Skip to content
Environment, Government Federal

Exposed: Text exchange reveals Woodside ‘state capture’

Australian Conservation Foundation < 1 mins read

A barrage of almost 200 text messages between Woodside and senior officials from the federal Department of Climate Change, Energy & Water reveals the extent of high-level access gas giants expect – and get.

The heavily-redacted text exchange took place between 21 May and 7 October 2025 in the crucial period when conditions for the controversial North West Shelf extension were being decided.

During this period, Woodside claimed stronger environmental conditions would make its not-yet-approved Browse offshore gas project – gas from which the company proposes to pipe 1000km to the North West Shelf export plant – unviable.

As revealed in documents obtained using Freedom of Information laws, there was relentless, persistent and at times after-hours communication on mobile devices between Woodside and senior government officials about the approval process and public communications.

After the negotiation period, the government weakened the environmental requirements it had initially proposed for the North West Shelf extension.

“What we’re seeing here is a gas giant having unfiltered, casual access – at all hours – to senior departmental officials, who are bending over backwards to respond to demands and requests,” said ACF CEO Adam Bandt.

“This raises serious questions about inappropriate access and state capture at a critical time in the North West Shelf assessment process.

“Big corporations have too much power over governments. Governments should make decisions for the public interest, not for vested interests.

“When Woodside sends the government ‘you up’ texts, the public and nature gets screwed.”

ACF’s court case challenging Minister Murray Watt’s approval of Woodside’s North West Shelf gas export hub out to 2070 is scheduled to be heard in July. 


Contact details:

Freya Cole, [email protected], 0477 638 774

Josh Meadows, [email protected], 0439 342 992

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Transport Automotive
  • 05/03/2026
  • 09:17
Electric Vehicle Council

Retaining Electric Car Discount Key to Shielding Australians from Soaring Petrol Prices

Key Facts: Petrol prices have risen above $2 per litre in Australian cities due to Middle East conflict, prompting calls to retain the Electric Car Discount Electric vehicles can save households up to $3,000 annually in transport costs, primarily through avoiding petrol expenses The Electric Car Discount has helped over 114,000 Australians transition to electric vehicles 5 March 2026 As the Middle East conflict drives petrol prices above $2 per litre in Australian cities, the Electric Vehicle Council is calling on Federal and State Governments to strengthen support for electric vehicles and protect the Electric Car Discount. With global oil…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Indigenous
  • 05/03/2026
  • 00:01
RMIT University

Australia’s carbon markets risk penalising Indigenous stewardship

Carbon markets rewarding the recovery of degraded environments risk penalising long-term Indigenous stewardship, according to a coalition of experts writing inNature Climate Change. The…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Information Technology
  • 04/03/2026
  • 20:30
Climate KIC

Applications Are Open for ClimateLaunchpad, the World’s Largest Green Business Ideas Competition

Singapore, March 4, 2026 – ClimateLaunchpad, the world’s largest green business ideas competition by Climate KIC, has opened applications for its 2026 edition. Since…

  • 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.