The channels in Queensland's south west after flooding in 2019
— not far from where gas development is proposed. (ABC Southern Queensland: Nathan Morris)
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Key Points
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Last month the ABC revealed that, without consulting traditional owner groups, the Queensland government had progressed plans for gas development in the environmentally fragile Channel Country, a vast system of flood plains in the state's south west.
A report, commissioned by environmental group Lock the Gate by leading climate change scientist Emeritus Professor Ian Lowe from Griffith University, modelled the potential carbon emissions if the gas projects in Queensland went ahead.
The Queensland component of the gas is in the Cooper-Eromanga Basin, and Professor Lowe found that if just 25 per cent of the resource was recovered, the emissions it would produce would be "incompatible" with Queensland's emission reduction targets.
"It would increase greenhouse gas emissions by about 60 per cent of Australia's current total national emissions from all sources: electricity, transport, manufacturing agriculture," he said."The high level of production would be about 300 million tonnes of carbon dioxide a year, and Australia's current total emissions from all causes is about 500 million tonnes a year."
The Channel Country's flood plains are home to a large sustainable
grazing industry. (Supplied: OBE Organic) |
"Even a modest level of production would be incompatible with Queensland stated emission reduction targets," he said.
More than 250,000 hectares of land in the Channel Country is
subject to Origin Energy's applications. (Supplied: Queensland Government) |
But the Queensland government said its emissions targets were "achievable".
"In fact, Queensland achieved 20 per cent of its renewable energy target by 2020 and is almost halfway to reaching its 2030 emissions reduction target, having reduced emissions by 14 per cent since 2005," a spokesperson said.
Traditional owners call for a pause on Channel Country fracking plans |
There is concern among traditional owners and graziers in the area, but the Queensland government spokesperson said that additional approvals were still required before gas development could occur in the region, and they would be "subject to stringent assessment criteria".
Fugitive emissions
Professor Lowe said the Lake Eyre Basin contained high levels of additional CO2, which would be released directly into the atmosphere during gas extraction.
"The gas there contains significant amounts of carbon dioxide, so just producing the gas to be burned somewhere else would result in the release of significant amounts of carbon dioxide into the Australian atmosphere," he said.
The Lake Eyre Basin covers large parts of four Australian states
and territories. (ABC News: Alex Palmer) |
Queensland has the highest fugitive emissions from coal and gas mining in the nation, and they continue to rise.
A 2018 Queensland government report found fugitive emissions represented "11 per cent of Queensland's total emissions and the long-term trend is increasing emissions".
"Methane is a much more powerful greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, and so the leakage, if gas were produced in the Channel Country, would add significantly to our greenhouse gas production locally," Professor Lowe said.
"In typical natural gas fields, about 5 per cent of the gas leaks into the atmosphere, in some bad cases at 7 or 8 per cent."
Coal seam gas mining is widespread further east of the Channel
Country, and criss-crosses farm land. (ABC Southern Queensland: Nathan Morris) |
A spokesperson for the Queensland government said it had a plan to reduce fugitive emissions.
"The Palaszczuk government has committed in its draft 30-year-plan for the resources industry to work with industry to investigate ways to reduce fugitive emissions from resource activities, particularly in the Bowen Basin," they said.
"It also expects industry to reduce emissions, including fugitive emissions."'Making enormous money'
After gas prices fell during 2020, international demand for the resource has rebounded, and the International Energy Agency forecasts more growth in the coming years.
"All these gas companies at the moment are trying to produce as much gas and ship as much gas as they possibly can," Bruce Robertson said, an Energy Finance Analyst with the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA).
"Even if it's not contracted gas, they're making enormous money on it."
Coal seam gas wells in an area south of Chinchilla in southern Qld,
near the Tara residential estate. (AAP: Supplied) |
However, last year another report from the International Energy Agency said:
"Beyond projects already committed as of 2021, there are no new oil and gas fields approved for development in our pathway [to net-zero], and no new coal mines or mine extensions are required."Mr Robertson said this was at odds with the continued enthusiasm for fossil fuel projects in Australia.
"In every state and territory, we're seeing new areas opened up for exploration by the current governments," he said.
"We're seeing this massive expansion of the gas industry, which is entirely inconsistent with any climate commitments."
While demand for gas remained strong now, Mr Robertson thought that would change.
"The change is very rapid when it occurs, and all the factors are in place for that change to occur in gas and when it comes it will come very quickly," he said."In New South Wales, for example, the state where I live, there are 17 battery projects, grid-scale battery projects in the planning system right now."
Resources a major economic driver
Farmer welcomes CSG
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The Queensland government also reports that the resources industry directly employs around 80,000 people in the state.
And according to Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration Association (APPEA), liquefied natural gas (LNG) and oil projects generated $13.20 billion in royalties and contributed $55 billion to national GDP.
Links
- Traditional owners call for a pause on Channel Country fracking plans
- Queensland Government grants oil and gas leases in Channel Country, failing to consult traditional owners
- Emissions from potential gas development, Queensland Lake Eyre Basin (pdf)
- Geological and environmental baseline assessment for the Cooper region
- Emissions lost to the atmosphere during coal and gas mining activities
- Queensland resources industry development plan (pdf)
- Resources and Energy Major Projects 2021 Report (pdf)
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