Skip to content
Energy, Environment

Leaked report confirms WA gas is derailing the clean energy transition in Asia

Greenpeace Australia Pacific 2 mins read

PERTH, Thursday 6 November 2025 – A Deloitte report leaked to the media, commissioned by the government of Western Australia, confirms WA’s gas exports are fuelling the climate crisis by delaying Asia’s clean energy transition, says Greenpeace.

The report's findings reinforce other independent analysis on the global energy transition, and expose the massive climate and economic risk of the state’s continued expansion of new fossil fuel projects.

Greenpeace gas campaigners in Australia and Southeast Asia say the report firmly challenges the gas industry’s claims that WA’s gas exports are helping countries in Southeast Asia to decarbonise, when it is actually delaying the renewable energy transition and fuelling climate disasters.

Joe Rafalowicz, Head of Climate and Energy at Greenpeace Australia Pacific, said: “This report confirms what experts have been warning for years: WA’s gas exports are fuelling the climate crisis and delaying the roll-out of clean energy in Asia. The CSIRO concluded the same thing in a 2019 report Woodside tried to hide.”

“How many more reports will be buried before the Government of Western Australia accepts the truth: WA gas is fuelling the climate crisis, and any claims made by the gas industry that suggest otherwise are nothing but a smokescreen to wring every dollar out of their stranded fossil fuel assets.

“Our trading partners need clean, reliable energy, not expensive, polluting gas — and Western Australia can be the one to provide it, as Greenpeace’s recent modelling clearly shows. If we act now, renewable energy can be our next big success story. We encourage the WA Government to accept the overwhelming evidence and firmly lean into the state’s green economic future."

Anchalee Pipattanawattanakul, Campaign Leader at Greenpeace Southeast Asia, said: "Australia’s growing gas exports are among the factors holding back Thailand and the region from transition toward renewable energy, keeping us dependent on fossil fuels and worsen the devastating climate impacts that we are already experiencing. 

Expensive gas imports from Australia, often resold by other countries, are a direct driver of our surging electricity prices. In 2022, growing gas imports contributed to a doubling of domestic gas prices in Thailand, hitting ordinary people with record-high power bills. 

Instead of helping us, this flood of expensive gas flowing in from Western Australia is delaying our transition to cheap, clean energy and fuelling more severe climate disasters like floods, droughts and extreme heat. We need partners for a renewable future, not polluters who lock us into expensive, fossil-fuel dependency, while big gas corporations keep the profits.”

-ENDS-

Notes to Editor:

Greenpeace’s report Power Shift: WA’s Electrified Future, written in collaboration with Springmount Advisory, shows for the first time how Western Australia can become a global renewable energy powerhouse by rapidly scaling up investment in green energy and industry.


Contact details:

For more information or interviews contact Lucy Keller on 0491 135 308  or [email protected]

More from this category

  • Environment, Women
  • 05/03/2026
  • 12:00
Bush Heritage Australia & Trust for Nature

NEW INTERNSHIP TO SUPPORT EMERGING WOMEN AND GENDER DIVERSE CONSERVATIONISTS

Bush Heritage Australia and Trust for Nature have announced a collaborative internship designed to open new pathways for women and gender diverse early career conservationists. Women remain underrepresented across many STEM fields in Australia. In 2024 the proportion of women in STEM-qualified occupations had plateaued at 15 percent. While environmental science performs much better than the broader STEM sector in gender representation, equity has not yet been consistently achieved or sustained. The Bush Heritage and Trust for Nature Conservation Internship aims to directly address this gap by providing practical experience, professional networks and clearer entry points into conservation careers. Bush…

  • Environment
  • 05/03/2026
  • 11:36
Greenpeace Australia Pacific

Greenpeace welcomes WA Government’s starting plan for renewable energy projects to pay their way, but the real costs should be borne by oil and gas industry

SYDNEY, Thursday 5 March 2026 — The WA Government has released their Community Benefit Guidelines outlining the expectations on renewable energy companies paying their fair share to local communities hosting wind turbines and solar panels.Big gas corporations like Chevron and Woodside recently announced annual profits in the billions, while the WA Government is expected to receive only $365 million in total royalties for the 2025-'26 financial year.That amounts to only 0.7 per cent of WA’s revenue with further declines expected. Most oil and gas operations are currently not required to pay any royalties at all to WA. Geoff Bice, WA…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Travel Tourism
  • 05/03/2026
  • 11:06
Divers for Climate

Thirty weedy seadragons in a single dive: What South Australia’s divers are seeing underwater

South Australia’s harmful algal bloom has entered its second year, local divers are witnessing dramatic shifts in marine life. A national community of dive…

  • 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.