LIVE BLOG Sunday March 25
91自拍论坛 Weekly is reporting live from the on March 25.
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3.30pm After a conference lunch break, four workshops were held concurrently. The most popular workshop was on blockade skills and planning for a CSG community blockade, which drew almost 100 people. Other workshops were on building community support, an introduction to CSG and working on Stop CSG Illawarra鈥檚 plan to get thousands of signs on houses and businesses across the Illawarra.
The final all-in conference session adopted the following resolutions unanimously:
鈥 Mobilise supporters for a May 1 rally outside NSW parliament, spearheaded by the farmers, to oppose the NSW government鈥檚 Strategic Land Use Policy.
鈥 Maintain suburban organisation, including stalls, letterboxing, and film screenings.
鈥 Consider options for the Illawarra鈥檚 next big local action and look at the Lock The Gate plans for a national day of action in September.
鈥 Call on University of Wollongong to declare any research it is carrying out on behalf of the CSG industry. There are indications UWS has a sponsorship relationship with AGL, a big CSG company.
鈥 Promote the April 14 Rock to Stop CSG fundraiser.
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12.30pm The mood lifts as the discussion turns to action and the campaign needed to stop CSG.
Stop CSG Illawarra鈥檚 Jess Moore says: 鈥淲e鈥檝e done big events, the human sign on Austinmere, the bridge walk, but essentially the key work we have done is talking to people 鈥 day in, day out, raising awareness.
鈥淲e鈥檝e had small wins, but haven鈥檛 won yet.
鈥淏TEX chemicals are being banned from being used 鈥 but you can鈥檛 fully ban BTEX chemicals because they can occur in produced water, even if not used.
鈥淲e鈥檝e seen evaporation ponds banned 鈥 yet in the Pilliga they are still used, and at Oakdale there are open air 鈥榮umps鈥 instead of 鈥榚vaporation ponds鈥 鈥 what is the difference?
鈥淲e won a one-year moratorium on new fracking projects 鈥 yet fracking still allowed for existing projects鈥nd what new information do we have that means fracking should be allowed again after the moratorium?
鈥淲e won unanimous support for the campaign from the Wollongong council. We鈥檝e had the NSW ALP reverse its pro-CSG policy to support a moratorium.
鈥淏ut we鈥檝e had a broken promise from the NSW government. Not a millimetre of NSW is ruled out to CSG.
鈥淲e had the moratorium bill put by the Greens, supported by the ALP, but voted down 16-19 with the Coalition, the Christian Democrats and the Shooters against.
鈥淲e need to ask what cost if we 诲辞苍鈥檛 cancel these licenses? What cost to our health, to our water, to our environment? Look at asbestos industry, and the damage that did.
鈥淧ublic opinion is 74% for a moratorium 鈥 but opinion is not enough 鈥 we need people to act.
鈥淲e can鈥檛 act just as individuals 鈥 need to come together 鈥 that鈥檚 the one good thing CSG has done 鈥 brought people together, brought community together.鈥
To loud cheers from the 300-strong crowd, Moore says: 鈥淎 recent meeting of Stop CSG Illawarra voted that if they attempt to start drilling, we will blockade. We need to fight until government policy catches up with what communities across NSW are calling for.鈥
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12pm Beyond Zero Emissions strategic director Mark Ogge outlines the mass expansion of CSG and gas in general.
鈥淭he Pilliga forrest, the 鈥榣ungs of NSW鈥, a beautiful place, will be covered by industrial gas infrastructure across 8000 hectares,鈥 Ogge says.
To audible gasps as an image is screened of the world heritage area destroyed to make way for the port, Ogge says: 鈥淲orld Heritage Curtis Island has been excised to be used as a gas port. That鈥檚 the smallest of four massive gas port projects in Queensland.
鈥淣SW is where Queensland was six or seven years ago."
He shows a graph of today鈥檚 20 million tons of gas that Australia exports, rising to 140 million tons of gas exported in a matter of years.
鈥淭he CSG industry says it is necessary to replace coal,鈥 says Ogge. 鈥淏ut renewables can supply 100%. Other countries are expanding in solar and wind. Solar thermal produces heat, and that allows solar power to be stored and released when needed.鈥
Ogge shows a revealing graph, that as mining has boomed, all other manufacturing areas have shrunk. In terms of employment, the mining industry employs less than 2% of the workforce. So as mining increases at the expense of other industries, it is eating up jobs.
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11.15am Jess Moore, founding member of Stop CSG Illawarra and a regional spokesperson for Lock The Gate, is introduced as a 鈥渃ommunity treasure鈥 to launch the first panel.
Moore outlines the key concerns around CSG, starting with water.
鈥Any extraction technique produces contaminated water.
鈥淪alt is the first contaminant 鈥 it sounds innocuous. But the federal government revealed that over the next decade 150 million tons of salt will be produced by CSG activity.
鈥淨ueensland gas has gained approval to build a salt pit the size of four MCGs.
鈥淭he CSG industry is a massive user of water. The government estimates the industry will use 5400 gigalitres a year 鈥 around three times Australia鈥檚 entire domestic water use of 1870 gigalitres a year.
鈥淥n methane 鈥 studies indicate that around 4% of this highly potent greenhouse gas is lost through leakage. Then another 15% can seep into produced water 鈥 that鈥檚 why we see in [the documentary] Gasland people who can light the water from their taps.
鈥淲e call for a precautionary approach 鈥 we need the facts. Freeze the industry and hold a Royal Commission, the highest level of public enquiry 鈥 the public have a right to know.鈥
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10.45am A festive atmosphere meets the 200 people who have gathered at Wollongong Town Hall, with local musicians performing under yellow and black balloons as community members walk in.
The conference is welcomed by Aboriginal activists Mark Bloxsome and Lyle Davis. Bloxsome tells the conference: 鈥淐oal Seam Gas is the greatest environmental challenge in many years 鈥 water is the source of all life.鈥
Wollongong Mayor Gordon Bradbury opens the conference, as the conference acknowledges that Wollongong council provided the hall for free.
鈥淭his is about democracy,鈥 Bradbury says. He outlines the council鈥檚 stance against CSG, calling on the state government to rule out CSG in Wollongong and in all water catchment areas.
鈥淣othing [is] more precious than water鈥 everything seems to be up for grabs to miners鈥 our country is not a mine to be sold off."
To a huge cheer, Bradbury says: "I am not against mining per se, but we also need to live sustainably."
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