Gina Rinehart-backed company gets approval from Tanya Plibersek for coal seam gas project
26 Jun 2024
Environment
minister gives go ahead for Senex Energy to develop and operate up to 151 new
coal seam gas wells in inland Queensland
The environment minister, Tanya Plibersek, has
given a company co-owned by Gina Rinehart approval to develop and operate up to
151 new coal seam gas wells in inland Queensland.
A spokesperson for Plibersek said the Atlas stage 3 project
proposed by Senex Energy, which is jointly owned by South Korea’s steel
giant Posco and Rinehart, would “primarily contribute domestic gas supply to
households and Australian manufacturing – including for glass, bricks, cement
and food packaging”.
“The clear solution is more gas supply, and our announcement
today is part of that solution,” he said.
Climate campaigners called the decision a “disgrace” at a time
when international science and energy agencies say there can be no more exploitation of new oil, gas
and coalfields if the world is to limit global heating to 1.5C.
“While Australia is distracted talking about the LNP nuclear
charade, the federal government is approving new fossil fuel projects,” the
Australia Institute’s research director, Rod Campbell, said.
“We know that new fossil fuel projects are the last thing that
the climate needs. The last thing that the Australian economy needs is to be
doubling down on fossil fuels at a time when we should be leading the world on
decarbonisation.”
The
head of policy and advocacy at the Climate Council, Jennifer Rayner, said
Australia’s existing domestic gas supply “would be enough to meet our domestic
needs for more than 60 years”.
“80% of Australia’s gas is used by the export industry. We have
more than enough to meet our small and declining needs as we transition to
clean energy,” she said.
“There is a massive global glut of gas coming with projects from
the US and Qatar. Australia should not be adding to our massive climate
pollution from gas.”
The Australian Conservation Foundation’s national climate policy
adviser, Annika Reynolds, said in the “midst of a climate crisis, this fossil
gas project should not have been approved”.
“This is federal government’s reckless future gas strategy in
action,” Reynolds said.
Plibersek’s approval is valid until 2080 and, in addition to the
new wells, will allow for construction of supporting infrastructure such as
access roads.
Davies said the project was a “significant boost” for domestic
gas supply and would deliver 60 petajoules of gas to the east coast market from
the end of 2025.
“The federal government has made it clear that gas is
required until 2050 and beyond, and that investment in new gas supply is needed
if we are to reach net zero with thriving industries,” he said.
The Lock the Gate Alliance’s national coordinator, Ellen
Roberts, accused the coal seam gas industry in Queensland of “irreversibly damaging the state’s
best farmland”.
“Water has been contaminated, water bores drained and cropping
country is sinking,” she said.
Plibersek’s spokesperson said the “Albanese government has to
make decisions in accordance with the facts and the national environment law –
that’s what happens on every project, and that’s what’s happened here”.
“The government will continue to consider each project on a
case-by-case basis, under the law,” the spokesperson said.
They said the approval included conditions to protect nature,
including “strict limits” on habitat loss.
“Under Labor, we’ve already seen a 25% increase in renewable
energy in our grid,” they said.
“We are ticking off renewables energy projects at record rates,
outstripping coal and gas projects seven to one. And we have record numbers of
renewable energy projects in the approval pipeline.”