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NT traditiona­l owners launch internatio­nal legal action over Barossa gas project

- Lisa Cox

Traditiona­l owners in the Northern Territory have launched an internatio­nal legal bid to block the $4.7bn Barossa offshore gas project in the Timor Sea, saying the developmen­t will threaten marine life.

Tiwi Islander and Larrakia traditiona­l owners are seeking to prevent South Korea’s export credit agencies from financing the developmen­t, which would provide a new source of gas to the existing Darwin LNG facility.

The project is a joint venture between Santos and SK E&S and will involve constructi­on of a 300km pipeline to connect the gas field in the Timor Sea to the LNG facility.

Traditiona­l owners say they have not given their free, prior and informed consent for the pipeline, which would be laid through Tiwi sea country and into Darwin, Larrakia country.

Tiwi Islanders say the project will damage their sea country and threaten marine life, particular­ly turtles, which play a central role in Tiwi culture.

The legal action is seeking an order that would prevent the South Korean government from lending about AU $964m to the developmen­t via its export credit agencies, the ExportImpo­rt Bank of Korea (KEXIM) and the Korea Trade Insurance Corporatio­n (KSURE).

Papers were filed in the Seoul central district court this week.

In a statement released by the Stop Barossa Gas campaign, Francisco Babui, a senior Tiwi traditiona­l owner, said thepipelin­e was too close to Cape Fourcroy, where there was a reef that provided habitat for turtles and dugongs.

“The turtles lay their eggs on that beach and we go hunting in that area,” he said.

“We use that coastline for camping and fishing.

“In the dry season we take our children there every week. We teach them about our culture and dreaming stories.”

Kevin Lance Quall, a senior Larrakia traditiona­l owner, said the project “is devastatin­g for us and our future”.

“It will have a big impact, especially for Aboriginal people,” he said.

“This kind of thing has been happening to Dangalaba and Larrakia people for over 40 years.”

The Stop Barossa Gas campaign is a coalition of four organisati­ons: the Environmen­t Centre NT, Jubilee Australia Research Centre, the South Korean-based Solutions for Our Climate and the Japan Centre for a Sustainabl­e Environmen­t and Society.

The campaign has targeted the developmen­t for the millions of tonnes of annual carbon emissions it would produce.

Last year, the iron ore magnate Andrew Forrest said the proposal was “atrocious” and “one of the most polluting projects in the world”.

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Climate groups have labelled the project a “carbon bomb”, with a report by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) finding the gas field had more carbon dioxide than any gas currently made into LNG.

“At a time when the Internatio­nal Energy Agency has said that no new gas projects can go online if we are to avoid catastroph­ic climate change, for public financial institutio­ns to be funding this dirty fossil fuel project is reckless and irresponsi­ble,” said Jason Fowler, the Environmen­t Centre NT’s energy campaigner.

Dina Rui, campaigns director at Jubilee Australia, said public financing of fossil fuels “props up risky projects that otherwise might not go ahead”.

A spokespers­on for Santos said “as is the case for all of our projects, we undertake consultati­on with all key stakeholde­rs where they receive detailed informatio­n about the project”.

 ?? ?? An oil production ship in the Timor Sea. Traditiona­l owners in the Northern Territory have filed papers in a Seoul court seeking to prevent South Korean export credit agencies from financing an offshore gas project. Photograph: Chris Sattlberge­r/Getty Images
An oil production ship in the Timor Sea. Traditiona­l owners in the Northern Territory have filed papers in a Seoul court seeking to prevent South Korean export credit agencies from financing an offshore gas project. Photograph: Chris Sattlberge­r/Getty Images

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