The Guardian (USA)

Great Australian Bight: Norwegian energy company Equinor given environmen­tal approval to drill for oil

- Adam Morton Environmen­t editor

The Norwegian energy giant Equinor has been granted environmen­t approval for its controvers­ial bid to drill to explore for oil in the Great Australian Bight.

The decision, announced by the federal offshore petroleum regulator on Wednesday, means Equinor has cleared the second, and most significan­t, of four regulatory hurdles it needs to pass before it can start drilling.

Environmen­t groups immediatel­y flagged a likely legal challenge to the decision by the National Offshore Petroleum Safety and Environmen­tal Management Authority, known as Nopsema.

The company says its plan shows drilling in waters more than 2km off the South Australian coast can be done safely. Opponents say Equinor has failed to properly consult with affected groups, the bight is a unique marine environmen­t that includes the world’s most important nursery for the endangered southern right whale and rough seas make the proposed site a risky place to drill.

Nopsema said it had approved the plan after a rigorous assessment that took almost eight months. Equinor still needs a well operations plan and a facility safety case approved before it can begin drilling.

Equinor said Nopsema’s decision was an important milestone. Its Australian manager, Jone Stangeland, said the company had been preparing its proposal for two-and-a-half years, holding more than 400 meetings with community and other organisati­ons.

The Wilderness Society said the regulator had ignored the concerns of scientists, coastal councils, traditiona­l owners and environmen­tal groups, and the decision would further mobilise community opposition.

Peter Owen, the Wilderness Society’s South Australia director, said the group was “gobsmacked” by the decision. He said tens of thousands of people had joined a “fight for the bight” campaign against the developmen­t.

“Opening up a new high-risk frontier oil field when we are hurtling towards catastroph­ic climate change is madness,” Owen said. “We will now be looking at our legal options to protect Australian­s from this risky and unwanted drilling.”

Equinor was first granted a petroleum title over areas in the bight in 2011. The proposed Stromlo-1 well site is in water more than 2.2km deep nearly 400km off the South Australian coast.

An analysis based on an amalgamati­on of 100 oil spill simulation­s found there was potential for a spill to spread along the coastline and into ocean between Esperance in Western

Australia, Sydney and Tasmania.

Nopsema said it had imposed stringent conditions on its approval to ensure a high level of protection to the environmen­t in recognitio­n of the bight’s unique values and sensitivit­ies. It said restrictio­ns included limits on the time of year activity can take place and regular public reporting on environmen­tal impact.

The approval followed Nopsema last month asking Equinor to modify and resubmit its environmen­tal plan to provide more informatio­n on the consultati­on it conducted and on risks posed by oil spills. It was the second time it was asked for more informatio­n.

The Australia Institute said its polling suggested an overwhelmi­ng majority of South Australian­s wanted the bight to be given world heritage protection and most Australian­s opposed allowing companies to drill for oil there.

The Greens environmen­t spokeswoma­n, Sarah Hanson-Young, said the decision was a “pre-Christmas horror show” for South Australia.

“South Australian­s don’t want our Great Australian Bight turned into an oil field,” she said. “They don’t want a foreign oil giant destroying our coastline and one of our most precious and treasured assets.”

If approved, Equinor plans to begin work in late 2020 with the operations expected to last between 30 and 60 days.

 ??  ?? The Wilderness Society says it was ‘gobsmacked’ by the granting of the environmen­t approval for Norwegian energy company Equinor’s bid to drill for oil in the Great Australian Bight. Photograph: Sarah Hanson-Young
The Wilderness Society says it was ‘gobsmacked’ by the granting of the environmen­t approval for Norwegian energy company Equinor’s bid to drill for oil in the Great Australian Bight. Photograph: Sarah Hanson-Young

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