Santos chief executive
Kevin Gallagher told investors the company’s focus for
Narrabri would be on approvals but ‘not spending any capital or exerting any effort’. Photograph: Matt Turner/AAP View image in fullscreen
Santos chief executive
Kevin Gallagher told investors the company’s focus for
Narrabri would be on approvals but ‘not spending any capital or exerting any effort’. Photograph: Matt Turner/AAP
Santos accused of ‘stringing everybody along’ over
Narrabri gas project CEO tells investors firm won’t ‘exert any effort’ while it awaits approvals as opponents urge the miner to ‘spike the project finally’ Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast
Santos chief executive,
Kevin Gallagher, has told an investor briefing the company will not be “exerting any effort” on its
Narrabri gas project while it awaits outstanding approvals, prompting fresh questions about the future of the controversial development. Gallagher told investors this week the company was prioritising exploration in the
Northern Territory’s
Beetaloo Basin, where it is pursuing an expansion. He said a strategic review had determined
Santos reserves in eastern
Queensland and
Western Australia’s
Browse Basin should be “deprioritised”. According to the published briefing, the
Narrabri project in north-west
New South Wales would be subject to “further review” in 2027 after the company completed an appraisal of its Beetaloo reserves. “
Narrabri, it’s really about just focusing on approvals and … you know, continue with that, but again, not spending any capital or exerting any effort on that route,” Gallagher told investors. “And some of these [domestic] assets will be re-evaluated once we’ve appraised the Beetaloo, and for obvious reasons. “If the Beetaloo works, then it changes what we might want to do with some of those assets. There’d be less of a requirement in some cases to do anything with any of them … because the Beetaloo has a scale”. Gallagher told investors the company believed its acreage in the
Beetaloo Basin had enough gas in it “to supply 10m tonnes of LNG and supply the east-coast market for more than 50 years – it’s a phenomenal resource”. The remarks have prompted more uncertainty for opponents of the
Narrabri project. While the project received its main approvals in 2020, other elements, including a production licence, a pipeline licence and development approval for a lateral pipeline, are outstanding. The lateral pipeline would connect to a larger Hunter gas pipeline, which has faced strong opposition from landowners in the region. The gasfield is also subject to a legal challenge from Gomeroi traditional owners under native laws. Georgina Woods, head of research and investigations for the grassroots anti-mining organisation Lock the Gate, said: “By holding but delaying
Narrabri,
Santos is prolonging stress and anguish for communities who have already spent more than a decade defending farmland, water and cultural heritage from this destructive proposal.” “Stop stringing everybody along and spike the project finally,” Woods said. “It’s not worth anything to them but it’s worth so much to the community – that forest and that aquifer.” In question time in the NSW parliament this week, the independent MP Roy Butler asked the premier, Chris Minns, about the
Santos briefing, which Butler described as “another delay to the
Narrabri gas project”. Minns has been a vocal supporter of the development, threatening last year to compulsorily acquire land to clear the way for the Hunter gas pipeline. Butler said: “Will the government acknowledge that the
Narrabri gasfields are smaller than expected and high in carbon dioxide, which is not only contrary to the government’s climate change policies but also makes the gas more expensive to produce?” Minns responded “it is not necessarily inconsistent with our energy needs in
New South Wales”. The premier said the state would need about 5% of its total energy capacity from “peaking plants”, which generally run only when there is a spike in demand for electricity. “We will also need gas for our manufacturing industry, and it has to come from somewhere,” he said. “That is completely consistent with the government’s ambitions in relation to net zero and its massive undertakings in renewable energy investment in this state.” In response to questions, Minns’ office pointed Guardian Australia to his answer to Butler, which did not directly address the investor briefing or delays to the project. A
Santos spokesperson said the company was continuing to pursue approvals for
Narrabri. “A final investment decision cannot be taken until all necessary approvals are in place, including native title, gas production and pipeline licences,” the spokesperson said. Explore more on these topics
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