Friday, May 17, 2013

Who's going to protect Mr Casey's rights as a farmer and land-holder? Some anti CSG protesters thuggish behaviours revealed!

Farmer, family abused by CSG protesters

Farmer Steve Casey
Farmer Steve Casey and his grand-daughter Bella, 4, at his Doubtful Creek property near Casino, which has been under seige. Picture: Heath Missen Source: The Australian

CATTLE farmer Steve Casey is not sorry he allowed mining company Metgasco to explore for coal-seam gas on his property, despite the abuse and intimidation he says he has suffered at the hands of the protesters who have been camped at the main gate to his property for five weeks. 
  
"It's made our lives pretty difficult," Mr Casey said yesterday of the standoff at his farm at Doubtful Creek, near Casino in northern NSW.
"Everything you do, they've got a camera at your face.
"They hurl abuse at my wife, my daughter and my granddaughter."

CSG companies say the behaviour of anti-CSG protesters around NSW shows opposition to the industry is driven by zealots who do not represent the mainstream community.
Claim and counter-claim over a series of ugly confrontations at Doubtful Creek have intensified in the wake of tighter rules for CSG exploration in NSW, which Premier Barry O'Farrell announced last week and said came after the state government "listened to the community."

In an unsigned letter to the local newspaper last week, a police officer claimed the protesters at Doubtful Creek spat on him and threatened his family.
The letter brought a response from local police chief Michael Dempsey, who said, "The majority of people protesting recently have been doing so peacefully and within the confines of the law."
This was echoed by protest organiser Dean Draper, a neighbour of Mr Casey, who said the protesters were worried about "the industrialisation of our rural lands".

But Mr Casey said he was sick and tired of having "Shame!" and "other bits of abuse" shouted at him over his fence."It doesn't worry me so much because I'm a grown man, but my daughter is only a month off having a baby and she's intimidated," he said.

Police have had to be called to the property several times a day to force the 40 or so protesters to allow Metgasco workers access. There were three arrests earlier this month.
Metgasco boss Peter Henderson said yesterday: "The vast majority of protesters at our sites do not represent mainstream community values."
Mr Casey said 800 litres of diesel fuel went missing from a tank near the boundary of his farm recently, and he suspected the protesters were involved.
"I agreed to it and I'm not sorry I did," he said of the Metgasco drilling. "I just see it as a big thing for Casino."

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/state-politics/farmer-family-abused-by-csg-protesters/story-e6frgczx-1226586359132

Thursday, April 4, 2013

The ugly truth of anti coal seam gas protesters

Do you know thugs are running the show now in NSW?
You don't? Been drinking cofee lattes in trendy inner Sydney now have you greenies?




Contrary to the "Non Violent Direct Action" slogan commonly quoted by these protesters, one of the protesters screamed abuse at the police, typical to the scene at anti csg protest sites.

Source: Northern Star



Do you know thugs are running the show now in NSW?
You don't? Been drinking cofee lattes in trendy inner city Sydney/Byron now have you greenies?





Contrary to the "Non Violent Direct Action" slogan commonly quoted by these protesters, one of the protesters screamed abuse at the police, typical to the scene at anti csg protest sites.

Source: Northern Star



Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Can landholders fight Lock the Gate thugs and greenies?

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?
 
Can NSW save itself from a gas implosion?


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.
 

Thursday, December 6, 2012

The true colour of pseudo-environmental nastiness in Northern NSW


Here we go again; a well intended consultation meeting in Lismore was hijacked and turned into a violent public stoning session. The shouting, spitting and abusive behaviours were not needed in an occasion like this, or anywhere civilised. Rude, abusive, disruptive screaming and self-victimising overpowered the good intentions of Government representatives. So what has Lock the Gate’s mob mentality achieved at the end? It did not appear that seeking facts and truth were on their agenda.

Did they get the facts, or did they once again forcibly shoving their emotive bile down those who could be making a positive contribution? Sadly it was an opportunity lost for those sensible enough to not be part of this ugly demonstration event! Pity that children were once again been used as pawns in the demonstration.

Would anyone dare to speak against these people in Lismore given now that they have seen it personally with their own eyes? An orchestrated violent demonstration aimed to cause fear and chaos, they weren’t there for anyone else but rather to reinforce much the misinformation and fear campaign that have spread by Lock the Gate and associate groups over the last two years.

Non-violent direct action A.K.A. peaceful protesting was given a new definition by the mob in Lismore. No doubt these mad mob minorities would be proud of it.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Anti CSG protests near Grafton - Same old faces?!

LtG protesters abused locals and workers. Facts distorted, protester numbers slimmed

It appears that Ian Gaillard from the infamous Keerong Gas Squad has descent upon Grafton after failed attempts to incite public riots as published in the Northern Star earlier this year. With children and pet dogs involved, did those ugly behaviours exerted over Casino farmers and workers repeat itself again?

An opinion piece by Jojo Newby from the Daily Examiner reveals the story, and it doesn't take long to discover what some of these people are really up to. Hidden agendas?

OPINION - JOJO NEWBY Grafton Daily Examiner

HAVING a job in our town really isn't something I take for granted.

I'm a born-and-bred local and I am fully aware of how difficult it can be to gain employment in our area.

I am also personally opposed to coal seam gas being mined in our picturesque Valley.

I live just a short distance from where Metgasco is test drilling and the property I live on fronts the beautiful Coldstream River.

There are a few of those anti-CSG yellow triangular signs hanging on gates around our property.

I have read countless articles on the potential effect CSG mining has on the quality of our water.

With that in mind, I was angered and disappointed by some of the comments made at the CSG protest on Avenue Rd a couple of days ago.

I was instructed by a number of protesters to "zoom in and only take photos of the earthmoving trucks, especially the business name on the side of them".

My response to these protestors was firm.

I wasn't there to take a distorted view of what was happening.

I wasn't going to ignore the fact there were police present and that protester numbers had slimmed.

I wasn't going to ignore the fact that there were earthworks being undertaken at the site, but I also wasn't going to photograph a distorted view of what was happening on that day at Glenugie.

I raised the following point with two of the protesters and will raise it again should I be confronted on the issue.

I am good mates with one of the local fellows who yesterday copped abuse from protesters for simply doing his job.

He too is against CSG and has anti-CSG signs on his property, but none of this was taken into account by the angry protesters.

I occasionally get asked by my bosses to do something which I don't necessarily enjoy, or agree with, but I do it anyway, because I value having a job.

I presume it's the same with the local company concerned.

A job is a job. Work is work.

If they don't provide the materials and manpower, somebody else will.

I understand the frustration and anger felt by many people about this test-drilling site, but we all need to recognise that at the end of the day, these invective remarks will have no impact whatsoever on the company responsible for drilling for CSG.

By hurling abuse at these innocent workers, all that is achieved is a barrier between the protesters, who are standing up for their beliefs, and the workmen, decent people who are just doing their jobs.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Southern Cross University Lismore (SCU), what are you doing?!

Minister slams 'unscientific' report on gas leak
20/11/2012

Energy and Resources Minister Martin Ferguson has accused researchers who identified a massive coal-seam gas leak in Queensland of a cynical attempt to grab headlines.

Speaking at an energy conference in Sydney, Mr Ferguson said he believed the study by Southern Cross University researchers Isaac Santos and Damien Maher, which found that masses of methane and carbon dioxide were leaking undetected from Australia's biggest coal-seam gas field, abandoned usual scientific practice.

He criticised the study's public release, before it had been peer-reviewed, saying that in "the scientific community that is not regarded favourably".

"Let's have a factual, scientific debate, not an emotional debate, because there is too much at risk and the community expects that approach to life," Mr Ferguson said.

"Conduct yourself in a professional way and focus on the outcome, not short-lived media opportunities."
The research was outlined in a submission to a federal climate change department investigation into the greenhouse gas emissions from coal-seam gas drilling. The department had called for public submissions.

Source: http://www.smh.com.au/environment/minister-slams-unscientific-report-on-gas-leak-20121120-29nj5.html

Photo: An Argentine scientist attaches a gas collector on a cow, which measures the amount of Methane produced from cattle. Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/2274995/Cow-farts-collected-in-plastic-tank-for-global-warming-study.html

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Why pseudo-environmental anti-CSG crowd are failing?

Extreme anti-CSG crowds distant to failure

Despite the involvement of so called rent-a-crowd students, unemployed, academics, lawyer hacks, hobby farmers, general community members what not … With all those misinformation and scare campaigns coming from the Greens, Lock the Gate, Socialist Alliance, hijacking CSG information meetings, as well as having the “original man” and Mr. Dean Draper speaking on the NSW CSG Committee Alstonville meeting last year; it is now clear to see that:

Protesters might be loud and visible but science, technology and even common sense are proving otherwise to those slogans. NSW is moving forward with CSG developments, and these games of “playing the victims” will not get you anywhere at the end.
Have a listen to the ABC radio interview of Professor Tingay from Uni. Adelaide (On the right-hand side of this web page), it pretty much put those silly Lock the Gate banners and slogans back to where they should be ... into the big green bins.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Casino Beef Farmers unhappy about anti-CSG attacks


Enough is enough? Read what local beef farmers had to endure from those Lock the Gate redical groups. Personal threats, vandalism and personal abuse because the farming couple have their own point of view in CSG.
Note how the couple believe that the CSG information meeting had being "hijacked" by those thugs.

That's right, THUGS.

People don't need a "Social Licence" to confront THUGS, knowing that THUGS have been operating under the false pretence of "Environmentalism" and "Lock the Gate" for far too long. I call it Bullshit.

Read the following story from the Northern Star:

Darrelyn and Ian Sharman at their farm. They want people to look more into the positive aspects mining can bring to the region.
CASINO cattle farmers Ian and Darrelyn Sharman admit they've been vocal about their criticisms of the anti-coal seam gas movement.
After being told by a Metgasco representative in 2008 their farm had a potential drilling site, they took it upon themselves to independently research the science behind coal seam gas extraction.

On a trip to western Canada and Alaska this year for a cattle conference, they met many ranchers positively affected by the long-term gas mining in their area.

But Mrs Sharman said protestors had "hijacked" many of the Casino CSG meetings and she'd given up on them providing independent information

"They've been less than honest and have used scare tactics that are not well founded to stop people being correctly informed," she said.

During the weekend, the Sharmans said they were harassed by anti-CSG protestors while accessing their property on Hockeys La, off Ellangowan Rd, 5km south of Casino and the site of Metgasco's seismic testing.

Three protesters thumped on one side of their car while they were driving in and out of their property, behaviour Mrs Sharman said she found "aggressive and unpleasant".

"It was very irritating that someone would touch our property when they were already stopping us having free access to the land we own," she said.

CSG Free Northern Rivers spokesperson Adam Guise said he had "always promoted peaceful protest" and advised people to contact the police about accusations of harassment.

"I am not in control of the actions of other people... this is a broad social movement with many people from all walks of life who are opposed to CSG mining."

Mrs Sharman said the couple had been inaccurately represented by activists on Facebook as in an "arrangement" with Metgasco.

"We have no relationship at all with Metgasco, we have never received any money from them, and have had minimal communication with them," she said.

"(But) They've been very polite and kept us advised about the seismic testing."

And the couple are not 100% sold on CSG - they want Metgasco to provide a clear statement on the destination for excess water.

She said the behaviour during the weekend and on Facebook was "deliberate intimidation" because the couple have "been vocal" about their belief that some anti-CSG protesters "have been putting out misinformation".

Source: The Northern Star 06 November 2012

Monday, November 5, 2012

Theft didn't stop test, but sure revealed a leaky organisation

The stories coming out of the Northern Star over the last few days surprised me. Have I not gotten used to seeing the protests around the State re: CSG? You know all that Occupy & Lock the Gate stuff, Greens and Socialist Alliance et al.

Well, there's always something new. The latest news involved around 50 protesters on a Friday trying to block Metgasco employees and seismic contractors from performing a low impact survey in Casino. I guess these protestors do not work on Fridays, but works on the weekends instead, as the numbers went down to 15.

Perhaps it was a nice beach day on Sunday over at Byron. Well, even the unemployed has right to protest, no problem with that! But playing the victims does seem to lose it's effectiveness after a while.


Theft didn't stop test - The Northern Star article

work was approved by relevent authorities and land owners, so what's this so call NR CSG Free group doing? Another loosely formed greens group grabbing the local headline perhaps.

To see that the spokesperson of the group state that his organisation is a peaceful organisation, which does not condone theft or crime; is comparable perhaps a terrorist group not claiming responsibility to attacks. That sounds extreme perhaps, but you can not claim to be an organisation, if you can not maintain control and the quality of you members. Don't flatter yourself.

METGASCO has accused anti-coal seam gas activists of theft, physical intimidation of its staff and destruction of private property at a protest held in Casino since Friday. The CSG company which has operations in the Richmond Valley is alleging environmental activists have stolen seismic equipment worth about $5500.

The company also alleges activists physically intimidated Metgasco staff and contractors while they were staying at a Lismore hotel. Metgasco claims superglue was inserted into locks at the Primex site, where the seismic equipment was being stored. The company claims to have images of the theft that will be handed to the police.

On Friday, more than 50 activists first gathered near the Casino Primex site as Metgasco began seismic testing close to the sewage treatment works on Spring Grove Rd.
However, the number of protestors on site at the weekend sat between 15 and 30.

Media spokesperson for CSG Free Northern Rivers, Adam Guise said he could not comment specifically on the allegations because it was a matter for the police, but said his organisation did not condone the theft of property or the harassment of Metgasco staff.
"We are a peaceful organisation. We do not condone the theft of property," Mr Guise said.
CSG Free Northern Rivers would continue to ensure the protest remained peaceful.
Metgasco said its seismic activities had not been disrupted and were proceeding.
Because of a major operation around a fuel tanker crash, police were not available to comment.

Source: http://www.northernstar.com.au/news/theft-didnt-stop-test/1608593/

Monday, October 22, 2012

Free-Spin for Lock the Gate Porkies...Pokies!

Lock the Gate received free-spins from pokies!


It has been a month since the NSW government released the SRLUP, renewed PELs and granting of a production lease for Metgasco's Casino Gas Project.

This is essentially a greenl light for the gas industry to reignite the exploration and production of CSG, so congratulations to responsible gas explorers and producers in the State. With only 6% of NSW gas usage produced locally, NSW can now move on to ensuring energy security for domestic and industrial usages.

One of the slogans we constantly hear from anti-csg/coal/petroleum protestors is "you can't eat coal, can't drink gas". To me personally, I think it is probably one of the top ten catch-phrase of all time. Of course no one would eat, breath or drink coal and gas directly. But to deny these energy resources as asking people to choose between either food or energy, are both in my opinion; ignorant and extreme. Yes, you can have both by having the extractive industry co-exist with agriculture.

So here is another interesting development about LtG.

Sydney Morning Herald (22/10/2012) article has revealed that the son of Pokies Len Ainsworth has made donations to Drew Hutton and Lock the Gate activities. Mr. Kjerulf Ainsworth is no stranger to the oil & gas industry as the article revealed that he owns 15 petrol stations. What's going on?

Hutton was ask to guarantee that he will not run a greens agenda with Lock the Gate, for if he did, support from Mr Ainsworth would be withdrawn. Well Hutton denies of course. But why the association with Green Left and spoke on April 29, 2011 at a Green Left forum in Brisbane :

"This is the battle for the end of the fossil fuel industry. This is the end game,"
Source: http://www.greenleft.org.au/node/47423

SMH article by Paddy Manning - Son of pokies king funds anti-gas fight

http://www.smh.com.au/environment/son-of-pokies-king-funds-antigas-fight-20121021-27za0.html

Monday, August 20, 2012

Lock the Gate - No Accountability +

It seems that local newspapers have been used as a vehicle to promote lock the Gate propaganda.

The following article was published in the Australian on the 18/08/2012. Written by Imre Salusinszky, it demonstrated the lack of credentials in the dealings of the Lock the Gate movement and it's associated satellite groups. The fact that these people can and have hidden under a broad banner of "environmentalism" while spreading lies, misinformation and sabotage the State's economy is beyond belief.

********************************************************************************

"A GUIDE to Metgasco's propaganda" is the title of a document prepared for anti-coal seam gas groups in northern NSW by consulting psychologist Wayne Somerville. The document dissects the claims of Metgasco, a natural gas company with extensive exploration licences around Lismore.

"Metgasco employs propaganda to give the impression that all their operations are safe and beneficial," writes Somerville. "Metgasco's language distorts the truth and stymies analysis and debate."

Somerville's claims appeared to be bolstered last month when the regional branch of Australia's leading anti-CSG group, Lock the Gate, contested the credibility of a sample of water from one of the waste-water ponds in which Metgasco stores the water it extracts from coal seams in the process of releasing natural gas.

While laboratory analysis of the Metgasco sample showed nothing worse than elevated saline levels, which would not prevent the water being used for irrigation, Lock the Gate released analysis of a rival sample activists had covertly obtained from the same pond.

As the press release from Lock the Gate spokeswoman Boudicca Cerese revealed, laboratory analysis showed the second sample contained "high levels of a range of heavy metals toxic to humans and wildlife" and thus confirmed CSG poses "a serious threat to humans".

It was scary stuff - and, it turns out, nonsense.

Graham Lancaster, head of the laboratory at Southern Cross University in Lismore that tested both samples, was horrified when he read the unquestioning reporting of Cerese's claims in the local media. It was true the second sample contained much higher levels of heavy metals than the company sample, but Lancaster pointed out there were 4040mg of sediment in the sample provided by the activists, compared with 30mg in the company sample.

"There are separate guidelines (for heavy metals) in water and sediment," he told The Australian at the time.

"The standard for sediment is 100 to 1000 times higher. You are allowed to have more metals in sediment because it's attached to the sediment.

"You don't drink sediment sludge. Hence, applying drinking water guidelines is not relevant."

Cerese was insouciant when questioned by this newspaper, suggesting the real point was the need for independent testing of samples. But her press release unambiguously portrayed the Lock the Gate sample as demonstrating CSG was a threat to humans.

Seldom has the propaganda cat been belled quite so clangingly. Yet activists have been highly successful in stalling CSG in NSW, where there is exploration but no production. That is why the industry employs 11,864 workers in Queensland and just 249 in NSW. It is why CSG - which the industry claims is 70 per cent cleaner than coal - provides 90 per cent of household gas in Queensland but just 6 per cent in NSW.

But this situation will change, possibly as soon as Monday, when NSW Energy Minister Chris Hartcher and Planning Minister Brad Hazzard take a strategic land use policy to state cabinet that is expected to green-light CSG, with a series of "gateways" that ramp up the level of environmental approval required, depending on competing land uses such as agriculture and horse breeding.

Lock the Gate is not going to accept a "gateway" model for CSG. It wants much, if not all, of NSW to be off-limits.

The group's founder, former Queensland Greens candidate Drew Hutton, insists he is not proposing a blanket ban but refuses to nominate a single area in NSW where CSG extraction would be acceptable.

"This industry believes it can go anywhere, do anything and accept no constraints," Hutton tells Inquirer, adding: "It's got to be in areas that are not closely settled."

The main fear factor with CSG - that it can poison aquifers and hence rural drinking water supplies - has not manifested so far in Queensland, and a recent independent study of the Namoi catchment area in northeastern NSW found that "at current levels of development, extensive regional scale impacts on water resources are unlikely".

Lock the Gate is unconvinced by this, just as it is by industry representatives' claims that CSG wells are small and unobtrusive.

"Every gas well is connected by a pipeline and a service road, and every gas field has compressor stations, processing plants and a holding pond," says Hutton. "The impact is huge: you are industrialising the landscape."

That claim is countered by Rick Wilkinson, from the Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration Association. "For every 100 wells, you need a compressor station," he says. "But it does not have to be over a coalfield; it just has to be connected by a pipeline."

Part of the startling success of Lock the Gate has been the alliance it has forged with farmers' groups concerned about water quality and control of their land. It is an unlikely alliance, given the close and documented relationship between anti-CSG groups and far-left outfits: last year, The Australian revealed the main Wollongong-based anti-CSG group shares a mailing address with Socialist Alliance, Resistance, Green Left Weekly and Democratic Socialist Perspective.

The latest issue of Chain Reaction, the national magazine of Friends of the Earth, is devoted to CSG. Several of the articles, including one by Hutton, enthuse at the possibility of taking environmental activism out of the latte belt and establishing a broader movement around CSG.

Occasionally, Hutton allows a much wider agenda to surface, as when he told a forum in Brisbane last year the battle against CSG "is the battle for the end of the fossil fuel industry". He added: "This is the end game."

"I said that in the context that there is only a few decades left of fossil fuels," he explains to Inquirer. "I don't see what I'm doing as part of the end of the era - I'm just saying the era is coming to an end."

That is hotly disputed by the industry - and by Hartcher.

"The point is that NSW is facing a gas supply crisis," says Hartcher.

"The supply contracts start to run out in 2014, and one-third of the energy in NSW comes from gas. The traditional argument of the Greens is to say, 'We're not against mining,' but then to find a number of hurdles they can put in the way, so it will be either too costly or too time-consuming for people to proceed.

"That's what they've tried to do with CSG and they've had a certain degree of success because they've been able to develop a sense of concern among rural communities. On this issue they've been able to pose as the friends of rural communities, but they are the classic wolf in sheep's clothing.

"Had the Namoi water study been negative, the Greens would be holding it up like a holy icon, but they have gone completely silent about it."

Hartcher hopes the land use policy will be released by the end of the month, and CSG extraction will begin in NSW next year. He's also hoping the policy will break the nexus between radical activists and conservative bushies.

"Farmers should receive some benefit from CSG and the government is determined to address that in its strategic land use plan," he says. "We've got to change the paradigm from, 'Oh no, they've discovered gas on my land', to 'Great, they've discovered gas on my land, and that's going to give me a drought-proofing income.' "

As for water v sediment in Lismore, Hutton was noncommittal: "I saw Boudicca briefly at a film showing and she indicated she thought that scientist was wrong, but I didn't get a chance to ask why that was the case."

As the CSG fight in NSW gets near the pointy end, it seems not all the nasty propaganda in this debate is coming from one direction.
Source: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/csg-fight-is-about-to-ignite/story-fn59niix-1226452782737

Friday, August 10, 2012

Moderate voices in the CSG debate - Queensland Western Downs

Western Downs Regional Council Mayor - Ray Brown described himself as an environmentalist, but saw a possibility of co-existence between agriculture and Coal Seam Gas.

The Mayor felt that enforcement of regulation was key, as was an appropriate recognition that some land is simply not suitable for extractive industries.

He displayed a sensitivity to the range of views among citizens, and some of the potential adverse impacts on the environment - particularly around salt and water.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Firestorm ahead in NSW

 
Firestorm set to ignite when power runs out
Paul Sheen - Sydney Morning Herald, 06 August 2012Any subject, even the humble household energy bill, can become interesting if it turns into a horror story.

In 2015, the NSW government will face an election. It will also face an energy shock. The state's major gas supply contracts expire at the end of 2017, along with the flow of gas. From 2014, demand for gas will exceed supply. NSW is not building any coal-fired power plants. It is not developing any gas-fired power plants. It is not granting any natural gas exploration licences. Prepare for an energy bill horror story.

The man who must confront this problem is the NSW Minister for Resources and Energy, Chris Hartcher, who surveys the scene with some foreboding.

''We have been advised there will likely be gas supply challenges from as early as 2014,'' he told me. ''If we fail to secure future energy supplies, it could result in a more than tripling of gas prices for over a million NSW gas consumers.''

The word ''challenges'' is corporate euphemism for firestorm. The chief executive of the company that supplies most of the gas to NSW, Michael Fraser, of AGL, concurs. He says the natural gas market in Australia is heading for a ''structural dislocation''. He warns: ''If we don't get on with the job, we're going to have supply problems, it's as simple as that.''
NSW has abundant untapped low-cost energy. It has coal and coal-fired power stations but the Gillard government has destroyed the cost base of developing future coal power. NSW has enough natural gas reserves to power the state for more than 200 years. But the state government is suffocating the industry at birth with layers of red tape.

A state with abundant energy is thus facing an energy shock because coal has become a dirty word and even natural gas has become anathema in NSW because it is coal seam gas, now synonymous with another dirty word, ''fracking'' - which is shorthand for hydraulic fracturing, the process of extracting natural gas from coal seams.

A powerful alliance has formed against fracking, built on a fear that it poses an intrinsic threat to the water table, a rational fear given that once an area's water supply has been contaminated it faces economic collapse. For many people, opposition to coal seam gas exploration is a blanket ban - nowhere, at no time.
Chief among the antagonists are the Nationals and the NSW Farmers Association. The Greens are also opposed, along with the environmental movement en masse and thus the ABC. There is also an opponent more formidable than any politician - Alan Jones.

When in full campaign mode and full righteous indignation, the broadcaster is a force of nature. He is fully mobilised against coal seam gas exploration. A combination of the Nationals, farmers, environmentalists and the wrath of Jones is enough to still the hand of the NSW government on any policy.
Its hand has certainly been stilled on granting or renewing gas exploration licenses since coming to power 16 months ago. It has granted none. Instead, it has commissioned its umpteenth report, the Strategic Regional Land Use Policy, in which concerns about coal seam gas exploration are already enshrined under an ''aquifer interference policy''. The final version of the report is due any day.

All of which leaves Australia's biggest state, economically, with a problem. Where is it going to source its growing energy needs? The massive natural gas developments around Gladstone in Queensland are being financed and locked up by and for foreign markets.

Hartcher believes NSW should look close to home: ''We have a responsibility to maintain and improve our state's energy security and central to that is the responsible development of a domestic gas industry.''
He is clearly frustrated by the emotionalism that has led to stasis: ''A refusal by certain groups to join the rational debate under way on the state's future energy needs shows a reckless willingness to disrupt future household gas supply.''

His frustration was amplified by Fraser in a recent speech: ''For the past 18 months, the public conversation has been notable for a smorgasbord of claims about many issues impacting the energy industry that are sometimes ill-informed and, in some instances, deliberately misleading.
''If anyone wants to see what a CSG operation actually looks like, then drive out to Camden one weekend and see if you can find one of our 89 operating wells. You'll struggle to find them because … they have a very small footprint. In Queensland, over 90 per cent of their natural gas supplies come from coal seam gas. In NSW, it's about 4 to 5 per cent.''

He said demand for east coast gas was about 700 petajoules a year but would surge when the Gladstone liquid natural gas projects come on stream, increasing demand more than threefold to 2500 petajoules a year if the fourth Gladstone project goes ahead. These projects convert natural gas to liquefied natural gas for export.

AGL is the largest retailer of gas in NSW, with 700,000 customers, supplied via Santos from the Cooper Basin in South Australia and via Esso/BHP from Bass Strait. These contracts expire at the end of 2016 and 2017.

A recent ACIL Tasman study found that gas supply problems could arise as early as 2014.
''Gladstone is going to be like a giant vacuum cleaner for the east coast gas market, hoovering up all the gas it can get its hands on,'' Fraser said. ''Any time you get a structural dislocation like that in demand, it's going to have consequences.''

Consequences that the king of compromise, the NSW Premier, Barry O'Farrell, will have to navigate.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/firestorm-set-to-ignite-when-power-runs-out-20120805-23nos.html#ixzz22pJTVQ4w

Thursday, August 2, 2012

KISS - Keep It Surreptitiously Stupid! Time to quit Cerese

So it didn't take too long to get the truth out. After all, this can be seen as another example of systemic attacks masterminded by Lock the Gate movement and it's smaller affiliated groups.
An open apology from LtG would be nice, but no one's counting on it.

I would like to ask NSW Ministers and Regional Councils:
When will this Lock the Gate/ Greenies/ pseudo-environmentalism nonsense end? Why should the Government and the sensible majority of NSW people continue to put up with delays caused by mindless slogans, misinformation, and gorilla tactics aimed to sabotage regional development and growth in NSW?

Source: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/nation/coal-seam-gas-threat-claims-undermined/story-e6frg6nf-1226440315641

Friday, July 27, 2012

Guilty! Lock the Gate Lies AGAIN. Accountability Not Detected!


    

Lock the Gate spokesperson Boudica Cerese's usual tactics of fear and misinformation has unleashed once again, claiming an "Anonymous and concerned citizen" has bottled water from a Metgasco water pond and had it tested by the Southern Cross University (SCU) in Lismore. Shock horror! Heavy metals 800 times the environmental safety limit.

Please tell us, did the anonymous person paid for the water testing or was it you Cerese? Lock the Gate?

There was also fantastic effort coming from the Northern Star - as usual, who provided the medium, and the pathetic level of  reporting standards in an often one-sided bias for Lock the Gate.

Err...excuse me, when will Boudica Cerese and Ian Gaillard have the basic decency to tell the truth just for once? Name the person who obtained the water and be ACCOUNTABLE for your action?
Or, will Ian Gaillard incite RIOT in the region, as headlined by the Northern Star?

How would you describe the behaviour of these people when they bullied and threatened Lismore Show Committee to reject sponsorship from Metgasco, when such annual fundings provided the show with regard to the interest of Lismore residents?

ABC North Coast NSW has interviewed Metgasco's Peter Henderson and RVC General Manager John Walker regarding the shameless lies by Lock the Gate. As John Walker said "frankly how can anyone believe anything about water when we have no idea where it's come from and how it's been collected... or if it's been contaminated?"

Surely, even some of the LtG followers must start to ask some questions by now? Accountability not detected! LOL!
Read the full article on:
Lock the Gate's shameful lie - Dodgy water samples
Interviews of Peter Henderson and John Walker can also be heard on that webpage.
*Photos from The Norther Star and Echo Newspaper

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Casino CSG News - Extremists rampant on Northern NSW news sites!

Well what can I say? Freedom of speech is a fundamental right in this country.

The problems is that some people are too happy to protest and spread their share of misinformation, but at the same time attacks anyone who do not wish to be part of their lies and hidden agendas.

That's OK too.

The same scenario occurred in the NSW Government "Have Your Say" Northern Rivers Forum. Some posters have shown their valid concerns, but many others choose to constantly refer to the now debunked Gasland drama, hoping to sustain their fear campaign.

Sorry to say this, but baseless protests and self victimisation doesn't work well other than to please certain political/psedo-environmental groups

Those who follows the extreme views, I would call them "sheep", for them do not understand that freedom of speech is a two way street. And what's worst? Local papers seemed too happy to continue on writing up biased articles aimed to increase their internet traffic counts and paper sales.

Monday, July 2, 2012

Catherine Cusack NSW MLC has written this article in the Sunday Telegraph. I can not possibly estimate the readers it has compared to some biased Northern NSW papers.

"It is ironic our fledgling CSG industry is probably the least environmentally intrusive form of resource extraction, and promises numerous environmental benefits by reducing our dependence on coal, which is infinitely more damaging."

"In the agricultural region of Narrabri I amless worried about the safety of gas wells in the Pilliga as I am about the tragic razing of the pristine Leard state forest by open-cut coal miners."
"O'Farrell Government needs to resist any temptation to react to the screaming and instead show measured leadership that convinces the real stakeholders their needs are being met."

Read the whole article: Coal seam gas is a smokescreen for the real fight  Sunday Telegraph

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Casino CSG Update: Welcome Truth!

C'mon Lock the Gate, show us that you are genuine. Tell the folks that people will not simply be used and disposed of once the Greens and associates have gotten your votes.
How about showing the TruthLand on one of your movie nights? You know, just for a balanced point of view...

But I know you guys will probably just ignore it and label Truthland as some gas/oil company propaganda. Maybe it does sound like it, maybe it doesn't, but it sure helps to open your mind about the fact that there is always two sides to a story.

Well, perhaps Lock the Gate are only here to make you afraid, they don’t offer real solutions!

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

We Want CSG - Home

We Want CSG - Home


" Just like the Greenies, Lock the Gate are  here to misinform, they don’t offer real solutions".

Monday, September 12, 2011

Casino CSG: Environmental Extremism spreading like the Plague

Tara sees red over protests
http://www.couriermail.com.au/ipad/tara-sees-red-over-protests/story-fn6ck620-1226130867527

TARA is as mad as hell and is not going to take it any more. The tiny town on the western Darling Downs says it has repeatedly been maligned by Greens and "blockies" demanding an end to coal-seam gas mining.
Tara has been depicted as a town full of rebels. I couldn't find any the day I visited.

Suggestions that Tara is leading the charge against gas is a misconception advanced by the media. The truth is that most Tara townsfolk support the gas industry with the appropriate environmental safeguards. And so do businesses in the district.

Yet Tara has been repeatedly portrayed on television as the town backing the infamous Lock the Gate campaign.

It isn't.

"Tara is getting the blame for all the protesters but we have never had a placard waved in Tara," says 55-year-old Richard Thornbury. "Why would we want to lock the gates? Gas has brought jobs and wealth and the hope of a more prosperous future."

Tara business leaders dismiss demonstrators as a rent-a-crowd.

Thornbury, whose family arrived in Tara in 1936, is president of Tara Futures, a community group set up to combat negative images of the town.

Thornbury says scenes on television of protesters being dragged away by police happened at Wieambilla, more than 30km away.

Tara families couldn't recognise the protesters on television and most of them were professional protesters who live in Brisbane and were brought to the demo by the Greens, he says.

Tara has now joined Chinchilla, Miles, Dalby and other Maranoa and Darling Downs towns embracing gas.

Gas-fired power stations such as Braemar 2 at Tipton West are sprouting alongside wheat crops and cattle yards. Braemar 2 generates enough electricity to power 200,000 homes. And it's cleaner than coal.

But the heat remains in Tara, where an unsigned flyer condemning the Greens-backed Western Downs Alliance has been circulated.

"These are the people claiming to represent Tara," it says. "They will in fact continue to devalue our town by their self-serving thoughtless and often unlawful actions.

"This is a group of people who are devaluing our homes, our town and our blocks of land.

"Make no mistake. It is these people who are destroying the value of our town."

The flyer criticises the "lazy drones" on unemployment benefits. "The workers they abuse and threaten are the same people paying the taxes that supply their benefits," it says.
"These people who do not represent us fraudulently continue to scream 'Hands off Tara!'.

"Tara doesn't need this. Many people participating in the protests do not live in or around Tara."

Tara's fightback comes as Australia's coal-seam gas producers launch a major campaign stressing the positive side of the gas industry. It will focus on investment, jobs, environmental benefits and enormous opportunities that this industry generates. About time. Gas has been safely captured in this state for half a century but its benefits are largely unknown.

The apolitical campaign was put together by the Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration Association and highlights the practical opportunities gas is providing for regional communities in Queensland and NSW.

The "We want CSG" campaign is backed by some of Australia's biggest energy companies including AGL, Santos and Origin Energy, and by major foreign investors such as BG, PetroChina, Shell and ConocoPhillips.

I hope the Greens take notice of the campaign, especially the part pointing out that using more gas can help reduce global CO2 emissions.

As well, coal-seam gas has a much smaller footprint than other energy sources such as coal.

I am also waiting for the Greens to acknowledge the gas industry's significant contribution to housing and infrastructure.

Queensland Gas Company will invest more than $60 million on up to 100 houses in the western Downs and Gladstone as part of its integrated housing strategy.

The strategy has been approved by Queensland's Co-ordinator General and includes new houses for project staff and affordable housing and rental assistance in communities from Chinchilla to Gladstone.
QGC is expanding its operations in the Surat Basin in southwestern Queensland to transport gas through a 540km underground pipeline to an LNG plant at Gladstone.

Santos and its partners will provide $13.2 million towards social and affordable housing support for the Gladstone and Maranoa as par of its housing strategy approved by the Co-ordinator-General.

The gas companies are also generous in their financial support for everything from footy teams to indigenous housing.

At present QGC is handing out grants from a $6 million Sustainable Communities Fund, which supports not-for-profit and local government organisations in the western Downs, Gladstone, North Burnett and Banana Shire regions. Groups can apply for $10,001 to $50,000 for short-term, one-off projects.

Near Dalby, Arrow Energy continues to supply water and gas to the massive Grassdale cattle feedlot, next door to a major gas field.

Like cattlemen and grain farmers, gas extractors are helping to put food on our tables

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Metgasco Casino CSG news - Northern NSW gas company under attack by environmental extremists!

Here we go again, minority extremists been encouraged by the Greens and Lock the Gate followers. In a progressive town like Casino, why would you want scaremongers like those above, whom will always protest against everything and anything disguised under the term "environmentalism".