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State Significant Development

Determination

Narrabri Gas

Narrabri Shire

Current Status: Determination

Interact with the stages for their names

  1. SEARs
  2. Prepare EIS
  3. Exhibition
  4. Collate Submissions
  5. Response to Submissions
  6. Assessment
  7. Recommendation
  8. Determination

The project involves the progressive development of a coal seam gas field over 20 years with up to 850 gas wells and ancillary infrastructure, including gas processing and water treatment facilities.

Attachments & Resources

SEARs (3)

EIS (71)

Submissions (221)

Response to Submissions (18)

Agency Advice (46)

Additional Information (8)

Assessment (8)

Determination (3)

Approved Documents

Management Plans and Strategies (34)

Reports (2)

Notifications (2)

Other Documents (1)

Note: Only documents approved by the Department after November 2019 will be published above. Any documents approved before this time can be viewed on the Applicant's website.

Complaints

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Enforcements

There are no enforcements for this project.

Inspections

There are no inspections for this project.

Note: Only enforcements and inspections undertaken by the Department from March 2020 will be shown above.

Submissions

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Showing 281 - 300 of 6108 submissions
Douglas Kolisnyk
Object
Whitebridge , New South Wales
Message
This submission is in response to Santos proposed drilling/exploration in the Pillaga. In short CSG is a destructive process in itself. There have been numerous documentations and citings of contaminated bunds overflowing. rivers self igniting, radioactive waste water being spread over sealed and unsealed roads near and away from well sites.

Where does commom sense kick in, the Pillaga is a refuge for a whole host of flora and fauna some of which are endangered, or is it the case of 'out of sight , out of mind'.

To be tampering with the Artesian basin again is a recipe for disaster. Once any damage is done can it be repaired? Will Santos front up to any post drilling effects? I highlyu doubt it.

We need our wild areas to remain just that 'WILD' . I totally reject Santos new 850 drilling regime, their DA should be withdrawn and scrapped.


Thank you

Name Withheld
Comment
Irymple , Victoria
Message
Please don't approve this project. As it will corrupt our water supply, jeopardise our food security, and destroy the country.
University of Newcastle
Object
Hamilton , New South Wales
Message
I am writing to express passionate criticism of the proposal for CSG to destroy the Pilliga Region and neighbouring areas. The knowledge we now have on how potentially catastrophic CSG mining can be to water tables, soil quality and geological stability should alone have forced this project out of any consideration.
The effects of such exploration and construction have been exhibited here in Australian as well as overseas; the long-term damage to water security, soil quality and local ecosystems will NOT be compensated for by Santos or its accomplices, but instead will condemn individuals and families who live and work in the region.
This is a ridiculous proposal, and it is the responsibility of governments to assert that CSG is a danger to communities and nature alike by refusing any more CSG exploration or extraction.
Annelies Deak
Object
Helena Valley , Western Australia
Message
Strongly disagree with this decisdion
Jillian Adams
Object
The channon , New South Wales
Message
The drilling of new csg gas wells will risk poisoning the water table and surrounding land. We do not need these wells for energy sustainability, we should be investing instaed in renewables such as wind and solar. CSG flares are also adding unnecessary risk to bushfires and all csg wells leak methane which is adding to greenhouse gases and climate change.
Lynne van Veen
Object
Crookwell , New South Wales
Message
Our family care deeply for the Pilliga forest and the Great Artesian Basin. To consider Santos' proposal is deeply disturbing, even frightening, and shows a total lack of concern for the environment and the people who live in this area as well as all Australians.

We need to get serious about protecting our environment for future generations. Allowing Santos to drill for coal seem gas well in this region would be one of the worst mistakes ever and our family are saying NO. This must not be given the green light to proceed under any circumstances.

Thank you

Name Withheld
Object
Carrum , Victoria
Message
I object this project for the following reasons as outlined by the Wilderness Society

1. The Narrabri Gas Project risks precious water sources, including the Great Australian Basin--Australia's largest groundwater aquifer
The Narrabri gasfield poses a real risk to our two most precious water resources: the Great Artesian Basin and the Murray-Darling Basin. The area of the Great Artesian Basin with the highest recharge rates is almost entirely contained within the Pilliga East forest. In a worst-case scenario, the water removed for CSG extraction could reduce water pressure in the recharge areas--potentially stopping the free flow of waters to the surface at springs and bores across the whole Great Artesian Basin.¹

Creeks in the Pilliga run into the Namoi River--a part of the Murray Darling Basin. This system is vulnerable to contamination from drilling fluid spills and the salty treated water produced from the proposed 850 wells.

2. The Gamilaraay Traditional Custodians are opposed
There are hundreds of cultural sites as well as songlines and stories connecting the Gamilaraay to the forest and to the groundwater beneath. Gamilaraay people are deeply involved in the battle against CSG, and have told Santos they do not want their country sacrificed for a coal seam gas field.

3. Farmers and other local community reject the project
Extensive community surveys have shown an average of 96% opposition to CSG. This stretches across a massive 3.2 million hectares of country surrounding the Pilliga forest, including 99 communities. Hundreds of farmers have participated in protest actions unlike any previously seen in the region.

4. The Narrabri Gas Project has a long history of spills and leaks of toxic CSG water--Santos cannot be trusted to manage the project safely
Santos has already contaminated a freshwater aquifer in the Pilliga with uranium at levels 20 times higher than safe drinking water guidelines, as well as lead, aluminium, arsenic and barium². In addition, there have been over 20 reported spills and leaks of toxic CSG water from storage ponds, pipes and well heads. Santos cannot be trusted.

5. The Pilliga is a haven for threatened wildlife
The Pilliga is one of 15 nationally listed `biodiversity hotspots' and is vital to the survival of threatened species like the Koala, Spotted-tailed Quoll, Black-striped Wallaby, Eastern Pygmy-possum, Pilliga Mouse and South-eastern Long-eared Bat. The forest is home to over 200 bird species and is internationally recognised as an Important Bird Area². The Santos gasfield would fragment 95,000 hectares of the Pilliga with well pads, roads, and water and gas pipelines--damaging vital habitat and threatening the survival of endangered species.

6. Coal seam gas fuels dangerous climate change
Methane is by far the major component of natural gas, and is a greenhouse gas 72 times more powerful than CO². CSG fields contribute to climate change through the leakage of methane during the production, transport, processing and use of coal seam gas.

7. Human health is compromised by coal seam gas
A range of hydrocarbons and volatile organic compounds can be released into the air from coal seam gas operations, including flaring of gas wells. The effects of volatile organic compounds vary, but can cause eye, nose and airway irritation, headache, nausea, dizziness and loss of coordination⁴. These impacts have been documented in human populations nearby to existing gasfields in Queensland, Sydney and in America.

8. The nation's premier optical astronomical observatory is at risk
The Siding Springs Observatory, situated in the Warrumbungles and adjacent to the Pilliga, is under threat from the Narrabri Gas Project due to light and dust pollution⁵. The area has been internationally recognised as a `dark sky park'⁶ and the 50m high gas flares proposed by Santos threaten the viability of the facility.

9. Thousands of tonnes of salt waste will result from the project
Santos has no solution for disposing of the hundreds of thousands of tonnes of salt that will be produced. Between 17,000 and 42,000 tonnes of salt waste would be produced each year. This industry would leave a toxic legacy in NSW.

10. Risk of fires would increase throughout the Pilliga's tinder-box conditions
Methane flare stacks up to 50m high would be running day and night, even on total fire ban days. The Pilliga is prone to severe bushfires. The project would increase ignition sources as well as extracting, transporting and storing a highly flammable gas right within this extremely fire-prone forest.
Rose Dwyer
Object
Preston , Victoria
Message
Natural habitat will be more valuable than we know in the future, think further ahead guys!!!
Name Withheld
Object
Gladesville , New South Wales
Message
Whilst I understand that the "Narrabri Gas Project" will supply a useful energy source, any form of coal seam gas poses a risk to local aquifers which are frankly much more vital to both our long and short term survival and economic growth.

Stop thinking short term, leave it in the ground.

Also leading bank as the god damn security code? Doesn't that tell you something about what you find important? Isn't clean drinking water more important than a quick buck?
Mark McKean
Object
Buderim , Queensland
Message
1. The Narrabri Gas Project risks precious water sources, including the Great Australian Basin--Australia's largest groundwater aquifer
The Narrabri gasfield poses a real risk to our two most precious water resources: the Great Artesian Basin and the Murray-Darling Basin. The area of the Great Artesian Basin with the highest recharge rates is almost entirely contained within the Pilliga East forest. In a worst-case scenario, the water removed for CSG extraction could reduce water pressure in the recharge areas--potentially stopping the free flow of waters to the surface at springs and bores across the whole Great Artesian Basin.¹

Creeks in the Pilliga run into the Namoi River--a part of the Murray Darling Basin. This system is vulnerable to contamination from drilling fluid spills and the salty treated water produced from the proposed 850 wells.

2. The Gamilaraay Traditional Custodians are opposed
There are hundreds of cultural sites as well as songlines and stories connecting the Gamilaraay to the forest and to the groundwater beneath. Gamilaraay people are deeply involved in the battle against CSG, and have told Santos they do not want their country sacrificed for a coal seam gas field.

3. Farmers and other local community reject the project
Extensive community surveys have shown an average of 96% opposition to CSG. This stretches across a massive 3.2 million hectares of country surrounding the Pilliga forest, including 99 communities. Hundreds of farmers have participated in protest actions unlike any previously seen in the region.

4. The Narrabri Gas Project has a long history of spills and leaks of toxic CSG water--Santos cannot be trusted to manage the project safely
Santos has already contaminated a freshwater aquifer in the Pilliga with uranium at levels 20 times higher than safe drinking water guidelines, as well as lead, aluminium, arsenic and barium². In addition, there have been over 20 reported spills and leaks of toxic CSG water from storage ponds, pipes and well heads. Santos cannot be trusted.

5. The Pilliga is a haven for threatened wildlife
The Pilliga is one of 15 nationally listed `biodiversity hotspots' and is vital to the survival of threatened species like the Koala, Spotted-tailed Quoll, Black-striped Wallaby, Eastern Pygmy-possum, Pilliga Mouse and South-eastern Long-eared Bat. The forest is home to over 200 bird species and is internationally recognised as an Important Bird Area². The Santos gasfield would fragment 95,000 hectares of the Pilliga with well pads, roads, and water and gas pipelines--damaging vital habitat and threatening the survival of endangered species.

6. Coal seam gas fuels dangerous climate change
Methane is by far the major component of natural gas, and is a greenhouse gas 72 times more powerful than CO². CSG fields contribute to climate change through the leakage of methane during the production, transport, processing and use of coal seam gas.

7. Human health is compromised by coal seam gas
A range of hydrocarbons and volatile organic compounds can be released into the air from coal seam gas operations, including flaring of gas wells. The effects of volatile organic compounds vary, but can cause eye, nose and airway irritation, headache, nausea, dizziness and loss of coordination⁴. These impacts have been documented in human populations nearby to existing gasfields in Queensland, Sydney and in America.

8. The nation's premier optical astronomical observatory is at risk
The Siding Springs Observatory, situated in the Warrumbungles and adjacent to the Pilliga, is under threat from the Narrabri Gas Project due to light and dust pollution⁵. The area has been internationally recognised as a `dark sky park'⁶ and the 50m high gas flares proposed by Santos threaten the viability of the facility.

9. Thousands of tonnes of salt waste will result from the project
Santos has no solution for disposing of the hundreds of thousands of tonnes of salt that will be produced. Between 17,000 and 42,000 tonnes of salt waste would be produced each year. This industry would leave a toxic legacy in NSW.

10. Risk of fires would increase throughout the Pilliga's tinder-box conditions
Methane flare stacks up to 50m high would be running day and night, even on total fire ban days. The Pilliga is prone to severe bushfires. The project would increase ignition sources as well as extracting, transporting and storing a highly flammable gas right within this extremely fire-prone forest.


¹SoilFutures Consulting 2014, Great Artesian Basin Recharge Systems and Extent of Petroleum and Gas Leases. http://www.gabpg.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/GAB-Report1.pdf
²http://www.smh.com.au/environment/santos-coal-seam-gas-project-contaminates-aquifer-20140307-34csb.html
³BirdLife International (2017) Important Bird Areas factsheet: Pilliga http://www.birdlife.org
⁴Marion Carey Doctors for the Environment Australia (DEA), Air pollution from coal seam gas may put public health at risk The Conversation, November 20, 2012
⁵https://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/oct/21/siding-spring-observatory-threat-coal-seam-gas-light-pollution
⁶http://darksky.org/first-dark-sky-park-in-australia-designated/

- See more at: https://www.wilderness.org.au/final-push-pilliga#sthash.qLU2Ewjv.dpuf
Lille Gill
Object
Moorooka , Queensland
Message
In short, there are four main reasons I oppose CSG drilling (exploratory or otherwise) in the Pilliga Forest.
In no particular order, the Pilliga Scrubland is the most INTACT forest in eastern Australia. A total of 25 nationally listed and 48 state listed threatened species now rely solely on this area for survival.
It's is a vital recharge area for the Great Artesian Basin - This water reserve has taken 2 million years to form and is the lifeline of Australian farmers and wildlife. Unnecessary or excess use of this reserve is hugely irresponsible in a country that suffers so dramatically from drought. The risk of groundwater contamination is also to great to allow such developments to occur.
The Pilliga is also home to Australia's largest koala population - an iconic species that is now classed as vulnerable on the IUCN red list due to intensive developments and agriculture throughout greater eastern Australia.
Finally, it is also the traditional Country of the Gamilaroi People. As the original owners of this land, these people (who have been battling CSG developments in this area for years) deserve to have what is left of their heritage and cultural values preserved.
Anne Stanton
Object
Dorrigo , New South Wales
Message
Dear Sir/Madam,

The Pilliga forest is the largest intact woodland in eastern Australia, stretching across half a million hectares in north-western New South Wales. It is a unique ecological refuge, home to 25 nationally listed and 48 state-listed threatened species, such as the Pilliga Mouse, which rely on the Pilliga for survival.

The sandstone under the Pilliga is a vital recharge area for the Great Artesian Basin, and creeks that flow through the Pilliga provide clean water into the Murray Darling Basin. These water sources are the lifeblood of farming communities throughout the southeast and inland Australia.

Santos' plans to dig 850 coal seam gas wells here is madness --threatening this natural refuge, our precious groundwater, and the communities who rely on it. If we're to maintain a safe climate and keep global warming below 2 degrees, projects like this cannot go ahead.

As a resident of NSW, as a mother and a grandmother, I strongly urge you to reject this proposal, and all future csg projects. The risks to our water, our land, our health and our future descendants is just too high.
Name Withheld
Object
Bowraville , New South Wales
Message
1. The Narrabri Gas Project risks precious water sources, including the Great Australian Basin--Australia's largest groundwater aquifer
The Narrabri gasfield poses a real risk to our two most precious water resources: the Great Artesian Basin and the Murray-Darling Basin. The area of the Great Artesian Basin with the highest recharge rates is almost entirely contained within the Pilliga East forest. In a worst-case scenario, the water removed for CSG extraction could reduce water pressure in the recharge areas--potentially stopping the free flow of waters to the surface at springs and bores across the whole Great Artesian Basin.¹

Creeks in the Pilliga run into the Namoi River--a part of the Murray Darling Basin. This system is vulnerable to contamination from drilling fluid spills and the salty treated water produced from the proposed 850 wells.

2. The Gamilaraay Traditional Custodians are opposed
There are hundreds of cultural sites as well as songlines and stories connecting the Gamilaraay to the forest and to the groundwater beneath. Gamilaraay people are deeply involved in the battle against CSG, and have told Santos they do not want their country sacrificed for a coal seam gas field.

3. Farmers and other local community reject the project
Extensive community surveys have shown an average of 96% opposition to CSG. This stretches across a massive 3.2 million hectares of country surrounding the Pilliga forest, including 99 communities. Hundreds of farmers have participated in protest actions unlike any previously seen in the region.

4. The Narrabri Gas Project has a long history of spills and leaks of toxic CSG water--Santos cannot be trusted to manage the project safely
Santos has already contaminated a freshwater aquifer in the Pilliga with uranium at levels 20 times higher than safe drinking water guidelines, as well as lead, aluminium, arsenic and barium². In addition, there have been over 20 reported spills and leaks of toxic CSG water from storage ponds, pipes and well heads. Santos cannot be trusted.

5. The Pilliga is a haven for threatened wildlife
The Pilliga is one of 15 nationally listed `biodiversity hotspots' and is vital to the survival of threatened species like the Koala, Spotted-tailed Quoll, Black-striped Wallaby, Eastern Pygmy-possum, Pilliga Mouse and South-eastern Long-eared Bat. The forest is home to over 200 bird species and is internationally recognised as an Important Bird Area². The Santos gasfield would fragment 95,000 hectares of the Pilliga with well pads, roads, and water and gas pipelines--damaging vital habitat and threatening the survival of endangered species.

6. Coal seam gas fuels dangerous climate change
Methane is by far the major component of natural gas, and is a greenhouse gas 72 times more powerful than CO². CSG fields contribute to climate change through the leakage of methane during the production, transport, processing and use of coal seam gas.

7. Human health is compromised by coal seam gas
A range of hydrocarbons and volatile organic compounds can be released into the air from coal seam gas operations, including flaring of gas wells. The effects of volatile organic compounds vary, but can cause eye, nose and airway irritation, headache, nausea, dizziness and loss of coordination⁴. These impacts have been documented in human populations nearby to existing gasfields in Queensland, Sydney and in America.

8. The nation's premier optical astronomical observatory is at risk
The Siding Springs Observatory, situated in the Warrumbungles and adjacent to the Pilliga, is under threat from the Narrabri Gas Project due to light and dust pollution⁵. The area has been internationally recognised as a `dark sky park'⁶ and the 50m high gas flares proposed by Santos threaten the viability of the facility.

9. Thousands of tonnes of salt waste will result from the project
Santos has no solution for disposing of the hundreds of thousands of tonnes of salt that will be produced. Between 17,000 and 42,000 tonnes of salt waste would be produced each year. This industry would leave a toxic legacy in NSW.

10. Risk of fires would increase throughout the Pilliga's tinder-box conditions
Methane flare stacks up to 50m high would be running day and night, even on total fire ban days. The Pilliga is prone to severe bushfires. The project would increase ignition sources as well as extracting, transporting and storing a highly flammable gas right within this extremely fire-prone forest.


¹SoilFutures Consulting 2014, Great Artesian Basin Recharge Systems and Extent of Petroleum and Gas Leases. http://www.gabpg.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/GAB-Report1.pdf
²http://www.smh.com.au/environment/santos-coal-seam-gas-project-contaminates-aquifer-20140307-34csb.html
³BirdLife International (2017) Important Bird Areas factsheet: Pilliga http://www.birdlife.org
⁴Marion Carey Doctors for the Environment Australia (DEA), Air pollution from coal seam gas may put public health at risk The Conversation, November 20, 2012
⁵https://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/oct/21/siding-spring-observatory-threat-coal-seam-gas-light-pollution
⁶http://darksky.org/first-dark-sky-park-in-australia-designated/

- See more at: https://www.wilderness.org.au/final-push-pilliga#sthash.Pf5RcJYk.dpuf
Name Withheld
Comment
Warrnambool , Victoria
Message
To whom it concerns, I am writing this letter on behalf of communities that care about our land and water security.
We have enough evidence for Santos not to mine Piliga forests for all the reasons that science and community people's alike have unequivocally been alerted to.
I love Australia for everything that is natural" our wonders to preserve for generations to come.
Any mining close to water hence the artesian basin would be madness, why would one take the risks involve? when it has such a dire straits effect.

Surely prevention is better than cure that it would never be the same if this pristine place is mined for vested profits.
Please listen to the communities because they are the ones who have to live with this nightmare.
I believe Santos needs to pack up and move on from this area, it's just to dangerous.

Thanks you for your time
Name Withheld
Support
Goulburn , New South Wales
Message
I am fully in support of the Narrabri Gas Project.
It has the potential to:
a)Further diversify the local economy within the local area, supporting the existing industries
b)help ensure energy security at a low cost for NSW
c)help create additional jobs in regional areas
d)provide alternative jobs for workers affected by the downturn in the NSW coal industry
Sandra Hohnen
Object
Forest Grove , Western Australia
Message
In the future we will realize the mistake of proceeding with fracking. Very unnatural invasion on the environment. Disastrous implications for water purity.
Winangali Infusion
Object
Newtown , Queensland
Message
As a proud Gamilaraay Man which sacred land these evil People are desecrating. I SAY GAMIL (no) NO MORE!

The environmental, and more importantly the traumamatical impacts they impose on the land , all people, our sacred places and waterways is catastrophically not sustainable, there are many other ways of renewable energy to implement to stop this evil from unleashing.

I dedicate my life to preserving our Gamilaraay sacred lands as our business reflects this "empowering our communities" via ancient song and dance, we Gamilaraay and many other Original tribes people across the world are carrying the trans/intergenational effects not only from colonialism but what's happening right now.

Preservation, nurturing our earth is foremost what are we as people if she is destroyed bit by bit......

Yallu
Fred de Munk
Support
Healesville , Victoria
Message
If this project does not get the go ahead then you may as well close the state down.
The political sensitivity to the loud and noisy is not benefiting this country. If projects such as this get closed down then our standaard of living will be seriously compromised.
The EIA is comprehensive and the damge to the environment proposed by observers is merely speculation without proof.
Katie Lavers
Object
Balmain East , New South Wales
Message
I am writing to express my objections in the strongest terms to the Narrabri Gas project.
This project poses a real risk to the water resources in the Great Artesian Basin and the Murray Darling Basin. Creek in the pPllaga run into the Namoi Basin making the entire Murray Darling basin vulnerable to spills and salty treated water produced from the proposed 850 wells.

Santos has already contaminated a freshwater aquifer in the Pillaga with uranium, lead, aluminium arsenic and barium. In addition there have already been over 20 reported spills and leaks of toxic CSG water from storage ponds, pipes and well heads. Santos cannot be trusted to mange this project safely.

Community surveys show that the project does not have the support of local farmers or the local community. Hundreds of farmers have participated in protest actions.
The project seriously threatens the Pillaga ecosystem threatening over 200 bird species and species such as the kolal and the PIllaga Mouse.
In addition this project goes against the wishes of the traditional custodians of the land the Gamilaraay who have sacred songlines linking them to the land and the water beneath it.
Yours
Katie Lavers
Teresa Hazendonk
Object
Cranbourne north , Victoria
Message
1. The Narrabri Gas Project risks precious water sources, including the Great Australian Basin--Australia's largest groundwater aquifer
The Narrabri gasfield poses a real risk to our two most precious water resources: the Great Artesian Basin and the Murray-Darling Basin. The area of the Great Artesian Basin with the highest recharge rates is almost entirely contained within the Pilliga East forest. In a worst-case scenario, the water removed for CSG extraction could reduce water pressure in the recharge areas--potentially stopping the free flow of waters to the surface at springs and bores across the whole Great Artesian Basin.¹

Creeks in the Pilliga run into the Namoi River--a part of the Murray Darling Basin. This system is vulnerable to contamination from drilling fluid spills and the salty treated water produced from the proposed 850 wells.

2. The Gamilaraay Traditional Custodians are opposed
There are hundreds of cultural sites as well as songlines and stories connecting the Gamilaraay to the forest and to the groundwater beneath. Gamilaraay people are deeply involved in the battle against CSG, and have told Santos they do not want their country sacrificed for a coal seam gas field.

3. Farmers and other local community reject the project
Extensive community surveys have shown an average of 96% opposition to CSG. This stretches across a massive 3.2 million hectares of country surrounding the Pilliga forest, including 99 communities. Hundreds of farmers have participated in protest actions unlike any previously seen in the region.

4. The Narrabri Gas Project has a long history of spills and leaks of toxic CSG water--Santos cannot be trusted to manage the project safely
Santos has already contaminated a freshwater aquifer in the Pilliga with uranium at levels 20 times higher than safe drinking water guidelines, as well as lead, aluminium, arsenic and barium². In addition, there have been over 20 reported spills and leaks of toxic CSG water from storage ponds, pipes and well heads. Santos cannot be trusted.

5. The Pilliga is a haven for threatened wildlife
The Pilliga is one of 15 nationally listed `biodiversity hotspots' and is vital to the survival of threatened species like the Koala, Spotted-tailed Quoll, Black-striped Wallaby, Eastern Pygmy-possum, Pilliga Mouse and South-eastern Long-eared Bat. The forest is home to over 200 bird species and is internationally recognised as an Important Bird Area². The Santos gasfield would fragment 95,000 hectares of the Pilliga with well pads, roads, and water and gas pipelines--damaging vital habitat and threatening the survival of endangered species.

6. Coal seam gas fuels dangerous climate change
Methane is by far the major component of natural gas, and is a greenhouse gas 72 times more powerful than CO². CSG fields contribute to climate change through the leakage of methane during the production, transport, processing and use of coal seam gas.

7. Human health is compromised by coal seam gas
A range of hydrocarbons and volatile organic compounds can be released into the air from coal seam gas operations, including flaring of gas wells. The effects of volatile organic compounds vary, but can cause eye, nose and airway irritation, headache, nausea, dizziness and loss of coordination⁴. These impacts have been documented in human populations nearby to existing gasfields in Queensland, Sydney and in America.

8. The nation's premier optical astronomical observatory is at risk
The Siding Springs Observatory, situated in the Warrumbungles and adjacent to the Pilliga, is under threat from the Narrabri Gas Project due to light and dust pollution⁵. The area has been internationally recognised as a `dark sky park'⁶ and the 50m high gas flares proposed by Santos threaten the viability of the facility.

9. Thousands of tonnes of salt waste will result from the project
Santos has no solution for disposing of the hundreds of thousands of tonnes of salt that will be produced. Between 17,000 and 42,000 tonnes of salt waste would be produced each year. This industry would leave a toxic legacy in NSW.

10. Risk of fires would increase throughout the Pilliga's tinder-box conditions
Methane flare stacks up to 50m high would be running day and night, even on total fire ban days. The Pilliga is prone to severe bushfires. The project would increase ignition sources as well as extracting, transporting and storing a highly flammable gas right within this extremely fire-prone forest
- See more at: https://www.wilderness.org.au/final-push-pilliga#sthash.YdCE72pW.dpuf

Pagination

Project Details

Application Number
SSD-6456
EPBC ID Number
2014/7376
Assessment Type
State Significant Development
Development Type
Petroleum Extraction
Local Government Areas
Narrabri Shire
Decision
Approved
Determination Date
Decider
IPC-N

Contact Planner

Name
Rose-Anne Hawkeswood