Gas

Hundreds of people gathered outside the Northern Territory parliament in Darwin on April 18 to protest the Labor government鈥檚 decision, announced the day before, to lift the ban on fracking. Another protest is planned for April 22.

Chief Minister Michael Gunner announced the onshore ban on fracking would be lifted following the tabling of an independent report which concluded that the risks associated with the hydraulic fracturing of gas could be 鈥渕anaged鈥 and 鈥渞egulated鈥.

As the newly-elected Queensland state parliament met for the first time on February 14, a small group of dedicated Protectors from Families Against Fossil Fuels and Standing with Sandi held their regular #StandAgainstCSG protest outside its doors.

Sandra Bamberry (Sandi) is the mother of two little girls who have experienced negative health impacts, including ongoing nosebleeds and nausea, from the many coal seam gas (CSG) mines that now surround their home on the Tara gasfields.

More than 500 people gathered at the Coonamble Bowls Club on February 10 to declare they do not want a gas pipeline across NSW鈥檚 western slopes and would fight to protect the Great Artesian Basin.

The meeting expressed deep-seated concern about the potential threat of coal seam gas (CSG) mining to the Great Artesian Basin.

APA has been contracted to build a gas pipeline through the NSW slopes and plains for gas giant Santos, which wants to sink 850 CSG wells in a 95,000-hectare project area in the Pilliga State Forest.

More than 60 Aboriginal community members from across the Northern Territory gathered on Larrakia Country in Darwin over November 18鈥19 to discuss how to stop fracking from destroying the Territory.

They came from Alice Springs, Borroloola, Mataranka, Minyerri, Maningrida, Marlinja, Tennant Creek, Yuendumu, Jilkminggan and Katherine to demand a permanent fracking ban, saying they fear for the future of their land and culture if the moratorium ends.

More than 300 people joined a forest camp in the Pilliga State Forest in north-west New South Wales during the weekend of November 11鈥12 to protest against coal seam gas (CSG) mining.

The protest culminated in a convoy of about 100 cars filled with locals, farmers and environmental activists making their way into the forest to create a human sign on the sand beds of the river spelling out 鈥淣O CSG鈥.

Finally, the federal government has a policy for the electricity sector: the National Energy Guarantee. (NEG. Did it think this one through?)

It is, effectively, an emissions trading scheme applied to electricity. It is similar to other schemes 鈥 the Clean Energy Target (CET) and the Emissions Intensity Scheme (EIS) 鈥 supported by Labor.

Scotland vowed on October 3 to ban hydraulic fracturing, or 鈥渇racking鈥澛燿ue to 鈥渙verwhelming鈥澛爌ublic opposition to shale gas.

Scottish energy minister Paul Wheelhouse said Scotland鈥檚 current moratorium would be extended 鈥渋ndefinitely鈥 through planning powers 鈥 removing the need for legislation.

More than 250 people gathered on August 26 for the Frack Free People's Rally organised by Lock the Gate Alliance and Frack Free WA outside the Western Australia State Labor Conference.

Gamilaraay elder Auntie Bowie Hickey and daughter Vanessa Hickey expressed their deep gratitude to those protesting outside a gas industry forum on August 3.

The Wilderness Society called the protest to highlight the widespread opposition to Santos鈥 Narrabri gas project in the Pilliga Forest.

The Sydney Morning Herald published audio on July 19 from a at which former Western Australian state MP Michael Sutherland described anti-fracking campaigners and refugee rights activists as "a bunch of cockroaches".

If South Australia were a country, its citizens since July 1 would have been paying the highest residential electricity prices of any nation in the world, edging out Denmark.

Throughout most of Australia, the new financial year brought spiralling energy charges. For an average Canberra household without rooftop solar, the combined cost of electricity and gas over 2017鈥18 will rise by $580.

The NSW Department of Planning & Environment admitted on June 7 that it had been inundated with more than 23,000 mostly oppositional submissions to corporate giant Santos鈥 plan for a gas field in the Pilliga region in north-western NSW.

The department has now totalled the figures: more than 18,000 鈥渇orm submissions鈥 were sent in 鈥 meaning that many people took advantage of anti-fracking groups鈥 efforts to broaden the anti-gas campaign, by signing a form and adding their personal view to a statement of concern.