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QGC under fire again

08 Apr, 2011 04:00 AM
QUEENSLAND Gas Company has again been called to explain its actions after another landholder has accused the mining company of breaching its access agreement.

Friends of the Earth campaigner Drew Hutton, who was arrested last week after disobeying a police order to move on from the site, said lawyers for landowner Bryce Keating had complained that QGC had breached its agreement by clearing vegetation for a road wider than the 20 metres stated in their contract.

However, a QGC spokesman said the company was "not aware it has breached that (land access) agreement in any way".

Despite the challenge, QGC had resumed construction activities on the private land, raising the question of whether mining companies should be able to access private land when the terms of the access agreement were challenged.

In a letter to QGC written by Mr Keating's lawyer Peter Shannon on March 30, the landowner demanded QGC suspend entry to the property until a new compensation agreement was reached.

"Entry upon our clients' property will be treated as trespass," the letter stated.

At the weekend, Mr Hutton said police had "packed up and left," telling the protest group this was a "civil matter now" and QGC had stopped all work on the pipeline.

However, it is also understood a lack of police at Tara over weekend was a contributing factor to the suspension of mining activities.

"They (QGC) suddenly realised that, if they have breached their environmental agreement on this pipeline, then they might be similarly in breach in many other areas," he said.

However, Mr Hutton said police returned to Tara and dismantled the blockade on Monday afternoon, forcing about 15 protesters to leave the area while QGC resumed construction activity.

Tara protester Scott Collins said, as of late Tuesday, protesters had also returned to the site and would continue to blockade the area.

Providing a conflicting account of the reason for the construction shutdown at the weekend, a QGC spokesman said work had stopped on Thursday because the sub-contractor did not have the necessary equipment to proceed and work would continue when the equipment became available.

The spokesman said QGC lawyers were liaising with Mr Keating's legal representatives.

Bryce Keating's solicitor Peter Shannon said Mr Keating supported the protesters holding a blockade on his property "as long as they did not misbehave" and his client had not yet held any meetings with QGC to discuss the issues.

Mr Shannon said the current compensation measures only considered land valuation and did not take into account the social impact of any mining activities.

He said he believed some land access agreements across Queensland needed to be renegotiated.

"QGC is going into Tara with jackboots when they should be more sensitive to the needs of the community," Mr Shannon said.

"At the moment QGC are looking like corporate thugs and they need to address their own behaviour and sense of corporate responsibility," he said.

"Bryce Keating is legitimately upset and he is convinced he is being trounced upon and bullied.

"The people of Tara are being hung out to dry ? it is in the CSG industry's best interest to get this right but this is not going to be resolved if they send in the police and use whatever social influence the company has to get its way."

A QGC spokesman said the company had always dealt with Mr Keating in a "friendly, courteous and professional manner".

However, the company found Mr Shannon's comments about QGC's conduct "very surprising".

State MP for Southern Downs, Lawrence Springborg, also weighed into the debate this week.

He told the ABC that resource companies should not be able to enter private land until access disputes were settled by "all legal processes".

Despite ongoing difficulties with police and QGC security, coal seam gas protesters blockading Queensland Gas Company (QGC) from constructing the Tara pipeline claimed the Keating dispute was a "victory" in the latest round at the troubled development.

It is the most recent incident for the beleaguered company, which was forced to shut down its major pipeline construction between its Surat Basin gas fields and Gladstone earlier this month because some environmental plans for soil and species management had not been approved.

As reported in Queensland Country Life, QGC is also negotiating a settlement with Gulugaba grazier Nev Stiller after he accused the company of breaching its own code of conduct by constructing a 600- man accommodation camp less than 200 metres from his farm property.

QGC is expected to provide a compensation offer to Mr Stiller on Friday.

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comments


Date: Newest first | Oldest first
This is a trick another CSG company uses, compensation at say a 10 kilometre road 4 metres wide & make the road 6 metres wide only paying for 4 metres of course.

The other trick is if the road is gravelled and parts of the road are not gravelled the boss is given a bonus for saving money.

I tell you go and get your tape measure out.

Posted by les, 8/04/2011 1:42:28 PM, on Queensland Country Life
Before we all jump all over the gas company, consider the accuracy of the story. QGC DOES NOT stand for Queensland Gas Company. The Queensland Gas Company was bought by the BG Group and re-named QGC. If the journalist can't even get the name of the major players right, how much of the rest of this story is bullsh!t?
Posted by Dom, 12/04/2011 2:06:17 PM, on Queensland Country Life

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Drew Hutton.
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