Skip to content
Environment

Gas price shocks from Middle East crisis proves Australia must unhook itself from volatile fossil fuels

Greenpeace Australia Pacific < 1 min read

SYDNEY, Wednesday 4 March 2026 — As the Middle East crisis sends global gas and oil prices surging, Greenpeace Australia Pacific warns that peace and security will remain at the mercy of geopolitics as long as we remain hooked on fossil fuels.

Experts have warned the outbreak of war in the Middle East, and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, risks a repeat of the 2022 energy shock driven by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine that forced Australian power bills up by more than 40%.

While households brace for a new wave of price hikes, the conflict could prove a goldmine for gas corporations, with share prices for Woodside and Santos surging this week as they look to cash in on windfall war profits.

Solaye Snider, Climate Campaigner at Greenpeace Australia Pacific said: “The escalating violence and suffering in the Middle East is deeply distressing. 

“The resulting energy shock being felt around the world shows why we need to unhook from volatile sources of energy. It is disturbing to see that here in Australia, power bills are set to skyrocket because of yet another war, while gas corporations like Woodside and Santos stand to line their pockets from windfall war profits. 


“As long as we are dependent on fossil fuels, we will be at the mercy of geopolitics and impulsive decisions made by foreign leaders.  


“We need to urgently move away from these inherently volatile sources of energy. Transitioning to local renewables is the way to protect Australian households and businesses from international energy price volatility, and ensure a safe, clean and peaceful future for all.”

 

-ENDS- 


Contact details:

Lucy Keller on 0491 135 308 or [email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Environment, Government Federal
  • 27/03/2026
  • 16:04
NALSPA

Coalition’s call to scrap Electric Car Discount during fuel crisis doesn’t make sense

Australia’s peak body for novated leasing said the Coalition’s call to scrap the Electric Car Discount during a fuel crisis makes no sense.The Coalition wants to end the EV discount, which is helping Australians avoid petrol and its price shocks for good, in order to fund a short three-month halving ofthe fuel excise.“Any proposal to cut or reduce the EV Discount during the middle of a fuel crisis is irrational,” National Automotive Leasing and Salary Packaging Association (NALSPA) CEO Rohan Martin said.“It makes no sense to cut a policy that is helping Australians avoid petrol forever purely to fund a…

  • Agriculture Farming Rural, Environment
  • 27/03/2026
  • 10:31
Charles Darwin University

Green thumbs up: Project combines YouTube and AI to boost biosecurity

Gardening videos attract millions of views on YouTube each year, but an innovative research project has showed how this content could be critical in protecting Australia’s biosecurity. The project by Charles Darwin University (CDU), supported through the Northern Australia Biosecurity Strategy, combined YouTube gardening content and OpenAI to map urban green spaces and detect previously unregistered community gardens across northern Australia. Researchers fed a dataset of YouTube content into detailed large language model (LLM) prompts. The prompts classified whether a video related to community gardens and extracted the name of the garden, its address and a summary of the clip.…

  • Environment
  • 27/03/2026
  • 10:27
NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA)

PERILYA’S SOUTHERN OPERATIONS MINE ON NOTICE FOR DUST POLLUTION

The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) has fined Perilya Broken Hill Ltd $30,000 for failing to properly manage dust pollution at its Southern Operations lead, zinc and copper mine in central Broken Hill. The penalty was issued after a routine inspection of the premises in November 2025, where EPA officers observed visible dust pollution across multiple areas of the site. Officers also noticed no dust suppression measures were operating at the time, despite dry and windy conditions. NSW EPA Director Operations Scott Kidd said the EPA maintains strong regulatory oversight of mining operations along Broken Hill’s ‘Line of Lode’, one…

  • 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.