Skip to content
Energy, Indigenous

Experts warn clean energy transition must not come at cost of Indigenous rights

Charles Darwin University (CDU) 2 mins read

First Nations’ rights over Sea Country are being overlooked as Australia races into offshore gas and wind development, according to new research, with experts warning Traditional Owners remain excluded from decisions that threaten vital cultural, spiritual and economic connections.

According to a study in Heritage led by the Sea Country Alliance with Charles Darwin University (CDU), cultural rights at sea are far less recognised than those on land, creating a legislative gap that leaves Traditional Owners without a voice in offshore development.

Co-Chair of the Sea Country Alliance and the paper’s co-lead author, Rhetti Hoskins, said that without reform, offshore wind and gas risk becoming the next frontier of dispossession.

“For over 65,000 years Traditional Owners have cared for Sea Country, ensuring that the ecosystems thrived, and cultural connections remained strong," he said.

“Our connection to Sea Country is as important as it is to land, and yet, the protections that recognise our rights aren’t the same."

The research points to the Federal Court case Munkara v Santos (No 3) [2024], and illustrates the difficulties Traditional Owners face in safeguarding songlines, totems and other cultural heritage in the absence of free, prior and informed consent (FPIC).

The paper calls for urgent reforms to embed the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) into offshore legislation and proposes a national Economic Empowerment Fund to ensure affected communities - including those in spill zones - share in the benefits.

Co-Chair of the Sea Country Alliance and the paper’s co-lead author, Gareth Ogilvie, said Australia must now step up as a global leader.

“Australia must not just meet but lead international best practice in approaching Sea Country as a holistic environment that includes cultural significance, plants and animals and minerals,” he said.

“Our Songlines connect the heart of Australia to the Australian coastline as it once was, now far out at sea - we understand Sea Country and terrestrial Country as one.”

CDU’s Asia Pacific School of Business and Law academic and the paper’s co-author, Matthew Storey, said Australia’s energy transition will be judged not only by its climate credentials but also by its justice credentials.

“Offshore energy development could either repeat the mistakes of past extraction regimes or set a global benchmark for Indigenous-led, culturally safe, and economically just energy development.”


Contact details:
Alyce Mokrzycki
Media and Communications Officer
 
Marketing, Media and Communications
E: [email protected]
W: cdu.edu.au
 
CDU logo

Media

More from this category

  • Energy, Government QLD
  • 12/12/2025
  • 12:44
Power Together Coalition

Sunny Day as Queensland’s Supercharged Solar for Renters Launched

A collection of social service, faith and environmental groups have welcomed the launch of the Queensland Government’s Supercharged Solar for Renters scheme. The Power Together coalition, including the Queensland Conservation Council, Parents for Climate and Energetic Communities, have long called on the Queensland Government to help all Queenslanders, particularly renters and social housing tenants, access affordable solar energy to reduce their power bills and emissions. This comes as recently released research from Monash University found that solar systems increase Brisbane property values by an average of $30,000. According to the groups, the Crisafulli Government now needs to expand support to…

  • Energy
  • 12/12/2025
  • 10:05
Essential Services Commission

Businesses punished for providing false information, failing to get consent for energy efficient upgrades

The Essential Services Commission has taken action against two Victorian Energy Upgrades (VEU) accredited businesses for allegedly breaching the program rules. The VEU program is an energy efficiency program, designed to help Victorians cut their energy bills by supporting households and businesses to use energy more efficiently. Accredited businesses undertake energy efficiency upgrades that entitle them to create Victorian energy efficiency certificates, which they can then sell. Vision Environmental Solutions The commission has placed a six-month restriction on Vision Environmental Solutions Pty Ltd’s VEU accreditation. It alleges Vision Environmental Solutions and contractors working on its behalf made false claims about…

  • Indigenous
  • 12/12/2025
  • 05:30
eSafety

New resources to help First Nations communities stay well connected during social media delay

12 December 2025 New resources to help First Nations communities stay well connected during social media delay eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant is encouraging First Nations families to visit eSafety.gov.au to access tailored resources designed to help Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teenagers stay well connected when the social media minimum age takes effect from 10 December. Co-designed with First Nations communities, the resources explain what is changing, why it matters and how to support Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people through the transition. The First Nations social media minimum age restrictions resource package includes: First Nations parent and…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.