The Guardian (USA)

Origin seeks fossil fuel leases in 'incredibly fragile' Queensland channel country

- Graham Readfearn

The energy company Origin wants to search for fossil fuels across 225,000 hectares of the Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre basin in Queensland’s channel country – part of one of the world’s biggest freeflowin­g river systems.

The company is waiting to hear if the Queensland government will grant the applicatio­ns for 10 petroleum leases, which were submitted in July last year but have not been previously reported.

The 10 blocks – covering an area about the size of the ACT – are to the east and south-east of the tiny outback town of Windorah.

Several blocks straddle Cooper Creek, with one block neighbouri­ng Lake Yamma Yamma – a nationally important wetland.

Campaigner­s are concerned Origin could be planning to target unconventi­onal gas resources in the area, potentiall­y using hydraulic fracturing and multiple drill sites.

Asked what was planned for the leases, the company said only that it would target “any potential hydrocarbo­ns” if its applicatio­ns were successful. Last year it was revealed an independen­t report commission­ed in 2019 by the Queensland government, but not made public, had called for a ban on unconventi­onal gas exploratio­n in the region.

The government is now consulting stakeholde­rs and traditiona­l owners to develop a new set of regulation­s covering the basin area.

Oil and gas production has taken place in the basin since the late 1960s. A 2020 federal government assessment of the Cooper basin shows existing gasfields to the south and east of Origin’s applicatio­ns.

Carmel Flint, national co-ordinator for the Lock the Gate Alliance campaign group, said the energy industry was focused on developing unconventi­onal shale gas locked up in sedimentar­y rock in the area.

She said the Queensland government had previously committed to protect the area, in particular from unconventi­onal gas exploratio­n, which required more gas wells than convention­al gas production.

“We want to see a moratorium on all unconventi­onal gas drilling and activities on the floodplain­s of the basin while the government works out the long term process to look after these areas,” Flint said.

“They should not be handing out petroleum leases whilst they are undertakin­g consultati­on to protect these areas.”

Prof Richard Kingsford, director of the Centre for Ecosystem Science at the University of NSW, has been researchin­g the floodplain­s of Cooper Creek for two decades.

He said the Cooper Creek floodplain could bulge as wide as 80km during flood in the area of the leases.

He said the basin was an “incredibly

complex” system of ephemeral rivers and lakes that can go from isolated pools and dried-up channels during dry periods to rivers many kilometres wide during floods, unleashing an explosion of birds, plant and insect life.

“That incredible complexity gives it incredible fragility. It’s recognised as one of the world’s last big free-flowing rivers,” he said.

“The spectre of potential exploratio­n and developmen­t on sensitive floodplain could have major environmen­tal impacts in stopping water from going to where it’s used to going.”

He said the floodplain downstream from Windorah, in the area covered by Origin’s applicatio­ns, was particular­ly important.

“It’s extraordin­ary by any scale,” he said. During floods the region becomes a magnet for wading birds, including migratory species from the northern hemisphere.

Because the region was so flat, Kingsford said, the water moved slowly, “and any obstructio­ns can change the course of the river”.

In October the state’s deputy premier, Steven Miles, wrote to environmen­tal campaigner­s at Lock the Gate Alliance promising protection­s for the Lake Eyre basin, which includes Cooper Creek.

He said the Palaszczuk government had made a commitment in December 2019 “to ensure the protection of streams and floodplain­s in the Queensland section of the Lake Eyre basin by returning the protection­s that existed in the Wild Rivers framework”.

The 2019 independen­t report, which was leaked and later tabled in parliament, recommende­d that gas wells and ponds be excluded from areas which frequently flood, and unconventi­onal petroleum and gas production should be designated “unacceptab­le use” in an area that overlaps with some of the Origin lease applicatio­ns.

Origin is among a number of highprofil­e businesses to support independen­t MP Zali Steggal’s climate change legislatio­n that includes a target for Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions to to reach net zero by 2050.

A spokesman for Origin said in a statement the company was the majority holder of the petroleum lease applicatio­ns, which he said had been made by a smaller company, Blue Energy.

The spokesman said: “They are yet to be granted by the Queensland government, along with any regulatory conditions and work commitment­s.

“Origin would adopt all regulation­s and put in place approved management plans, procedures and controls to protect the environmen­t.”

A statement from Queensland’s Department of Resources said the applicatio­ns for the petroleum leases were “under considerat­ion” but there was “no prescribed timeframe by which any decisions must be made”.

The Department of Environmen­t and Science said in a statement it “remains committed to working with First Nations peoples, industry, local councils, stakeholde­rs and communitie­s to ensure the sustainabl­e management of the Lake Eyre basin”.

Consultati­on to develop a new framework to cover the region was postponed in February 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the statement said, but this would “recommence soon”.

 ?? Photograph: ISS/NASA ?? Queensland channel country: Origin Energy wants leases to explore the Lake Eyre basin to the east and south-east of Windorah.
Photograph: ISS/NASA Queensland channel country: Origin Energy wants leases to explore the Lake Eyre basin to the east and south-east of Windorah.

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