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AAP
AAP
Environment
Aaron Bunch

Climate activists scale 140-metre crane at Woodside HQ

Four protesters climbed a 140-metre crane on a building next to Woodside's Perth headquarters. (HANDOUT/GREENPEACE)

Activists have climbed a 140-metre crane next to Woodside Energy's Perth headquarters, to decry the oil and gas producer as "Australia's biggest climate threat".

Greenpeace says four climbers scaled the towering construction crane about 5.30am on Tuesday and unfurled a 25-metre banner reading "Stop Woodside".

Police were called to the building site in the CBD and arrested the group, with work resuming at the site by 7.15am.

Three men, aged 23, 30 and 31, and a woman, 25, were charged with one count each of trespass.

Woodside described the incident as a cheap and unlawful publicity stunt that put the community at risk and wasted the time of first responders, saying such disruptions won't solve global warming.

A Greenpeace banner on a crane next to the Woodside's  Perth HQ.
Greenpeace says fossil fuel companies like Woodside are Australia's biggest climate threat. (HANDOUT/GREENPEACE)

Greenpeace Australia Pacific chief executive David Ritter defended the action saying "Woodside is Australia's greatest climate threat".

"Woodside threatens our oceans, threatens our whales, threatens our climate," he told reporters after the protest.

Tuesday's protest comes days after the federal offshore oil and gas regulator gave Woodside the go-ahead to start undersea survey work for its $16.5 billion Scarborough gas project off the WA coast.

Mr Ritter said the operation involves "seismic blasting" and "blowing up" the ocean, which in turn endangers whale habitat.

Gas from the project will be processed at Woodside's Burrup Peninsula onshore facility, where expansion work is underway.

Mr Ritter said it was Australia's "most climate polluting" project and could "spew out" up to 6.1 billion tonnes of carbon emissions over its 50-year life.

"Bigger than the combined total of the next two largest proposed fossil fuel projects in Australia," he said.

The environmental lobby group wants the federal government to reject Woodside's Burrup Hub Proposal.

"Right now, in Dubai, world leaders are hearing yet again from climate scientists that it is essential that the world transitions away from coal, oil and gas at emergency speed and scale, which is the very opposite of what Woodside is planning," Mr Ritter said.

A Woodside spokeswoman said the company was proud of its contribution to the national economy.

"Our Scarborough Energy Project will create more than 3000 jobs in the construction phase and add almost 600 new operational jobs," she said.

The Burrup Peninsula, about 30km west of Karratha in WA's Pilbara region, is also known as Murujuga to traditional owners and contains the world's largest and oldest collection of petroglyphs.

The Scarborough gas field is located in the Carnarvon Basin, about 375km off its coast.

The four people charged are scheduled to appear in the Perth Magistrates Court on December 27.

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