The Stupid Country
As Dart Energy discovers coal
and gas at Putty, 500m from the World Heritage Wollemi National
Park , the community launches a campaign to have the area
declared a mining and extractive industries exclusion zone.
Technical information on the
quality and quantity of the gas found at Putty will be made available to the NSW
Government in three months. The government will not release this information for
two years. However, Jason Needham from Dart Energy told Kathy McKenzie, local
Putty resident and chairman of the Putty Community Association CSG Subcommittee,
that key information will be made available to the community after three
months.
Dart Energy owns Petroleum
Exploration Licence (PEL) 460 which was up for renewal in July and the NSW
Government is still deciding the terms and conditions of renewal. The original
licence’s condition of a minimum work program was not fulfilled within the
initial three year period.
‘If my drivers licence expires
I’m not allowed to drive why should it be different for mining companies,’ said
Kathy McKenzie. ‘All work should cease until their licence is reviewed and
renewed.’
‘From talking to people in
other areas, coal seam gas extraction starts with one core hole and can quickly
lead to pilot and production wells. Communities are given little time to prepare
submissions to counteract the mining companies’ promises of riches to desperate
governments wanting to stay in power and avoid recession.’
The campaign to have the
Putty Valley
declared a ‘sensitive area’ is based on the fact that it is totally surrounded
by the Yengo and Wollemi
National Parks , it is a part of the
Hawkesbury Nepean Catchment area and it has a high risk of bush fires and flash
floods.
Mining and gas extraction near
a national park risks contamination of that ecosystem and there is, to date, no
way of ensuring that any extraction is limited to areas outside the protection
of the park. The Putty community has received legal advice that drilling may
ultimately breach Section 41 of the National Parks & Wildlife Act
1974.
The NSW Liberal & National
Strategic Regional Land Use Policy document released prior to the election
states that they ‘believe that agricultural land and other sensitive areas exist
in NSW where mining and coal seam gas extraction should not occur’.
‘If the NSW Government is serious about implementing Regional
Land Use Plans they should put on hold all licence renewals and exploration and
production approvals until these plans are developed and in place,’ said
Kathy.
Although Putty’s water runs
into the Hawkesbury, the area is to come under the Upper Hunter plan which is
currently being developed and is expected to be put on public display before
Christmas. Only then will the public have an opportunity to comment with the
distractions of the Christmas break limiting their time to make
submissions.
‘Mining and gas extraction should not occur in environmentally
sensitive areas, on food producing land or in closely settled areas,’ said
Kathy. ‘You don’t need to be a scientist to know that mining risks water
contamination and brings with it more people, traffic and therefore pollution.
It’s common sense. Allowing mining to occur wherever resources are found, with
no overall planning and assessment of our energy needs and no controls over
exports is lowering our international standing. We have gone from the lucky, to
the clever, to the ‘stupid country’.
Kathy McKenzie
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