Skip to content
Environment, Government Federal

First shale gas fracking plan in Australia under federal environment laws released, faces staunch community opposition in the Kimberley

Environs Kimberley 2 mins read

A new plan to drill and frack six oil and gas wells in the heart of the Kimberley’s National Heritage-listed Martuwarra Fitzroy River catchment will face fierce widespread community opposition in the Kimberley to the environmentally destructive plan. 

The fracking project plans were released on 24th July by Federal Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek’s Department of Climate Change, Energy, Environment and Water for public comment [Link here].  

“This is the first shale gas fracking proposal referred under Federal environment laws. It will be the first test of the water trigger since amendments were made to include shale gas in December last year,” said Environs Kimberley Director of Strategy, Martin Pritchard. 

Black Mountain subsidiary Bennett Resources, owned by Texan billionaire Rhett Bennett, plans to turn the Kimberley’s Canning Basin into a US-style oil and gas field.

While this proposal is for six wells, the ultimate goal is to develop a global-scale oil and gas field using the highly polluting fracking technique pioneered in the 1990s in the US.

“Black Mountain have said they need a pipeline to the Pilbara. If they got such a pipeline they’d need thousands of oil and gas wells to feed it and pay for it. We’d be looking at a landscape industrialised by the oil and gas industry like they have in Texas and across North America,” Mr Pritchard said.

“Fracking uses vast quantities of water laced with poisonous chemicals pumped at extreme pressures through wells that pierce groundwater aquifers. Wastewater returned to the surface has been found to contain radioactive materials as well as a legion of carcinogenic compounds. This industry is incompatible with the globally significant natural values of the Kimberley,” Lock the Gate's Claire McKinnon said.

Three wells have been test-fracked in the Kimberley over the past 14 years and all have had problems, including documented well-integrity failures.

Wastewater ponds have overflowed in the monsoon season, spilling onto floodplains and endangering the plants and animals of the Kimberley.

The wells are close to tributaries of the National Heritage-listed Martuwarra Fitzroy River, the last stronghold of the critically endangered Freshwater Sawfish, and is a highly popular Barramundi fishing mecca.

“The community is outraged that this is being inflicted on the Kimberley particularly given the climate crisis we are living in. If we want a safe climate future we know it is vital not to open new oil and gas fields especially at the scale we could see in the Kimberley,” said Yisah Bin Omar from Seed, Australia’s first Indigenous youth-led climate network.

Oil and gas company Woodside abandoned plans to build gas refineries costing $80-billion at James Price Point in 2013 after national protests and community backlash in the Kimberley.

“We don’t want to see a James Price Point situation unfolding again here, The Albanese and Cook Governments must take action now and rule out fracking gasfields in the Kimberley,” said Mr Pritchard.

ENDS


Contact details:

Martin Pritchard

Director of Strategy, Environs Kimberley

+61 427548075 

Media

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Property Real Estate
  • 24/12/2025
  • 06:00
Everybody's Home

Renters thousands of dollars out of pocket by Christmas

Confronting new analysis reveals renters in some of Australia’s capital cities are thousands of dollars worse off this Christmas compared to last, with Sydneysiders facing an extra $3,770 in rent annually. Everybody’s Home has analysed SQM Research data on weekly asking rents to find the annual increase in rents from December 2024 to December 2025 across capital cities. The analysis reveals renters in Sydney are paying an extra $72.50 per week to rent a house this year compared to last year, adding up to $3,770 extra annually, while unit renters face an additional $2,109. Brisbane renters are paying $2,839 extra…

  • Government Federal, Religion
  • 23/12/2025
  • 20:34
Zionist Federation of Australia (ZFA)

ZFA welcomes forthcoming state visit by Israeli President Isaac Herzog, following Bondi terror attack

23 December 2025 ZFA welcomes forthcoming state visit by Israeli President Isaac Herzog, following Bondi terror attack The Zionist Federation of Australia (ZFA) welcomes today’s confirmation that Israeli President Isaac Herzog will visit Australia early in the new year as a formal state visit. In the aftermath of the Bondi terror attack during Chanukah, ZFA President Jeremy Leibler wrote to President Herzog on behalf of Australia’s Jewish community, inviting him to come to Australia to stand with a grieving nation and a shattered community. ZFA welcomes the Australian Government’s decision to now extend the formal invitation in accordance with protocol.…

  • Contains:
  • Environment
  • 23/12/2025
  • 11:08
NSW EPA

EPA ISSUES FINES FOR FALSIFIED WASTE RECORDS

Ferrycarrig Construction Pty Ltd has been fined $40,000 after a NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) investigation found the company supplied dozens of falsified waste dockets relating to works at the Sydney Metro Waterloo construction site. The investigation was launched after a site auditor raised concerns with the EPA in May 2024. Further enquiries confirmed the forged records were supplied on four separate occasions in response to Sydney Metro Joint Venture’s (JV) repeated requests for proof of lawful disposal by the construction company. EPA Executive Director Regulatory Operations Steve Beaman said the supply of falsified documentation is unacceptable. “Our investigation into…

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.