Wakaya Traditional Aboriginal Owners steadfast against fracked gas pipeline
NT Traditional Owners walk out on fracked gas pipeline deal Lock The Gate Alliance, July 28, 2016 Northern Territory Traditional Owners whose land is being targeted for the proposed new gas pipeline between Tennant Creek and Mt Isa have yesterday afternoon walked out of a joint Central and Northern Land Council meeting, pushing against a planned access route deal for Jemena’s Northern Gas Pipeline, due to concerns about the impacts of fracking gasfields.
A Land Council notice for the meeting asked, ‘are you ready to say yes or no to the pipeline?’ (see here). But the concerns and objections raised by Traditional Owners about the rushed consultation process and the proposed pipeline’s reliance on fracked gas has now meant the decision meeting is postponed until late September……
A final investment decision on the pipeline is due in December 2016 but Wakaya Traditional Owners say they will not back down and allow the project to proceed on their land.
“The Wakaya people are bailing up on this pipeline because what we heard today at the meeting wasn’t the full story. We know if the pipeline goes ahead then all this fracking will come afterwards and will damage our bush tucker, water and the land for our kids,” said Josie Davey, a Traditional Owner who attended the meeting in Tennant Creek.
Max Priest, another Wakaya Traditional Owner explains, “If we say yes to the pipeline we would be helping the fracking industry to expand across the whole Territory and damage not just our own but other mob’s country. We are standing up and saying no to this pipeline not just for our own sake but on behalf of a lot of station owners and Native Title mob who don’t have any rights to stop the gas companies walking on and damaging their land.”
“We have not made any deal today, we are going to block this pipeline and we will continue to push for a full ban on fracking to protect every community in the Territory.” …….
- Lack of adequate information about the environmental impacts of the pipeline on our country,
- Not enough information from the Central and Northern Land Council about how the decision making process will work and who has the power to make decision about the pipeline given the differing forms of land tenure including Land Trusts, Native Title and pastoral leases along the route.
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