CSG https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au Byron Bay & Beyond Sun, 03 Apr 2016 03:25:51 +0000 en hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.4.2 Metgasco gone: shareholders accept government buyback https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au/metgasco-gone-shareholders-accept-government-buyback/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=metgasco-gone-shareholders-accept-government-buyback https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au/metgasco-gone-shareholders-accept-government-buyback/#respond Sat, 19 Dec 2015 00:19:25 +0000 https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au/?p=5325 In an historic decision Metgasco shareholders decided this week to take the Government CSG licence buyout offer of $25 million, putting an end to...

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In an historic decision Metgasco shareholders decided this week to take the Government CSG licence buyout offer of $25 million, putting an end to coal seam gas exploration and extraction in the Northern Rivers.
A group of farmers and community members from the Northern Rivers travelled to Sydney to attend the AGM, which according to those present was a feisty affair, to witness the vote.
“We are estatic! This is something we’ve looked forward to for many years. Finally some closure and an end to the torment and fear that has pervaded the Northern Rivers since this company started mining for coal seam gas here,” said Northern Rivers Gasfield Free Regional Coordinator, Dean Draper. ‘This gas mining company never achieved a social licence here, they have never been welcome, our community has demonstrated loudly and clearly in many surveys, marches and actions that this dangerous industry is not acceptable here under any circumstances.”
Lismore Mayor Jenny Dowell was glowing and very relieved by the news. ‘When I first heard of the compensation offer I was over the moon – I let out a holler that I think disturbed the whole council chambers when I heard it on ABC News, and then there was the relief, and a period of reflection.  But we couldn’t pop the champagne until we heard that the offer had been accepted – and now we can, just in time for Christmas!”
Lismore Mayor Jenny Dowell will be popping the champagne corks.

Lismore Mayor Jenny Dowell will be popping the champagne corks.

 The project at Bentley has been the subject of an ongoing hard-fought community campaign of blockades.  It sparked a backlash against the Nationals, who lost the seat of Ballina in March and nearly lost two others. Shareholders voted three to two in favour of accepting the buyback of the licence.
“This is a very disappointing day for all of us who believed in an oil and gas exploration in the Northern Rivers,” said Metgasco chairman Len Gill.  “We are not defenders of the NSW government and its actions. But it is also our job as board members to negotiate robustly and put the best option to shareholders,” he said.
Shareholders, however, accused the board of giving in to the government. “We are giving away potentially billions of dollars of gas in the ground, proven gas, and the government could grant new licences in the future,” one shareholder, Dr Sam Prince, said.Local  farmers and enviornmental groups have always argued that the Bentley project is, or was, incompatible with the region’s rural industries and environmental values. Just before the election the government cancelled the drilling licence, but Metgasco successfully challenged the decision on the grounds the government had acted unfairly.
“Finally the people of the Northern Rivers can get on with their lives. The community will again have the confidence in the safety and long term sustainability of the region which is sure to fuel a lot of investment and growth in our region,” Draper said.

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Bentley revisited – Megasco licence renewed https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au/bentley-revisited-megasco-licence-renewed/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=bentley-revisited-megasco-licence-renewed https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au/bentley-revisited-megasco-licence-renewed/#respond Mon, 27 Apr 2015 07:53:32 +0000 https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au/?p=3588 “I took this photograph at the Bentley Blockade last April, a little over a year ago,” says Verandah Magazine publisher Candida Baker.  “Not long...

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“I took this photograph at the Bentley Blockade last April, a little over a year ago,” says Verandah Magazine publisher Candida Baker.  “Not long after there was rejoicing in the streets when the New South Wales Government suspended Metgasco’s license to drill for gas in the Northern Rivers.  Now the Supreme Court has quashed the suspension, with Justice Richard Button stating it was unlawful and giving Metgasco back its license to drill for gas, which will no doubt mean a multi-million dollar compensaiton case.  If Metgasco thinks that gaining its license will mean the locals will give up a fight, they must be crazy.  That blockade has become famous around the world – if it has to happen again, it will be even bigger and even stronger, I’m sure.”

If you’re interested in finding out more, or donating to the cause go to the Nature Conservation Council website on: nature.org.au

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Frackman: from reluctant to radical activist https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au/frackman-reluctant-radical-activist/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=frackman-reluctant-radical-activist https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au/frackman-reluctant-radical-activist/#respond Fri, 06 Feb 2015 10:14:41 +0000 https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au/?p=2746 The environment is very much the star of this year’s 9th annual Byron Bay Film Festival, which runs from March 6-15.  Mick Daley previews...

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The environment is very much the star of this year’s 9th annual Byron Bay Film Festival, which runs from March 6-15.  Mick Daley previews Frackman, a compelling documentary on the controversial subject of fracking which has its premiere at the Festival on Saturday March 7 in Byron Bay.

An Australian answer to Gaslands, the North American documentary that first opened the eyes of the world to the terrifying realities of the methane gas industry, Frackman the doco-drama follows the trials of ‘accidental activist’ Dayne Pratzky, the self-styled Frackman.
Denouncing fracking (coal seam gas or CSG mining) as “the biggest environmental issue Australia has ever faced”, Pratzky’s land at Tara in southeast Queensland was engulfed by the industry after a gas company demanded access to his land, and told him he couldn’t refuse.  From a knockabout pig shooter building a home on his block of land, Frackman follows Pratzky’s journey from reluctant to radical activist, travelling the world to take on powerful pro-fracking corporations. Pratzky sets out to expose the long-term dangers of fracking to a mainstream audience and on a series of intrepid commando missions he does so with convincing flair.

Wayne Dennis has 13 CSG wells on his property. His story is told in Dayne Pratzky's (The Frackman)  compelling environmental film, Frackman, which has its premiere at the Byron Bay Film Festival on Saturday March 7.

Wayne Dennis has 13 CSG wells on his property. His story is told in Dayne Pratzky’s (The Frackman) compelling environmental film, Frackman, which has its premiere at the Byron Bay Film Festival on Saturday March 7.   Photograph: Andrew Quilty/Oculi

Part Crocodile Dundee, part The Hobbit, the film adopts the tone of a classical heroic saga as The Frackman’s investigations reveal much about this secretive business and the corrupt political machineries in place to preserve it. Pratzky is up against heavy odds, fighting an established industry that has thus far been successfully promoted as an economic and even environmental panacea by such icons as Queensland football legend Darren Lockyer. But he has hyperbole – “it’s the biggest con that has been perpetrated on the Australian people since the asbestos disaster” – a surging, emotive soundtrack and some powerful allies on his side.

On a cross-country odyssey The Frackman moves from mining badlands in Queensland to the Pilliga forest in northwest NSW and to Bentley in the Northern Rivers, where the stirring sight of peaceful Aboriginal warriors uniting with farmers demonstrates the powerful momentum of the growing movement against CSG. They’ve been protesting under the banner of Lock the Gate, the apolitical lobby group whose name itself has become a powerful slogan, uttered with convincing fervour in the film’s bona fide protest scenes, where The Frackman comes into his own as an activist, disrupting CSG mining conferences and being arrested in dramatic scuffles.
Along the way he’s encouraged by Lock the Gate founder Drew Hutton, who counsels farmers on a Ghandian approach, urging ordinary people “to step up and become heroes”.

People power raised Lock the Gate from a grass roots organization to an international slogan.

People power raised Lock the Gate from a grass roots organization to an international slogan.  Photograph: Andrew Quilty/Oculi

There’s even a visit to the mansion of the bewilderingly powerful radio commentator Alan Jones in his southern NSW estate. Jones, in his best Churchillian soprano, tells Pratzky “You’re a gutsy bloke” and thunders about the CSG pestilence that has destroyed his Queensland hometown. He tells his enormous radio audience with righteous fervour: “The battle is on for our rights and for our country. The enemy is within”.
Jones’ presence in this film will give it some heavy credence in conservative, mainstream Australia, but it’s Pratzky’s personal narrative arc that gives it a gritty, if patchy authenticity. He finds romance, for instance, with a beautiful fellow activist from the USA, where methane mining has already wrought devastation worse than that seen in Gaslands. This relationship is the gold in filmmaker Richard Todd’s story, giving Pratzky’s sometimes somewhat overplayed histrionics a humility that fits beautifully into the elaborate plot.
Frackman is a fast-paced and fluid doco that has plenty of incendiary ingredients readymade.  The effortless indignation of Pratzky’s fellow Tara landowners, victims of corporate mining conspiracies, provide plentiful high pathos and there are solid hints of governmental skulduggery when The Frackman’s plans come unstuck in a cliff-hanger ending. It’s a worthy thriller that may well broaden the already universal appeal of Lock the Gate, whose mantra is creating a credible voice of opposition to a doomsday industrial cult that threatens our very air and water.

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From the BBFF

Another film in the running for the festival’s Best Environmental Film Award is Maarten van Rouveroy’s Black Ice.  This feature-length documentary captures the first-hand accounts of the infamous Arctic 30 – a group of Greenpeace protesters who attempted to sabotage the world’s first Arctic oil-drilling platform and found themselves the centre of geopolitical controversy.

 Black Ice charts the group’s adventure aboard the Greenpeace icebreaker Arctic Sunrise, their protest at the Prirazlomnaya oil platform, arrest, imprisonment and eventual freedom. It provides a behind-the-scenes look at the life and dramatic times aboard the Arctic Sunrise: tense, provocative, inspiring.

A scene from Black Ice - a day in the life of a Greenpeace warrior.

A scene from Black Ice – a day in the life of a Greenpeace warrior on board Arctic sunrise.

 There’s uplift, hope and, yes, positivity also in Net Positiva, a short documentary about a trio of young surfers who do something practical about the discarded fishnets that make up 10% of the plastic pollution in the world’s oceans.  The three friends travel to fishing villages in Chile and come up with a fishnet collection and recycling program, converting the fishnets into skateboards, illustrating the impact that the actions of a few can have on the future of many.

Uranium mining is creating havoc for the environment in Australia, where every operating mine has a history of leaks, spills and accidents, and it’s no different in the US. The film Crying Earth Rise Up tells the story of two Lakota women who work to expose the human cost of such mining and its impact on the people and water of the Great Plains. Debra White Plume is a grandmother and tireless leader in the fight to protect her people’s water and land from corporate polluters and is the lead plaintiff in a case challenging uranium mining on Lakota treaty territory.

Debra White Plume

Debra White Plume, grandmother and leader in the fight to protect the local water in Crying Earth Rise Up

Elisha Yellow Thunder knows too well the dangers of contaminated water. She unknowingly drank water with high levels of radiation while pregnant with her first daughter, whose severe medical anomalies are life-threatening. A nearby mining operation is extracting uranium ore from deep in the ground by tapping the aquifer that supplies drinking water to rural communities from South Dakota to Texas. Crying Earth Rise Up follows Debra White Plume as she rallies her community against the operation. But the promise of a much-needed infusion of economic opportunity to the region is seductive, despite the risks, and public opinion could go either way.

The 9th Byron Bay Film Festival runs from March 6-15, with films screening at venues in Byron, Ballina, Lismore and Murwillumbah.  Says festival director J’aimee Skippon-Volke of this year’s offerings.  “We have 220 films of an exceptionally high standard, with something for everybody’s taste.”

See Verandah Magazine next week for program details.

 

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They came, they saw – they’re ready to do battle – Lismore against CSG https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au/came-saw-theyre-ready-battle-lismore-csg/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=came-saw-theyre-ready-battle-lismore-csg https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au/came-saw-theyre-ready-battle-lismore-csg/#respond Sat, 08 Nov 2014 00:14:17 +0000 https://www.verandahmagazine.com.au/?p=1857 The sight of so many thousands of people walking through Lismore streets filled me with pride. It also sent a message to politicians and...

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Lismore rallies:  Photography Alex Moffatt Clarke

Lismore rallies: Photograph Alex Moffatt Clarke

The sight of so many thousands of people walking through Lismore streets filled me with pride. It also sent a message to politicians and gas mining companies – don’t mess with us! We, the people of the NR, will be here for however long it takes to get rid of this industry from our region.

Cr Jenny Dowell, Mayor of Lismore.

They came in their thousands from near and far last weekend to protest against Coal Seam Gas – it was a day of protest, but also a day of community pride, laughter and music as the parade wound its way through the centre of town.

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An angel, Mayor of Lismore Jenny Dowell, and a 'Greedozer' at the November 1 rally.

An angel, Mayor of Lismore Jenny Dowell, and a ‘Greedozer’ at the November 1 rally.

Nan and Hugh Nicholson: leaders in the protection of Terania Creek in the 1970s and still protecting the environment

Nan and Hugh Nicholson: leaders in the protection of Terania Creek in the 1970s and still protecting the environment

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