Coal seam gas: People鈥檚 power can stop it!

March 19, 2012
Issue 
Paul Benedek addresses the 'Stop coal seam gas' rally outside NSW parliament on March 15. Photo by Peter Boyle.

Farmers, environmentalists, irrigators, winemakers, horse breeders, the NSW opposition, and coal seam gas (CSG) campaigners have all been angered by the NSW Coalition government's new land use plans, which give the go-ahead to CSG and coalmining across the state.

Despite Premier Barry O鈥橣arrell鈥檚 pre-election promise that key agricultural land would be protected from mining and CSG activity, the government's draft Aquifer Interference Policy and draft Strategic Regional Land Use Plans "have left the gate open", said the NSW Farmers Association.

The government has 鈥渃hosen to literally sell the farm to coal and gas companies", .

The Hunter Wine Industry Association鈥檚 Andrew Margan told the March 7 Sydney Morning Herald he was 鈥渆mbarrassed to be a New South Welshman鈥 and that winemakers believed 鈥渃o-existence [with mining and CSG] is not possible鈥.

The policy 鈥減aves the way for decades of uncertainty鈥, .听

The the policy 鈥渇ails to protect water resources from mining and coal seam gas鈥.

Ryan Park, ALP MP for Keira, told the Illawarra Mercury the land use guidelines did not stop fracking in the northern Illawarra region after the current moratorium on the industry ends next month.

Worse, said Stop CSG Illawarra campaigner Jess Moore, is that drinking water catchments are not even mentioned in the government鈥檚 draft documents.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got a project approved that risks the drinking water of 4.2 million people in NSW and under these new announcements, that can continue,鈥欌 .

The the O鈥橣arrell government had delivered 鈥渁 result that strongly favours the interests of the mining and gas industry鈥.

No surprise that the mining and gas industry is the one group that has applauded the government鈥檚 new plans.听Shares in CSG companies Santos and AGL rallied after the announcement.

Tom Fontaine, director of CSG company Ormil Energy, welcomed the plans, saying: 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to have common-sense guidelines like these for the industry.鈥澛

the controls 鈥渨ill be manageable for the [CSG] industry鈥.听

Removing the doublespeak, this is an industry green light.

The government has talked up the plans鈥 鈥済ateway process鈥, under which areas identified as 鈥渟trategic agricultural land鈥 are subject to an 鈥渋ndependent panel鈥 before coal or CSG mining can go ahead.听

Hutton said the 鈥済ateway process鈥 meant 鈥渕iners can drive right through if a panel gives them the go-ahead鈥. The 鈥済ateway process鈥 fails to give farmers the power to deny access to miners wanting to explore on their land.

The NSW cabinet will have the power to override the 鈥済ateway process鈥 in exceptional circumstances. This mirrors the previous Labor government's infamous Part 3A planning laws, which allowed the government to override local opposition to anti-environment or unpopular development projects.

this provision was 鈥渁n invitation to circumvent the formal process for the government鈥檚 preferred mining companies鈥. The government has not provided any criteria for the exceptional circumstances that would allow it to override an independent panel decision.

The government also faces criticism for leaving key environmental areas without even the limited protection of the 鈥済ateway process鈥.

The Wollemi and Yengo National Parks, part of the World Heritage-listed Greater Blue Mountains National Park, . High value biodiversity areas do not trigger the 鈥済ateway process鈥.

Another issue raised is that precious water resources are not static, but flow between areas the plans mark as 鈥渟trategic鈥 (which might get some minor protection) and areas without any such protection.听

Moore said: 鈥淪o even if water is protected in one area, nothing can stop polluted water from CSG activity in another area from flowing into the 鈥榩rotected鈥 area. Ultimately, it鈥檚 no protection at all.鈥

The guidelines鈥 narrow definition of what qualifies as an aquifer means the policy relegates most of the Sydney Basin as being of limited value, and by inference, open to CSG and coal extraction.

On March 15, the same day that the Coalition, Shooters and Christian Democrats voted down a Greens/ALP bill for a CSG moratorium, northern NSW residents learnt that an application for CSG exploration had been made for the entire Northern Tablelands.

The NSW Farmers Association has pointed out that 鈥渕ore than 100% of the land area of NSW is covered cumulatively by applications and titles for minerals, coal and/or CSG exploration or production (given that many regions have multiple layers of applications and titles)鈥.

Activists say the failure of the government to protect that state from CSG only reinforces the importance of the people-power campaign.听

Within the past month, community events opposing CSG have included a 700-strong meeting in Lismore and a 200-strong meeting in Oakdale after residents learnt of CSG exploration close by. Two hundred rallied outside NSW鈥檚 parliament on March 15 and 1000 attended a food and CSG meeting in Brisbane on March 12.听

A stop CSG conference will be held in Wollongong on March 25 and the Farmers Association has begun discussing a big protest outside NSW鈥檚 parliament on May 1.听

Hutton said on March 6: 鈥淭he Lock the Gate Alliance continues to call for a moratorium on coal seam gas because the industry has failed to demonstrate that it can operate safely.

鈥淭he only constraint on unfettered exploration across NSW is the community taking up the fight through legal action, non-cooperation and peaceful protest ... The miners may get through the NSW government鈥檚 pathetic 鈥榞ateway process鈥 with ease but they will still find the gates locked when they come knocking on farmers doors across NSW.鈥

Pushing open slather CSG policy through a pro-corporate parliament is one thing. Getting the community to accept that the short-term profits for CSG companies are more important than our water, land, health and our future is very different indeed.

From Lismore to the Hunter to Pilliga to Oakdale to Illawarra to Sydney, the fight against coal seam gas is growing.

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Comments

Sickening!! This is the most important issue in australia and we have been sold out by our governments.. let's take the law into our own hands and drive these companies off our land!! Screw the government, screw the police, this is too important!!
Photos of coal seam gas mining protest outside the office of state member for Lismore Thomas George Friday 16th March 2012. http://www.lismore-newz.net/GALLERY/CSG%20protest.htm

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