judgment put the stateās biggest polluters on notice. EDO legal advisor Elaine Johnson said, āItās a really big win. It means [the EPA] has to do something to ensure there is protection against climate change.ā
In a world first, a case in NSW will challenge the accuracy of gas corporationsā net zero emissions targets. The EDO said on August 27 that the Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility (ACCR) is challenging Santosā claims thatĀ gasĀ provides āclean energyā and that it has a credible plan to achieve net zero emissions by 2040. It is the first Australian case against the oil andĀ gasĀ industry to question āgreenwashingā.
The ACCR will argue that Santos has misled or engaged in deceptive conduct in a potential breach of corporate and consumer laws. The EDO stated that such actions are āputting theĀ gasĀ industry on noticeā.