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QLD CSG Panel

Coal Seam Gas in Queensland

An increasingly large body of scientific and anecdotal evidence is revealing the devastating impact the CSG industry is having both above and below the ground in some of Queensland’s best farming regions.

In September, a report published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland, found the more than 22,000 wells planned for Southern QLD could cause irreversible damage

A big part of the report’s concerns focused around how CSG extraction was causing farmland to subside – an issue that has had a financial burden on farmers near Dalby due to the impact on cropping production. The government only publicly admitted it was a problem in April 2022.

CSG Scandals

Scandals are rocking Queensland’s coal seam gas industry at an increasingly frequent rate as projects spread out over the state’s best farmland.

The biggest penalty handed to a company for wrongdoing so far was in March 2022 when Shell and PetroChina owned Arrow Energy, which is developing its 8,600 square kilometre Surat Gas Project, was fined $1 million for illegally drilling deviated wells beneath farmers’ land without permission.

Origin Energy has also been in the news after it was fined a mere $60,000 in the Brisbane Magistrates Court for releasing nearly one billion litres of contaminated coal seam gas wastewater to spill onto farmland and into waterways near Wandoan. 

 

Coal Seam Gas Wastewater (Brine)

Despite allowing the coal seam gas industry to spread across vast areas of the state, the State Government still has no formal policy for how gas companies should dispose of the six million tonnes of waste the industry is expected to produce. This waste is heavily laden with salt and heavy metals, and experts say it would need to be monitored “in perpetuity” to prevent contamination.

CSG Wastewater Ponds near Chinchilla, Qld