CSG and coal mining stories, Journalism

How you get to Simmo Street

Coming over a rise about ten k’s out of Lismore you get your first glimpse of the camp. Amidst amaranthine paddocks and cows, against a backdrop of gentle hills cloaked in forest, it’s a great swatch of tents and cars glittering in the afternoon sunshine. It could be a festival for its size and incongruity.

Closer still, it resolves into orderly lines and rows of tents – streets in fact. Driving through the well signposted gate, you could indeed be at a festival, so well designated are the parking, camping and assembly points. It’s the well-heeled suburbia of the camping set, an upmarket gypsy rendezvous with four wheel drives and hi-tech tents and toilets. Solar panels blink at you from roofs and tarps and kids dash around along Simmo street.

Driving down past rows of tentage to the parking areas I remark the first aid tent, kitchens, well-built fireplaces. There must be hundreds of people here, on the eve of Richmond River Valley’s announcement that they intend to evict the camp, on account of tawdry slurs and alleged breaches of its DA conditions.

I park and walk back up to the information tent, where I spotted my friend Ruth on the way in. I see Mel there too, who runs a few online businesses and volunteers for all kinds of community organizations. She’s running the info tent and gets me to sign a waiver form in case of any unforeseen accidents.

Ruth runs an art gallery and a farm. She’s having relationship difficulties and we chat as we walk up the hill, alongside Kyogle road, with a constant stream of traffic swishing past us, some cars tooting, some catcalling or shouting encouragement.

Up the hill at Gate B about twenty people are gathered, sitting on the grass or makeshift chairs, listening to a man talking. He’s sitting at his ease in front of them, chatting evenly in a commanding, measured voice that I recognise instantly. It’s Tony Barry, the renowned Australian actor, who’s also missing a leg, packing crutches and one untenanted trouser fold. It would be a souvenir of his struggle against cancer, as hundreds of melanomas forced him to become an advocate of the controversial herbal treatment Black Salve, too late to save his riddled left leg.

I see Jarmbi, the huge, enigmatic Githabul nation spokesman, and his partner Iris, as well as some other faces I know, listening intently as Mr Barry yarns about his father, a tough Erskenville bloke, who wept openly when Ben Chifley died – the remarkable man who was called both a Communist and a Nazi, both potent insults in the wake of WWII, by Menzies the arch-conservative, when Chifley called for the nationalisation of banks, a visionary move that would have perhaps staved off the predatory merchant bankers who have nearly brought the world to its knees on several occasions since.

“That’s the kind of things they’ll call, us, they already have, but that just shows that they’re losing their grip on us,” he said.

Someone asks him what he thinks will happen here.

“If you want it to, it’ll be a showdown,” he smiles. “If you want it to it’ll just be a show. Keep smilin’ and the coppers won’t want to belt you around. Whatever you want to happen will happen.”

On request from an elderly couple, evidently farmers to go by their neat Akubras and work trousers, Mr Barry recites a poem by the irreverent ‘poet lorikeet’ Dennis Kevans, “Ah white man, have you any sacred sites”. That voice, stately and redolent with humour and emotion, rolls above the waves of traffic noise and Mr Barry’s audience smile.

Just then a woman, Katy, almost in tears, appears at the bottom of the track, leading two ponies. She’s just been separated from her unregistered car and horse float by some helpful police, and now has to walk her ponies back to Kyogle. Amidst ensuing hubbub, someone organises a 4WD with a towbar and within twenty minutes she’s sorted. The ponies don’t have to walk home.

Whilst kids crowd around them and they dutifully shy and snort, Katy tells how she can’t leave them here at the camp because of a ban placed by Tickies – cattle tick quarantine officers, summoned by some killjoy or other after the Franklin Riders had brought their far-travelled horses to camp. Someone remarks that this is just another camp closing ploy, part of the ongoing suites of bureaucratic mischief employed by the Bennetts and Walkers and their ilk, including an indignant sortie calling for a ban on the iniquitous playing of music.

Mr Barry departs in a mate’s car and I trudge up the hill to Gate C, which, having been once surrendered to council on an honour basis, has now been re-occupied by the feral contingent, and resembles Nimbin post Mardi-Grass, excepting the notable absence of any reasty aromatics. Jugglers juggle, guitar players serenade themselves, and under a small marquee, two amiable Nannas nod contentedly and explain to a dreadlocked gentleman some finer points of etiquette.

As I tramp down the hill a lone police car trawls slowly past. The driver and I briefly lock eyes. He’s a senior cop. I wonder what he’s thinking.

Back down at camp I chat to a bearded farmer from North Queensland who’s buying Lock the Gate placards, stickers and badges from the merch tent. He says there’s wells being drilled at his home on the Atherton Tablelands and he’s envious of the community here, hoping to be able to inspire something similar up there.

I spy my old pal, the Loon. We stroll through the burbs to Simmo Street, where he’s camped with some delightful ladies who want to play 500. Regretfully declining the invitation, I do take tea and hot cross buns and gaze at the enveloping hills.

Someone announces over a bullhorn that it’s time for a camp meeting, so we stroll over to the central fireplace, where around 150 people are gathered. They include a goodly contingent of conservatively dressed country folk, townies, backpackers, hippies and Bundjalung people. There are academics, artists, builders, office workers, retirees, tourists. As people sip tea, camp housekeeping issues are discussed, including the restraint of dogs and their doings, a vehement request for no drumming after dark, volunteers for toilet-cleaning duty, dishwashers and gate vigil rosters. An elegant lady named Sandra earns a round of enthusiastic applause for her valiant toilet cleaning efforts today, and vigil communication etiquettes are mooted.

I spot the original Simmo, the man for whom the role of manning (womanning?) tripods, modified vehicles, dragons or other drill-delaying devices was coined. I met him last year at Glenugie, a busy customer who works with troubled youth. He’s says gday but he’s too busy for fame, organising rosters and basic tenets of on-the-job communication training.

When all the camp business is dealt with, Ian Gaillard enters the circle and peering at his iphone, laments that his reading glasses are no match for the failing light. (Scattered laughter). He announces that he’s just done eight interviews with mainstream media. (Cheers.) With an assistant holding a megaphone and some borrowed glasses he reads aloud a letter from Adam Guise to Richmond Valley County Council. It appears we’ve engaged the services of a town planner, who’s helpfully pointed out that the letter of eviction served to the camp has been issued under the wrong planning laws. (Hilarity of sufficient magnitude that, were this Federal Parliament, everyone would be expelled by the fulminating Speaker).

Mr Gaillard continues, noting that an application for review of the camp DA has been submitted to the Land and Environment Court. He suggests that it makes insufficient reference to the making of music, whether it be singing in the shower, or perhaps the music of the spheres. (Loud cheers, general mirth and prolonged clapping.) The meeting breaks up and a long queue forms for dinner.

I head back to my car, as I have to go back to town to pick up my aging kelpie, Ticketyboo. As I’m getting into the battered Commodore a chap rummaging in the back of the next car along remarks in a neighbourly tone that the sunset is brilliant. I look up. Indeed, it is. Orange and cinnamon streaks purling over lustrous hills. The camp resonating with kids squealing, dogs yapping, the hum of gentle conversation. Smoke curls overhead, stirring veins into the sunset behind Simmo Street.

CSG and coal mining stories

Bentley bust a military solution

In what appears to be a classical military pincer manoeuvre, the NSW riot squad seems poised to enforce Richmond Valley County Council’s decision to shut down the anti-CSG Bentley protest camp.

This move comes hot on the heels of a visit to Casino last week by Energy and Resources minister Anthony Roberts. Refusing to meet delegations from the 3000-strong camp, Mr Roberts instead closeted himself with APPEA representatives, pro-gas Mayor Ernie Bennett and Council’s general manager John Walker, who has previously been under investigation by ASIC.

As the end of school holidays looms and the camp will presumably be vacated by the large number of families staying there, the announcement appears to be carefully synchronised by a state government that refuses to accept the Northern Rivers community’s right to refuse invasive gasfields.

Interestingly enough, it also coincides with warnings by an unnamed source to representatives of the camp, which they claim specified next week, from Monday April 28 on, as the likely dates for an onslaught by huge numbers of riot police, bolstered by the implementation of the Cronulla Riot Rule 6A, allowing extraordinary police powers.

“Such a response by government would be a clear misuse of those extraordinary powers against a peaceful but very sizable local opposition,” said Aidan Ricketts, a Gasfield Free Northern Rivers representative.

Aidan claims that an unspecified source within government has warned that up to 700 riot police will be deployed against the camp. The Minister’s office failed to respond to attempts to verify these claims.

The Richmond Valley Council’s timely announcement could act as a trigger for these police to be trucked in to the Northern Rivers as a pretext for shutting down the camp and allowing CSG mining company Metgasco to bring in a drilling rig from Queensland to commence work on its beleagured well site at Bentley.

Aidan Ricketts claims that the three month standoff at Bentley has gone beyond a policing issue, particularly in the light of the resignation of NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell and other related gas-industry investigations currently underway at ICAC.

“It is a political issue and as far as we’re concerned it’s a democracy issue, because 87% of people voted in a registered AEC poll that they didn’t want gasfields in the Northern Rivers,” he said.

“But the minister came and instead of seeking political solutions he was preparing the ground for a military solution.”

He said that these powers had previously been used on a non-violent activist training camp in 2010.

“Under those powers they can arrest anybody without cause, just for being there, which means they can target who they see as organisers. They can sieze mobile phones and communication devices, they can shut down areas and stop and search vehicles and search and stop mobile transmissions.

“So it’s a full suite of extreme police powers and any arrests or offences that they charge people for have a maximum $5000 fine.”

Minister Roberts has labelled the campers as “extremists”, despite the overwhelming presence there of everyday people from the Northern Rivers region. Aidan Ricketts says that this kind of inflammatory statement is designed to prime the police to ignore the peaceful demographic of law-abiding residents exercising their democratic right to oppose what they see as a toxic, invasive industry that will not benefit their region or Australia.

“They have an impression that there’s a hardcore that they want to get and they kind of don’t want the mainstream mums and dads and farmers in the way. Unfortunately at Bentley they’re going to get the mainstream, because the mainstream is what it is,” Mr Ricketts said.

CSG and coal mining stories

Gloucester’s gas goggles take flight

Freelance photographer Dean Sewell and myself were in Gloucester last week to take aerial shots of AGL’s projected coal seam gas (CSG) wells and the existing coal mines in the valley. Dean’s photos clearly depict the proximity of the current and planned gas fields and coal mines to the township. From the air they are a drab and dramatic contrast to the natural beauty of the valley.

We spoke to a number of people raising concerns about the expansion of mining and the industrialisation of prime agricultural land, loss of property values and tourism, and health issues.

We were interested to see that the only two relevant articles in the Advocate were public relations material from AGL, serendipitously located on the same page as large advertisements for that same company.

As CSG and coal mining have become significant national issues against the backdrop of climate change, Dean and I have flown over contentious areas such as the Pilliga Forest, Hunter Valley and Leard’s Creek in past weeks, to get a bird’s eye view of the impacts of the industries. We’ve documented immense areas of industrialized land – mostly former farming country, that are not as dramatically apparent from the ground. They give an interesting perspective to an issue that is rapidly assuming national significance.

The CSG and coal mining industries have been under the spotlight in past months as governmental corruption and significant industrial accidents have become national news. Two successive NSW Mining Ministers are now under investigation by the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC).

Health and environmental issues raised by independent scientists such as groundwater consultant Professor Phillip Pell contradict the reassurances by Federal and State politicians that best environmental practises are being followed.

An independent scientific forum at NSW Parliament House last week heard prominent independent professionals state that CSG drilling is contaminating aquifer systems and the companies are unable to deal properly with the large amounts of produced waste water and salts. Hydrogeologist Andrea Broughton from New Zealand told the ABC that there were “serious holes” in the scientific assessment of CSG mining practises.

Former mayor Julie Lyford, a member of Groundswell Gloucester, a movement “to look at positive social change and sustainability for the community”, told us that 83% of the community support their stand against industrialisation of the valley.

“We know that through a survey in the council elections.”

Julie echoed the concerns of Prof Pell that adequate environmental and cumulative impact studies from mining projects have not been done.

“There’s a cumulative impact that is quite profound,” she said. “It’s the Manning catchment which is nearly 100,000 people when you take into account all the people downstream and in Taree. It’s also the Port Stephens catchment, which is oyster growing and tourism. We have the cumulative issues of an open cut mine that’s just been allowed and the process going 24 hours a day right next to where people live.

“Compound that with 330 gas wells and another mine that’s in the process of approval less than three kilometres from our hospital, nursing home and schools – you cannot separate them out.”

“The science is not there. They are playing Russian roulette with the aquifers and the catchment. We’ll look at this in five or ten years time and people will be astounded that people played so fast and loose with people’s health, water and land.”

Gloucester dairy farmer Mark Harris disagrees with Julie Lyford’s understanding of the council’s surveys.

“Ninety percent of people in Gloucester don’t care whether it happens or don’t happen,” he said. “We’ve got a very small percentage that are just jumping up and down, very vocal about it and then we’ve got about the same amount of people that are actually for it.”

Mr Harris said that no farmers in the area use groundwater, so gas mining would have a very low impact. He was also of the opinion that modern techniques are safe, citing AGL brochures that state this. When asked about the string of toxic spills by Santos in the Pilliga Forest he observed;

“That’s what’s gotta be policed. The green movement jumping up and down and making them do the right thing, that’s the good part about it.

“As a farmer with three farms I don’t want them to stuff it up. But I don’t want to see the green movement getting that strong that we have no gas. We’ve just got to have a happy balance.”

That elusive balance is being sought all over NSW at the moment, as mining companies come up against community groups like Groundswell. We saw that in the Northern Rivers this week, where 2,000 people gathered to prevent Metgasco from drilling at Bentley. But as we left Gloucester AGL remained determined to proceed with their project, while Julie Lyford maintains that the people of Gloucester will mount a huge blockade to prevent it.

The airfield we left town from would be one of the local landmarks extinguished by an incoming industrial gasfield, the goodbye gift of a local dairy farmer who’s happily sold out for an undisclosed sum. With it would go the access point for Rural Fire Service choppers and a significant grazing area smack bang next to the town. Julie Lyford sees this as the death knell of a happy community.

“Why would you industrialise a valley that’s been on the State heritage register for nomination since 1975? All the Aboriginal heritage has been totally dismissed and they’ve got nine Aboriginal heritage sites that will be destroyed with the open cut mine expansion.

“Gloucester is one of the lowest socio-economic towns in NSW but its quality of life I would say is at the top of the spectrum. People have a really great sense of community, we have 192 voluntary organizations in a population of 5000 people. Our tourism industry is now worth $42 million so the clean green image of Gloucester right next to the Barrington Tops has been our biggest selling point.”

In a curious footnote, the editor of the Gloucester Advocate failed to publish or respond to this completed article, despite earlier emails welcoming commentary – and photos on the issue.

When I contacted AGL’s spokesperson on gas mining matters, former Murdoch journalist Kylie Keogh, she was rather less than pleased with the prospect of anything other than company press releases being printed in the paper. She declined to respond to my questions and this antipathy seemed afterward to have extended to the Advocate, which obligingly prints opinions – insofar as they accord with those of Mr Harris and Ms Keogh’s convictions.

CSG and coal mining stories

Wrong way to the top

In an era where corporations and governments are as clandestine as the rest of us are exposed, whistleblowers are denounced as traitors. Julian Assange is an asylum seeker in the Ecuadorian embassy in London, Chelsea Manning in a US military prison and Edward Snowden on the run with death threats hanging over him. All three maintain they were acting in the public interest.

Their criminalisation clearly indicates the prerogative of the US government to suppress information that has proved to have serious diplomatic and international security implications.

Just so, an Australian whistleblower says she has had explosive evidence of an alleged criminal conspiracy silenced by bureaucratic obfuscation. Despite it, she has gone further to unearth and publish new proof.

Simone Marsh blew the whistle on what she saw as a conspiracy to break the law between gas mining companies and the Queensland and Federal governments. She spoke on Four Corners last year about alleged complicity between key players to fudge crucial environmental approvals for massive coal seam gas (CSG) projects. But her complaints, and telling evidence, were sidelined by a bureaucratic investigation that she says deliberately misled her.

Simone was a senior environmental specialist advising the Queensland Coordinator General on environmental and cumulative impact studies from gas mining projects in 2011-12.

While working on the projected $38 billion LNG (liquid natural gas) infrastructures in the Surat Basin of Southwest Queensland, she claims that her work was falsified and deleted by her superiors in government and the approvals were illegally rushed through.

“There was a high level of disregard for the process and the law,” said Simone. “I just feel like I was making sure that the legislation was being followed.”

She says that despite her repeated complaints, the approvals for the Queensland Gas Company (QGC) and Santos ignored the terms of reference under which the pertinent guidelines had been drawn up years earlier. She says that people at State and Federal level were complicit in fraudulently pushing the gas company’s incomplete approvals through and being paid off with golden handshakes and jobs in the gas industry.

And she says that she now has conclusive proof.

Simone and former Greens politician Drew Hutton, founder of anti gas mining group Lock the Gate, originally took her complaints to the Queensland Crime and Misconduct Commission, after Four Corners aired her allegations on April 4, 2012.

Simone had taken stress leave after working on this process.

“I’ve seen a lot in more than a decade in that mining sector. I’d say that I was fairly understanding of the industry, but this whole LNG proposal was on a massively elevated scale, totally beyond anything I’d ever experienced before,” she said.

Her first interview with the Crime and Misconduct Commission was on February 14, 2013 and in ensuing weeks she was interviewed at length and then told to wait pending an investigation. Eight months later, on September 19, she was told that ‘the environmental and health impacts of the coal seam gas industry … do not fall within the CMC’s jurisdiction.”

Shocked that she was not told this when the investigation began, she countered that the complaints focussed on the failure of government departments to require the gas mining proponents to provide information required by environmental law. But her phone calls and emails were ignored.

Devastated by what she saw as further evidence of a concerted governmental effort to silence her, Simone withdrew altogether from her work.

Drew Hutton, a long-time thorn in the side of the CSG industry, had previously experience of being stonewalled on the issue.

“I started having talks with the Queensland Government around about 2010 and was assured then that this had been a done deal for some time. I was talking to the Premier’s Department and the Environment minister and they just laughed at me when I said to them that I was going to build a movement that would challenge them on this.”

“Simone comes into the picture in early 2010 when she gets put on to do the formal approvals, but everything was in place by that stage and she just got confronted with a decision which had already been made by faceless and nameless people before that.”

But Simone is a methodical woman whose employment in a top government advisory role had been no accident. While on stress leave she set about researching and documenting the train of events – and people involved, in setting up this alleged multi-billion-dollar fraud.

“I wanted to make sense of what I’ve witnessed and to share it with other people so they know the truth,” she said.

The truth lies in a crucial email, a new document obtained by Drew Hutton. The original, as provided under the Queensland’s Right To Information Act, had like so many others provided been so heavily redacted as to be useless. But this email in its entirety makes for an interesting reading of events.

Simone says that it demonstrates clearly the complicity of a number of proponents and proves a criminal conspiracy to subvert Australian law.

The email was from Ian Fletcher, the director and CEO of the Queensland Department of Employment and Economic Innovation (DEEDI), the same department responsible for granting petroleum exploration and production tenements.

“Ian Fletcher was a former managing director at the International Directorate in the UK Trade and Investment and he was also private secretary to the head of British Civil Service, a guy by the name of Sir Andrew Turnbull,” Simone explained.

“Around the time he came to Queensland was when the government put up their blueprint for the Queensland LNG industry, in September 2009 and Fletcher turned up in November 2009.”

It’s addressed to a number of people including the Queensland Coordinator General Colin Jensen and the treasurer, Andrew Fraser. Simone says that the three relevant paragraphs reproduced here demonstrate Fletcher instructing to ignore the terms of reference, created in 2009, and rush the approvals through.

The crucial part of the email reads:

(a) The drop dead date really is the June Board meeting. After that, customers will begin to go away, and the company will not continue with its investment. One or two weeks tidying up delay is possible, but six months (or anything like it) is not:

(b) On the Federal Government’s proposed resource super profits tax, the company is quietly confident that their negotiations with the Federal treasury are going to yield fruit. We will get more details later in the week: and

© On the EIS process, David Maxwell claimed there were two significant problems. One of these was the requirement for them to provide detailed engineering data for construction projects including ones well into the future. He said that this was “physically impossible” but went on to say he detected a degree of support for an approach were in-principle approval would be given subject to later provision of detailed engineering drawings, against which more detailed approvals would be granted. However, he then identified a second problem, the requirement to report in the EIS process against cumulative impacts. He said that QGC would find it impossible to report against the cumulative impacts of all proposed LNG investments by all known companies in the time available. He was prepared to continue, he said, to report against QGC’s own proposals, as well as those of Santos and other known investments in the Gladstone area, with a commitment to provide further information at the time other projects were being approved.

Simone observes:

“So if we look at the email we can see that it’s sent by Ian Fletcher to Treasurer Andrew Fraser and Andrew Fraser’s Under Treasurer at that time was a guy named Gerard Bradley, who is now the head of Queensland Treasury Corporation. It’s copied into Colin Jensen who was the Coordinator General at that time and it’s also copied to John Bradley who was at that time the Director General of the Environment Department (DERM).

“The subject line is David Maxwell QGC. At that time David Maxwell was one of the heads of QGC – a member of the British Gas group.

“At this stage, May 2010, QGC’s environment assessment had not commenced because the environment people had been focussed on the Santos project. QGC are now seeking approval between one or two weeks. But the document was 10,000 pages long.”

Simone says that this demonstrates the head of an international corporation telling the head of a government body to rush through its approvals, or lose its investment.

“This is a threat. They were saying to the government if they couldn’t get the go ahead to proceed pretty much immediately they would be pulling out their investment. When we saw they also did it to the Federal government later on it backs up that yes, they are using that method to threaten both levels of government.”

The approvals were actually signed five weeks later, in breach of the terms of reference.

“The Treasurer and the Premiers Department and the DEEDI don’t have responsibility for decision making under the State Development and Public Works Organisation Act.

“It’s actually the job of the Coordinator General to run this EIS process and it’s his job to coordinate with the other departments and to gain their advice and their input, but what we saw happening here was we saw interference from Treasury and from Premier and Cabinet overriding the law and overriding the Coordinator General’s role. He’s told that he has to sign off that project without the normal information.”

Simone observes that the second point that Ian Fletcher makes is regarding the resource super profits tax that Prime Minister Rudd was trying to bring in at this time. Fletcher hints that his negotiations at a Federal level are going to “yield fruit”.

“They’re definitely referring to whatever is going on at the Commonwealth level at that time. We saw that the same week that this project was approved, Rudd was removed. It’s an interesting coincidence.”

Prior to that point the head of British Gas, Frank Chapman, had flown into Brisbane enroute to Canberra to discuss the tax arrangements with Kevin Rudd.

Simone, already on stress leave, had received an urgent call.

“The Project Director asked me to come in and he said he needed me to write the Greenhouse chapter of the QGC approvals that day. And I said that was ridiculous.

“I hadn’t read the EIS and I asked for more information from the proponent on their calculations and assumptions. He just told me to do the best I could and that the Coordinator General had been told that he had to have a copy of this in his bag that evening.

“I read the front page of the Weekend Australian that Saturday, which said that when Frank Chapman got a copy of this from Anna Bligh, signed off, he’d flown down to Canberra to meet with the Prime Minister to make a tax arrangement for his project, and that meeting never took place because Kevin Rudd exited on the Thursday – the day before.

“Martin Ferguson was Kevin Rudd’s resources minister and it’s been speculated that Ferguson was behind the destabilisation of the Rudd leadership.”

Both Ferguson and his top advisor now work in senior positions for APPEA (Australian Petroleum Production & Exploration Association), the peak fossil fuel industry body.

“After the Queensland government had ticked both of these projects off, the Federal Environment minister Peter Garrett stalled the project for three months at the Commonwealth level under the EPBC Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act.

“But they moved him out of that role and they moved Tony Burke into that role and within a matter of weeks Tony Burke had signed both of them off.”

The third point in Fletcher’s email regards the EIS process and the information requirements that the companies were supposed to provide.

“David Maxwell claims there were two significant problems – one of these to provide detailed engineering drawings.

“He said that was physically impossible but went on to say that he detected sympathy for an approach where in-principle support would be given subject to later provision of drawings. However he identified a different problem, the requirement to report in the EIS process against cumulative impacts. He said that QGC would find it impossible.

“The paragraph demonstrates that the companies didn’t provide the information that was required by the terms of reference and they’re stating in that paragraph that they can’t provide that information.

“So basically what paragraph C is saying is that this company was not able to meet the terms of reference that had been set at the beginning of the process twelve months earlier. They did not want to provide the maps of the infrastructure layout, they said it was impossible, but we know that’s not true. We’ve seen drawings that were dated 2009.”

Indeed the Four Corners program The Gas Rush from February 21, 2011, demonstrates that QGC had detailed maps of their proposed wells and pipeline infrastructure in 2007.

“Paragraph C is what Drew Hutton and I complained about to the Crimes and Misconduct Commission. We said that the government had broken the Environment Protection Act by granting the environmental authorities without the information required under Section 310D of the EPA. And this is the proof that the government and the companies knowingly broke that law.

“And there’s more proof when we look down at the last paragraph as well. Because it suggests that the government used another process entirely that was outside of the law to approve these projects and get the information that the law required after they’d already given approval.”

Ian Fletcher goes on to talk about an ‘interesting development’ in which David Maxwell said that QGC would like to appear in front of an LNG committee to explain its position of its inability to meet the terms of reference. At this point Fletcher suggests that what he whimsically terms a  ‘constitutional innovation’ be used to subvert this legal process. He also suggests that a kind of Star Chamber be used to consider QGC’s case.

This is a very English notion – a Star Chamber being an archaic court once used to try members of the royal family, nobility or other important people – the general implication being that not only were such proceedings highly

secret, but eminently corruptible.

In April 2013, as yet unaware of the existence of this email, Simone had been ‘quietly confident’ that the gas mining proponents weren’t going to get the go ahead from the Federal government.

“I had gone down to Canberra and met with the senior public servants who were looking at the Federal Environmental approvals. I’d explained the situation and that we had no information and the scale of this proposal and at the end of that day the leader of that environment assessment team said there was no way her minister would be able to sign off on those projects under Commonwealth law, due to the huge amount of unknowns and so I’d gone back to Brisbane thinking, well that’s a relief, they’re not going to allow it through.

“The other reason was that I had advised the people above me that they were breaking the law under the sections I’d talked about previously and I’d gone with them across to their lawyers in George Street in Brisbane and explained this to them and they had received some legal advice and following that a letter was sent to Santos’ head of Eastern Australia at that time who was Rick Wilkinson, telling Rick that the Santos project needed to provide all that information, so at that stage I was quietly confident that we were actually going to do a proper process.”

But today the gas fields of the Surat Basin are in full operation and Santos has expanded its operations south into NSW. They have an exploratory license in the Pilliga forest, where at least 850 wells are planned. While there have been at least 17 serious waste water spills in this, the largest bio diverse hotspot in inland NSW, a Memorandum of Understanding was signed at breakneck speed by the NSW government in March 2013.

Simone Marsh sees a similar pattern emerging in NSW as she witnessed in Queensland.

“They’ll be doing exactly the same thing there as they did up here. It’s the same modus operandi. Our country’s been invaded. It’s shocking.”

Simone says her emails, and those of Drew Hutton have been hacked after they released the crucial email evidence to the Mining Leaks website.

“I’ve lost complete trust in the government and the industry. I can’t work with either of them.”

As Santos assures the public that it is following best environmental practise in the Pilliga, eight farmers have been arrested so far in blockades delaying work on the project. The disparity between what they believe and what mining corporations and governments are telling them has never been clearer.

. On February 18, 2014 the EPA confirmed that Santos had been fined $1500 for a leaking waste water pond that had transmitted uranium particles up to 20 times above safe drinking levels to a nearby aquifer.

While its also been confirmed that Santos are the National Party’s biggest donors, the spotlight in NSW has fallen on corruption as two successive Resources ministers of opposing parties are now under investigation by ICAC.

Both Eddie Obeid and Christopher Hartcher have been implicated with ties to a company known as Australian Water Holdings. The director of that group is one Tony Bellas, a former Queensland under treasurer deputy treasurer with oversight of government and corporations. Between 2009 and 2012 he was working for a company called Queensland Infrastructure Partners and that company was owned by John Grayson, who was also a director at Queensland Treasury Corporation until 1999 and is currently the director General of Campbell Newman’s Department of Premier and Cabinet. John Grayson is a board member of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, which has came under fire for its soft stance on port developments near the reef.

He also owns 16% of a company called Gasfields Water Management, most of which is owned by Australian Water Holdings. Eddie Obeid’s son sold off his shares in the company last year. Federal Environment Minister Greg Hunt’s legal investigator found last year that Mr Grayson had no conflict of interest.

Simone Marsh sees a similar pattern emerging in NSW as she witnessed in Queensland.

“They’ll be doing exactly the same thing there as they did up here. It’s the same modus operandi. Our country’s been invaded. It’s shocking.”

Simone is re-training in psychology and says she would never again work in her previous field. She says her emails, and those of Drew Hutton have been hacked after she released the email to the Mining Leaks website.

“I’ve lost complete trust in the government and the industry. I can’t work with either of them. I’m a single parent so I basically have to sell my house right now because I’ve used up all my savings and I’m going to use my equity in my home to fund my retraining.”

Writing

Glenugie anti-CSG blockade

Coal seam gas mining company Metgasco’s shares plummeted to an all-time low of 15.5 cents this week, a drop of some eight per cent since last week.

The apparent nervousness of investors is not shared by Metgasco CEO Peter Henderson, who was issued 1,352,000 shares by the company on November 14 and has vowed the company will press ahead with CSG well drilling.

There is a lot at stake. If Metgasco complete their planned wells in the Northern Rivers and push the Lions Way pipeline through to its major market in Queensland, the company’s fortunes are sure to considerably improve.

Last week Mr Henderson declared that a poll conducted during Lismore’s 2012 council elections – which found 86.86% of voters to be against CSG, was fraudulent. And despite six Northern Rivers councils and 70 communities declaring themselves gasfield-free, Mr Henderson told the Daily Examiner last week that the public debate over CSG has been hi-jacked by ill-informed radicals.

“We do our best to provide real information but some people would rather hear anecdotal evidence and come to incredible conclusions that have no basis in fact,” he said.

He claimed that Metgasco employees have been threatened – and a bomb scare was phoned into their Casino office this week.

However Annie Kia, of CSG Northern Rivers, who held a vigil outside Casino’s Metgasco office when the bomb threat was allegedly phoned in on Tuesday at 1pm, ridiculed the suggestion.

“We don’t even believe this was real” she said. “There is a pattern of exaggeration and distortion coming from Metgasco’s PR.  While Metgasco constantly complain to the media about protesters, their message to their shareholders is completely different… at  their AGM this year, there was barely a mention of public resistance.”

Meanwhile, protestors have been successful in delaying construction of a well at Glenugie, south of Grafton, over the past fortnight. Local land-holder Deb Whitley chained herself to a truck on December 4, delaying fencing work around the site. Later actions managed to turn away a truck bearing an industrial generator, and the vigil at Casino and growing presence of protestors at the Glenugie site have thus far deterred Metgasco from bringing their drill rig to the site to complete the well.

With the groundswell of popular opposition to Metgasco’s activities appearing to be on the rise, its shareholders may well be in for an anxious ride.

I’ve been to the anti-CSG protest site at Glenugie and met a small group of nervous but highly determined people, mostly locals. None of them are experienced at this kind of thing, most are middle-aged or over and very well informed. All are deeply concerned about the potential hazards of CSG drilling.

Improvising delaying actions and using non-violent protest tactics such as lying down in front of vehicles, they’ve been successful in dramatically slowing Metgasco’s operations, turning away a generator truck and deterring a drill rig from even leaving its temporary base at Casino. It’s an emotional business – a truck-driver contracted by Metgasco quit after Deb Whitley’s brave lock-on and a young policeman was seen in tears, overwhelmed by the events.

Other concerned individuals have dropped by, including a council worker, with no political knowledge of the CSG controversy but an instinctive conviction that drilling so close to the Coldstream River where he fishes is not a good idea.

Farmers, a retired boxer, health-care workers and , they’re all represented by a shifting demographic. People come and go. But an abiding belief in what they’re doing remains.