Surely many landholders and farmers are aware of the intimidation and abusive tactics from protesters in the community.
But a serious question that should be now put forward to the noisy protesters is that:
"Who is defending the RIGHTS of landholders whom have given consents and supports to gas companies which:
1. Operates under strict environmental, scientific and technical engineering standards AND,
2. Has the approval of NSW Government?
Ever wondering about that Lock the Gate slogan of protecting farmers' right to say no to CSG? I remember that clearly, especially during those Environmental Defenders Office (EDO) workshops. You won't see or hear about them now I'll guarantee that. Is it about landholder's rights, or Greens' rights?
2. Has the approval of NSW Government?
Ever wondering about that Lock the Gate slogan of protecting farmers' right to say no to CSG? I remember that clearly, especially during those Environmental Defenders Office (EDO) workshops. You won't see or hear about them now I'll guarantee that. Is it about landholder's rights, or Greens' rights?
Can NSW save itself from a gas implosion?
by Keith Orchison
Published
8:32 AM, 14 Jan 2013
One thing Barry O’Farrell and his New South
Wales government can be sure about in 2013 is that they are caught between a
rock and several hard places on the state’s gas supply.
The rock is the expiry of contracts for
delivery from interstate to meet 95 per cent of the needs of New South Wales'
1.04 million household and business gas customers.
Some in the energy industry expect the problem
to start manifesting itself as early as next year.
EnergyAustralia chief executive Richard
McIndoe graphically highlighted the challenge last year. “In 2014-15,” he said,
“it’s going to be like someone took the plug out.”
AGL Energy's managing director, Michael
Fraser, has warned that “the clock is ticking on energy issues” for New South
Wales.
The hard places include the ongoing campaign
against coal seam gas development in the state from the environmental movement
and more than a few farmers – and the high likelihood that gas prices are going
to spike as the decade wears on.
As well, with manufacturing continuing to
decline, O’Farrell & Co are confronted by a vocal factory sector demanding
reservation of gas to meet its needs while the LNG export industry hoovers up
existing east coast resources.
The New South Wales and federal governments
are at one in saying no.
Meanwhile, where domestic demand is going is
open to question.
As with electricity, consumption has fallen
back in difficult economic times.
Predictions from two to three years ago that
New South Wales gas demand will triple in 20 years may now seem over the top,
but the expectation remains that they will be substantially higher than
today.
For decades, New South Wales governments
haven’t felt the need to worry about gas despite occasional short-term hiccups
in delivery.
Ample supplies have been available from South
Australia’s Cooper Basin and Victoria’s offshore Gippsland basin – and more
recently from Queensland.
When contracts were last negotiated in 2002,
sellers chased the market from all directions, including far-off Papua New
Guinea (via a pipeline that hasn’t eventuated).
Back in late 2005, Bob Carr, then state
premier and now foreign minister, put out a New South Wales green paper on
energy that specifically pointed to the risk of Cooper Basin gas becoming scarce
– but neither he nor the three Labor leaders who followed him made any attempt
to address the issue.
Now sellers are top dog and “mind the gap” is
a serious warning.
The key Cooper Basin contract runs out in
2016-17 and most of remaining reserves there are already contracted
elsewhere.
How much gas is available from the offshore
Gippsland Basin is a point of debate – the Greens insist the region can meet New
South Wales needs so CSG exploitation is unnecessary – but ExxonMobil and BHP
Billiton, the sellers, have plenty of market options, including sending gas to
the north-east coast for export.
For the upstream petroleum industry, the best
New South Wales move is clear: exploit the 15,000 petajoules of coal seam gas
resources that have been identified in the state, more than either the Cooper
Basin or the Victorian fields can offer, 250 years worth of supply at present
demand levels.
CSG attracts what many in the energy industry
see as a disproportionate level of angst in some parts of the community, fuelled
not just by city media but also by rural papers, the ABC’s rural news team and
activists with strong social media skills.
AGL Energy, the main gas retailer, wants to
see CSG development in the Gloucester region of New South Wales as well as in
the Upper Hunter, aiming to top up what it needs from Bass Strait.
The petroleum industry argues that the
benefits of CSG are obvious: the gas will be relatively cheap to bring to
market, exploitation will provide about 3,000 full-time jobs in New South Wales,
many in regional communities, and development will be a cash cow for taxpayers,
delivering about $3 billion to the state Treasury over the next two
decades.
The O’Farrell government would love to go
along for the ride, but the opposition to development is a real hurdle, not
least because it affects the Liberals’ partners, the Nationals, and because an
important chunk of the NIMBYs are not wild-eyed nature lovers.
Late last year I sat at dinner on a farmhouse
porch overlooking Gloucester in the foothills of the Barrington Tops while one
of the local luminaries, the polar opposite of a greenie, told me grimly that
“this valley will be a desert in 40 years” if CSG development goes ahead.
He fears the impact on aquifers and
agricultural productivity.
The valleys and hills of Gloucester shire are
well-populated by his ilk, many of them tree-changers from Sydney. They are
happy to accept tourists but strongly oppose both the CSG and coal mining
industries.
The petroleum industry retort is that he and
hundreds of others like him in north-west New South Wales are falling prey to
mis-information, some of it deliberately misleading.
Gas suppliers are adamant that, with the
drilling practices used in Australia, there will be no material impact on
agricultural water supplies.
The industry is hanging out for 'honest
conversation' on the issue, 'not scare-mongering, suggestion, hearsay and
mischief'.
While Team O’Farrell contemplates how to
break the impasse, it is soon to get a harbinger of what lies ahead.
The state’s Independent Pricing &
Regulatory Tribunal will deliver decisions on consumer gas prices as well as
household power bills by May.
IPART has bids before it for a 10.4 per cent
gas bill increase for metropolitan areas and between 5 and 6 per cent for rural
and regional areas.
If the wholesale price of gas doubles over
the next five years, as it easily could, end-user bills in New South Wales will
rise by another 33 per cent.
Stalling until the March 2015 state election
is behind it will not work for O’Farrell’s government in its premier role as
guardian of the economy.
Objectively, the government has to drive the
CSG developments but there is a political price to pay. Just how big a price is
the bottom line for O’Farrell.
Those self-righteous greenie protesters - mainly unemployed hippies and thugs from around Lismore doesn't give a stuff about anyone else, but I guess the majority of people already knew that.
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