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 CSG plans approved despite red flag 

CSG plans approved despite red flag

23 Nov, 2010 10:36 AM
ENVIRONMENT and Water Minister Tony Burke was warned by his department of "significant concerns" that $35 billion of coal-seam gas projects in Queensland could damage water supplies, cause land subsidence and interfere with reforms in the Murray-Darling Basin.

Advice from the Water Group within Mr Burke's department said the companies had been "extremely conservative" in their estimates of how much water they would take from the Great Artesian Basin. The minister's department said it could be "at least 1000 years" before water levels recovered.

It warned that gas extraction was "likely to have a significant impact" on native springs and implications for the Murray-Darling Basin by reducing water in the Condamine Alluvium, The Australian Financial Review reports.

The companies have estimated there may be 30 centimetres of land subsidence, but the Water Group suggested it could be much more, noting that previous extraction in the region had caused land movements of up to several metres.

The advice was labelled "draft" and provided to Mr Burke in that form. It has been tabled in response to a Senate motion, along with hundreds of other files that informed his decision to approve the projects on October 22.

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CSG extraction is a threat to the artesian and sub artesian water supplies, which a large area of Qld relies on. If this threat becomes a reality, there will be such a revolt and uproar from regional areas, politics will be changed in Qld forever.
Posted by R, 24/11/2010 10:58:05 AM, on Queensland Country Life
For governments to approve these things shows there must be some great unspoken & unknown fear causing a great irrational panic over something. To risk all this water and the land that relies on it for so long into the future shows they will allow anything that turns a quick penny regardless of the damage. It also shows they hold no interest and put no value in Australian agriculture.

We can import all our food and pay for it by digging the whole place up.

Who needs farming?

What will we do when we run out of places to destroy?

The fact We spend so much money & time "building" things like mines that have no future is one thing, but to detroy our precious water & land resources to do it is criminal insanity.

Posted by SPARKS, 24/11/2010 5:55:58 PM, on Queensland Country Life

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