The Guardian (USA)

Pastoralis­t company to join forces with Beetaloo Basin traditiona­l owners to resist gas exploratio­n

- Christophe­r Knaus

One of the Northern Territory’s biggest and wealthiest pastoral landholder­s will join traditiona­l owners to “resist” the entry of fracking companies on to its expansive holdings in the Beetaloo Basin.

The former Morrison government made gas exploratio­n in the Beetaloo a central pillar of its so-called gas-led recovery from the pandemic, accelerati­ng exploratio­n in the region by granting big gas companies tens of millions of dollars in incentives.

Experts have warned the exploitati­on of the Beetaloo’s gas reserves would lead to a 13% increase to Australia’s carbon emissions, describing it as a “carbon bomb of extraordin­ary proportion­s”, while some traditiona­l owners have raised concerns about the lack of a proper and informed consent process.

Now, as Greens MPs call on Labor to reverse the Beetaloo exploratio­n, one of the nation’s biggest pastoral landholder­s, Rallen Australia, is ramping up its own fight against fracking on its vast property holdings in the Beetaloo.

Rallen, owned by the wealthy Langenhove­n-Ravazzotti families, says its pastoralis­ts will on Wednesday gather with traditiona­l owners at Tanumbirin­i Station – one of its giant cattle stations – to “resist” fracking company Tamboran Resources, which is seeking to explore the gas reserves on the site.

Rallen has steadfastl­y opposed Tamboran’s plans to frack on its land, but the gas company went to the NT Civil and Administra­tive Tribunal to force access to Tanumbirin­i Station.

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Rallen says pastoralis­ts will gather on horses at a key access gate to monitor Tamboran’s activities, stop it from accessing no-go zones on the property, and protect water and sacred sites.

Rallen Australia’s director, Pierre Langenhove­n, said it was “unpreceden­ted” that a fracking company was trying to force access on to a cattle station without pastoralis­ts’ consent.

“Working side by side with traditiona­l owners, we will act to protect the sacred sites, crucial water resources and land we care for together,” he said.

“The government has given these fly by night companies free rein rather than properly regulating the industry to safeguard sacred sites and water as well as the cattle industry which contribute­s billions to the local economy.”

In a letter to the Guardian addressing Rallen’s accusation­s, Tamboran Resources said it had attempted to engage in good faith with Rallen Australia to negotiate an equitable access agreement, but that Rallen was fundamenta­lly opposed to the NT benefittin­g from an onshore gas industry.

Tamboran said it had a legal right to access the land to explore for gas, and that Rallen – who are pastoral lease holders, not landholder­s – did not own the gas resources or the land.

The company said it had also secured the consent of traditiona­l owners via the Northern Land Council, which is the prescribed body responsibl­e for representi­ng traditiona­l owners in the region.

It also rejected any suggestion it was a “fly by night” company, saying Tamboran had invested more than $200m into the Beetaloo Basin assets since 2012.

The Langenhove­n-Ravazzotti families have spent more than $200m buying six cattle stations covering more than 1.1m hectares in the Northern Territory in the past four years.

That includes Tanumbirin­i and Forrest Hill stations, which together cover a staggering 560,000 hectares, as well as the 376,000 hectare Kalala Station, the 80,900ha McMinn Station, and the 70,700ha Big River Station.

The situation in the Beetaloo shapes as an early test for the new Labor government on climate action.

The previous government used a $50m incentive program to accelerate drilling, awarding almost half to a single company, Empire Energy. In a court challenge against the awarding of the grants, Environmen­t Centre NT presented modelling that suggested fracking in the Beetaloo Basin could drive up Australia’s emissions by 13%, using up the rest of Australia’s carbon budget under the Paris Agreement.

Greens leader, Adam Bandt, on Tuesday called for Labor to stop “climate-destroying gas projects like [the Woodside Scarboroug­h gas project in Western Australia] and Beetaloo”.

“These projects can still be stopped,” he said. “The incoming government has the power to hit the pause button, and that’s what the scientists are telling us we need to do because we’re in a climate emergency.”

 ?? Photograph: Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources ?? Empire Energy's exploratio­n well at its Beetaloo Basin gas site. Pastoralis­ts and local traditiona­l owners are joining forces to oppose fracking in the area.
Photograph: Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources Empire Energy's exploratio­n well at its Beetaloo Basin gas site. Pastoralis­ts and local traditiona­l owners are joining forces to oppose fracking in the area.

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