Thursday, December 8

Gloucester residents build on CSG blockade

GLOUSESTER residents gave a resounding thumbs up at a public meeting on Wednesday night to an ongoing blockade to prevent gas company AGL from drilling a further four pilot wells, according to Barrington-Gloucester-Stroud Preservation Alliance (BGSPA) spokesman Graeme Healy.

He said residents approved BGSPA’s move to call on the NSW Government to immediately implement a moratorium on all coal seam gas (CSG) exploration until an independent scientific investigation into the environmental, economic and social impacts of CSG was completed.
 
“It was an enthusiastic meeting, people were clamouring to add their names to the blockade roster,” Mr Healy said.
 
“Expressions of support and offers of assistance are coming from far and wide -- many communities are now facing the prospect of having a CSG field developed in their midst and they are watching events here in Gloucester with great interest.”
 
“There is a common thread in the conversations. Ordinary law-abiding people across the state are saying governments have failed us and we have no recourse but to take direct action to protect our water resources and farmland.”
 
AGL spokesman Nathan Vass said in a statement to The Land the company had given an undertaking there would be no truck movements on Maslens Lane and Jacks Road—the site of the blockade – today.


The Land

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