The Guardian (USA)

WA government draws ire of green groups for approving Woodside gas pipeline in Pilbara

- Royce Kurmelovs

The Western Australian government has been criticised for approving the final stage of a controvers­ial Woodside Energy-led gas export developmen­t in the state’s north, three days after the launch of a landmark climate science report.

The government gave the green light to 32.7km of pipeline to be constructe­d through state waters on the Pilbara coast. It allows the installati­on of the full 430km pipeline, most of it in commonweal­th waters, that Woodside has proposed to transport gas from the Scarboroug­h offshore basin to the Pluto liquified natural gas (LNG) processing facility on the Burrup Peninsula.

Woodside’s acting chief executive, Meg O’Neill, said the decision would open the way for the Scarboroug­h LNG project to go ahead.

“This is an important regulatory milestone as we now have both commonweal­th and state primary environmen­tal approvals in place to support a final investment decision,” she said in a statement.

The decision was condemned by the Conservati­on Council of Western Australia, which is attempting to halt the expansion of the Pluto LNG processing plant in the Western Australian supreme court.

Piers Verstegen, the council’s executive director, said the project would massively increase CO2 emissions, put marine life at risk and damage the cultural heritage of the local Murujuga people.

“This pipeline is the key piece of infrastruc­ture that would enable Australia’s most polluting fossil fuel project to proceed. That’s the reality of it,” Verstegen said.

The council and the Australia Institute

have estimated the developmen­t could emit more than 1.6bn tonnes of CO2 over its lifetime, including the emissions from burning the gas after it was sold overseas. Verstegen said the scale of the project meant it should have been subject to an environmen­tal impact assessment looking at its cumulative impact.

A spokespers­on for the WA environmen­t minister, Amber-Jade Sanderson,

said responsibi­lity for the project largely lay with the commonweal­th government.

“After assessment by the Environmen­tal Protection Authority (EPA), the small section of the nearshore pipeline that is in state waters has been approved by the Environmen­t Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson subject to a range of conditions.”

But Verstegen said the state government was evading its responsibi­lity to do its part on climate change by “allowing a giant fossil fuel mega-project to be carved up into separate elements and approved independen­tly”.

“That is something that should never happened in the first place,” he said.

WA Premier, Mark McGowan, announced on Tuesday he was considerin­g legislatin­g a state target of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, and Sanderson called on the federal government to increase climate targets in the wake of the landmark report by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The IPCC found human-caused greenhouse gas emissions are unequivoca­lly changing the Earth’s climate in ways “unpreceden­ted” in at least thousands and possibly hundreds of thousands of years.

The $16.2bn Scarboroug­h project is a joint venture between Woodside and BHP. There has been speculatio­n Woodside is in talks with BHP to buy some or all of its petroleum assets.

Tim Baxter, from the Climate Council, said the project was likely to become a stranded asset “hanging like an albatross around Woodside’s neck”.

“It is absurd that massive fossil fuel projects like Woodside’s Scarboroug­h gas project are still being considered, let alone approved, in 2021,” he said. “We

know that gas is a fossil fuel driving climate change, and the Internatio­nal Energy Agency has made it clear that we don’t need and cannot afford any more of it.”

He said the IPCC report showed

Australia was creating “catastroph­ic threats” by increasing the consumptio­n of coal, oil and gas. “It also spelled out that methane emissions, including from Australia’s gas industry, are a major contributo­r to the recent accelerati­on in global methane concentrat­ions in the atmosphere,” he said.

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Woodside says that technologi­cal measures mean that “these developmen­ts will be amongst the lowestcarb­on LNG sources globally for Woodside’s North Asian customers.”

Before it can start work on the project, Woodside needs to consult with the Murujuga Aboriginal Corporatio­n on a plan to protect cultural artefacts in the area and draw up an environmen­tal management plan to “minimise and monitor” the impact on marine life and coral.

A final investment decision on whether it goes ahead is expected later this year.

Woodside has been contacted for comment.

 ??  ?? The Pluto LNG plant in Western Australia’s Pilbara region. Environmen­talists estimate the project could produce more than 1.6bn tonnes of CO2 over its lifetime. Photograph: Krystle Wright/The Guardian
The Pluto LNG plant in Western Australia’s Pilbara region. Environmen­talists estimate the project could produce more than 1.6bn tonnes of CO2 over its lifetime. Photograph: Krystle Wright/The Guardian

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