Northern Territory Labor and the fossil fuel industry were on high alert on September 13 for the start of the NT Resources Week Conference at the Darwin Convention Centre.
Fences, extra private security and police greeted climate activists who came to voice their opposition to the NT鈥檚 gas expansion plans.
NT Labor has ignored the of experts, as well as motions by its own rank-and-file, to keep pushing its climate destroying policies.
It the green light to fracking for gas in the Beetaloo Basin in May, which prompted the to form.
This group has been mobilising to stop new gas projects. Its action during NT Resources Week follows a at the Developing Northern Australia conference at the end of July.
Activists were pushed off the stage and branded 鈥渆xtremists鈥 for raising awareness about the urgent need to halt fossil fuel projects.
Dave Alton, an activist with聽No New Gas Coalition who participated in a die-in outside the entrance to the Convention Centre, thinks the real extremists are those who are deliberately wrecking the climate.
Observing the conference attendees, he said: 鈥淲e have a responsibility to do what we can. Our generation is the one that produced this mess. These people, they鈥檙e stuck in the past. It鈥檚 just disgusting what they are planning to do here in the NT. At every opportunity, we will be here to let them know it鈥檚 criminal.鈥
Tamboran Resources CEO Joel Riddle attended the conference. The corporation wants to frack the Beetaloo Basin and is a in the NT Government鈥檚 proposed Middle Arm Sustainable Development Precinct.
The Middle Arm Precinct will establish a petrochemical facility and crucial infrastructure for the gas to be processed.
A , in Environmental Health, of populations residing within 5 kilometres of petrochemical facilities found that they had a 30% higher risk of developing leukemia.
The City of Palmerston is just 3 kilometres from Middle Arm.
The No New Gas Coalition has pledged to raise awareness about and stop the proposed development at Middle Arm, for which federal Labor has $1.5 billion.
Following pressure from the Greens and independent MPs, Labor has agreed to a .
Things are looking grim for Darwin and the NT unless gas is stopped.
Marcos A Orellana, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Toxics and Human Rights, visited Darwin over August and September and .
鈥淩ecent scientific reports suggest that temperatures in the Northern Territories could make the region uninhabitable for humans," he said. "Despite that, petrochemical and oil and gas industries are lining up massive projects in the region. This threatens to make Darwin and the region a climate change sacrifice zone.鈥