State Significant Development
Narrabri Gas
Narrabri Shire
Current Status: Determination
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- SEARs
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- Exhibition
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- Response to Submissions
- Assessment
- Recommendation
- Determination
The project involves the progressive development of a coal seam gas field over 20 years with up to 850 gas wells and ancillary infrastructure, including gas processing and water treatment facilities.
Attachments & Resources
SEARs (3)
EIS (71)
Submissions (221)
Response to Submissions (18)
Agency Advice (46)
Additional Information (8)
Assessment (8)
Determination (3)
Approved Documents
Management Plans and Strategies (46)
Reports (3)
Independent Reviews and Audits (2)
Notifications (2)
Other Documents (1)
Note: Only documents approved by the Department after November 2019 will be published above. Any documents approved before this time can be viewed on the Applicant's website.
Complaints
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Make a ComplaintEnforcements
There are no enforcements for this project.
Inspections
There are no inspections for this project.
Note: Only enforcements and inspections undertaken by the Department from March 2020 will be shown above.
Submissions
Name Withheld
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Name Withheld
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Rob Jones
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Rob Jones
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Melanie Wabnik
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Melanie Wabnik
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Politicians and corporations seriously do not care about the repercussions of these types of environmental descissions .
I've seen in the media the poorly maintained wells and rivers that are on fire. And I am 100% positive that these will result in the same way.
Please! Invest in green energy.
Stop torturing our planet.
Save the Pilliga region.
Bruce Clapham
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Bruce Clapham
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Lynette Singleton
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Lynette Singleton
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Michelle Voigt
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Michelle Voigt
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Alexander Iwanuch
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Alexander Iwanuch
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Allowing this project to continue is the height of folly, poor planning and a lack of vision for what matters to future generations.
Protecting and nurturing our natural environments and in particular our water sources is a cause not to be denigrated.
Wendy Haebich
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Wendy Haebich
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I can't believe this coal mine is proposed or any for that matter. Our planet is dying due to fossil fuels. Enough please. Look at investing in renewable power such as wind/ hydro or solar. These options are far kinder on the environment and sustainable. The evidence is clear, please abort such proposals in the name of humanity.
Name Withheld
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Name Withheld
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My main concern with this project is the risk it poses to our precious water resources, in particular, the Great Artesian Basin. The area of the Great Artesian Basin with the highest recharge rates are almost entirely within the Pillaga East forest. Contamination of this area could have serious, far-reaching consequences. Also, spills from this project could eventually find their way to the Murray-Darling basin.
Hundreds of cultural sites of significance to the Gamilaraay people with be lost if this project goes ahead.
Community surveys show 96% opposition to this project.
The Pillaga is listed as a "biodiversity hotspot". Fragmentation of habitat would threaten the survival of precious endangered species.
Santos has no solution for disposing of between 17,000 and 24,000 tonnes of contaminated salt waste produced each year. NSW will be left with the legacy of hundreds of thousands tonnes of this waste.
The dreadful impact of volatile organic compounds released by the CSG industry on human and livestock health has been well- documented here in Queensland, in Sydney and in America.
Yours sincerely
Jeanette Mills
Emma Henderson
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Emma Henderson
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Now the project has lost bipartisan political support with the State Opposition announcing policy specifically ruling out gasfield development in the Pilliga. The economic justification for the project, a gas supply shortage in NSW, has also been conclusively disproven.
Technical uncertainty at Narrabri remains high and reserves were recently written down by 32%.
The project has already been delayed for years due to the geotechnical difficulties, environmental contamination and community protests.
The community will not rest until the Narrabri Gas Project is scrapped altogether.
In fact, local community members are celebrating the results of neighbour to neighbour coal seam gas surveys. The incredible results are in: 96% of people living across more than 3 million hectares of land in North West NSW want to be gasfield free!
This Narrabri Gas Project is Santos' plan to drill 850 coal seam gas wells through the Pilliga forest, the largest inland forest left in Eastern Australia. There is already significant evidence of the irreparable damage coal seam gas projects have created both throughout Australia and across the world.
Our world is screaming out to us that climate change caused by us needs to be addressed. We need smart sustainable alternatives for energy
Name Withheld
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Lucy Geijskes
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Lucy Geijskes
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I am totally against this environmentally devastating project and i say NO to CSG in the Pilliga.
I am a mother and I vote for the future of my children.
Greta Peterson
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Greta Peterson
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Philippa Harrison
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Philippa Harrison
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Maryann Doolette
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Maryann Doolette
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Debra Wilson
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Debra Wilson
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Judy Rees
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Judy Rees
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Why do they choose important and vulnerable areas? Must not be in our shrinking food bowls, low rainfall/water availability, or areas of environmental and wildlife risk.
The amount of damage is unacceptable, the massive water usage and pollution, unviable.
Amanda Lucas
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Amanda Lucas
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Water is more precious than anyamount of gas you can dig out of the ground. Leave the gas in the ground...how much damage will be done to the beautiful environment above??!!
How arrogant of humans to think our needs matter more than some of Australia's most unique flora and fauna..
Like many Australians....I'm adding solar panels to my house and removing my links to gas!!! You won't get a penny of my money.
Sarah Hall
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Sarah Hall
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The Narrabri gasfield poses a real risk to our two most precious water resources: the Great Artesian Basin and the Murray-Darling Basin. The area of the Great Artesian Basin with the highest recharge rates is almost entirely contained within the Pilliga East forest. Worst-case scenario is the water removed for CSG extraction could reduce water pressure in the recharge areas--potentially stopping the free flow of waters to the surface at springs and bores across the whole Great Artesian Basin.
Extensive community surveys have shown an average of 96% opposition to CSG. This stretches across a massive 3.2 million hectares of country surrounding the Pilliga forest, including 99 communities. Hundreds of farmers have participated in protest actions unlike any previously seen in the region.
Santos has already contaminated a freshwater aquifer in the Pilliga with uranium at levels 20 times higher than safe drinking water guidelines, as well as lead, aluminium, arsenic and barium. In addition, there have been over 20 reported spills and leaks of toxic CSG water from storage ponds, pipes and well heads. Santos cannot be trusted.
The Pilliga is one of 15 nationally listed `biodiversity hotspots' and is vital to the survival of threatened species like the Koala, Spotted-tailed Quoll, Black-striped Wallaby, Eastern Pygmy-possum, Pilliga Mouse and South-eastern Long-eared Bat. The forest is home to over 200 bird species and is internationally recognised as an Important Bird Area. The Santos gasfield would fragment 95,000 hectares of the Pilliga with well pads, roads, and water and gas pipelines--damaging vital habitat and threatening the survival of endangered species.
It is important for future generations, Earth, and it's animals that this land isn't disturbed for profit by an energy company who will destroy it's fragile environment.
Name Withheld
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Name Withheld
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The damage this has to the landscape, the wildlife, the Artesian Basin and Murray River Basin will be catastrophic. It's been proven to be bad historically, so why continue it. Ban it for good.