on 06-11-2014 03:09 PM
The Pilliga is a vast expanse of bushland, located between Narrabri and Coonabarabran in western NSW. This iconic area of public land is under threat from the largest coal seam gas project ever proposed for New South Wales.
The vast forests of the Pilliga filter the waters that recharge our greatest inland water resource – some of the sweetest water that you will ever taste lies beneath the Pilliga sandstones in aquifers of the Great Artesian Basin.
Gas company Santos has plans for a gas project that would drill 1,100 coal seam gas wells, clear 1,000km of pipelines and spread out across 850 square kilometres of forest in the Pilliga. It would involve wells drilled on a massive grid, every 500m, as well as access tracks, pipelines, water treatment facilities and compression plants.
http://www.stoppilligacoalseamgas.com.au/
They'll lay waste to Australia then move out with not a care for the damage they've done.
06-11-2014 03:46 PM - edited 06-11-2014 03:47 PM
They'll lay waste to Australia then move out with not a care for the damage they've done.
Who is they?
Santos Gas Company? They are an Australian company.
With its origins in the Cooper Basin, Santos is one of Australia’s largest producers of gas to the domestic market and has the largest exploration and production acreage position in Australia of any company.
Santos has also developed major oil and liquids businesses in Australia and operates in all mainland Australian states and the Northern Territory.
Santos also has an exploration-led Asian portfolio, with a focus on three core countries: Indonesia, Vietnam and Papua New Guinea.
Was it OK for BHP to destroy the environment in, for example, parts of PNG, then move out? Because they are doing that out of Australia, that makes it OK?
on 06-11-2014 05:12 PM
Perhaps you could address the topic of the Pilliga being threatened by CSG mining, Am?
06-11-2014 05:29 PM - edited 06-11-2014 05:29 PM
@icyfroth wrote:Perhaps you could address the topic of the Pilliga being threatened by CSG mining, Am?
Well your hero Tones and his buddies are the ones pushing the CSG and associated destruction. At the moment he is busily trying to undo the water bill, introduced by Tony Windsor last year, so there is no impediment.
on 06-11-2014 07:47 PM
I don't even know wher eto start with this. It's so sad. And it's in my extended backyard. (there's a chinese owned coal mine going in my immediate backyard that should never have got past the application stage)
Already there have been toxic spills and contaminated bores as a result of coal seam gas in the Pilliga (it is spelled it wrong in the op). The company gets fined, but what's a few thousand dollars to them?, nothing. And that's all it was, a few thousand.
The extraction of energy resources in this part of the country is huge, and good ol Tones is ignoring the impact on environment and future agriculture in favour of the dollar.
on 06-11-2014 08:38 PM
This really is a bigger problem than the great Australian liberal/labor divide.
As Australians we should be pulling together instead of bickering about party loyalties.
Our marches should be for our national interests.
on 06-11-2014 08:44 PM
I'm not trying to turn it political, but in the end it is the government that is allowing it.
It's just so wrong 😞
on 06-11-2014 08:51 PM
It's foul and we need to support those who are protesting against it.
on 06-11-2014 09:03 PM
@icyfroth wrote:This really is a bigger problem than the great Australian liberal/labor divide.
As Australians we should be pulling together instead of bickering about party loyalties.
Our marches should be for our national interests.
How is that possible when the PM and his mates in Gov don't care?
They are at the moment dismantling the water bill that was introduced just last year because they have an obsessive need to erase everything the previous govt enacted. They do not care about the aquifers or the farming community. They don't understand the national interest.
on 06-11-2014 09:06 PM