Traditional Owners tell Origin not to build gas pipelines on country

October 27, 2020
Issue 
Mudburra Traditional Owner Ray Dimakarri Dixon. Photo: Dan Robbins/Protect Country Alliance

At Origin Energy鈥檚 online AGM on October 20, Traditional Owners from the Northern Territory made it clear they did not want gas infrastructure crossing through their聽country and sacred sites.

Protect Country Alliance coordinator Dan Robins, who recently visited Mudburra Traditional Owner聽Ray Dimakarri Dixon in the Beetaloo Basin, said he made it very clear to聽outgoing Origin Energy聽chairperson聽Gordon Cairns that the community did not want a fracked gas pipeline running through their land as this may cause damage to their sacred sites.

Dixon sent a question to the Origin AGM, as a representative of the聽Mudburra Jingili people, which read, in part:

鈥淏arna lankaj karri nginyama yurrawa 鈥 nyundiya karribadarra banda warnayaka kayini nginyangka ngurrangka.

鈥淣gana nyunduma karriba? Abala ban kayini nginyangka yulungka ban burdakbiji kayini. Ngadarra?鈥

鈥淟isten to our words, you are strangers to these homelands, our sacred grounds. When will you stop this destruction and leave our lands?鈥

Cairns replied that Origin was 鈥渟till in the exploration phase and a pipeline has not yet been planned鈥. He said if it was to proceed to production 鈥渁ll partners will need to work with the Aboriginal Areas Protection Authority (AAPA) 鈥 and comply with the聽Northern Territory Sacred Sites Act.

鈥淚f a location and work activity is not able to be certified by AAPA, no work can proceed. This is best practice to ensure that sacred, significant and cultural heritage sites are avoided and protected.鈥

Robins told聽91自拍论坛聽that聽Cairns聽was not being entirely honest, because, he said, 鈥渁 gas pipeline from Tennant Creek to Darwin is being planned and聽the current proposed route聽will definitely cross sacred sites.

鈥淭he Northern Territory Labor and Federal Coalition governments want to build two new gas pipelines: one from聽聽and one from聽the聽, south of Alice Springs, to the Moomba gasfield in South Australia.

鈥淭hese fracked gas pipelines will not only cross through communities and sacred sites, they will flare off gas and open up more gas fields across the NT.

鈥淚t is estimated that these pipelines would cost around $1 billion each聽to build, with the funding most likely to come from the federal government.鈥

Robins聽said that he had also confirmed that CNC Project Management, which has experience consulting for gas pipeline companies in New South Wales, had been paid $327,140 by the NT Labor government to聽talk to landowners across the NT about a government plan for a 900-kilometre gas pipeline from Tennant Creek to Darwin.

鈥淲e have a map of the proposed high pressure gas pipeline from Tennant Creek to Darwin, and it clearly passes through an area within 2 kilometres from Dixon鈥檚 community of Marlinja, within a recorded sacred site area.鈥澛

惭别补苍飞丑颈濒别,听听 on the site of a former cattle station 鈥 Newcastle Waters 鈥 near the community of Marlinja.聽

The proponents聽Sun Cable told聽ABC Rural on October 22 that it requires 12,000 hectares of the station to build a 10-gigawatt solar farm that would supply energy to Singapore via a 4500-kilometre undersea cable.

The $20 billion project is being backed by tech billionaire Mike Cannon-Brookes, resources billionaire聽Andrew Forrest and it has also received support from the federal government.

Sun Cable has already started to get聽environmental approvals in place. Robins is concerned that the company has still not adequately consulted Traditional Owners.

鈥淭he environmental impacts of such a large project are still being assessed. While Traditional Owners have repeatedly made it clear they would rather see renewable energy, than fracking infrastructure on their land, they still wish to be聽properly聽consulted and have some say concerning these large infrastructure projects being built on their traditional lands.

鈥淐ommunities such as聽聽in the NT聽that would see real economic benefits for First Nations people,鈥 Robins said.

[against fracking in the NT. The Arid Lands Environment Centre has set up a fundraiser to campaign against the NT pipelines. You can donate to it .]

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