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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
Comment
Adam Morton

The Australian government admits its funding is supporting the gas industry. That’s politically risky

A storm builds over the Ichthy's onshore gas processing facility on Middle Arm in Darwin Harbour.
Dark clouds are gathering over the NT’s Middle Arm gas project. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

Events in Canberra this week point to a significant political battleground for the next federal election.

More than 80 doctors converged on the capital to protest against government support for fossil fuel expansion in the Northern Territory. It might not sound like that many people, but it’s representative of a bigger movement backed by several crossbenchers, including David Pocock and Monique Ryan.

About 2,300 medical professionals have backed a call for the Albanese government to withdraw $1.5bn funding for an industrial development at Middle Arm, south of Darwin. The funding is a carryover from the Morrison era. Labor came to power last year planning to cut support for the Coalition’s never-delivered “gas-led recovery” from the pandemic, and it did in several cases. But the money for the NT development survived.

As Guardian Australia’s Lisa Cox has reported, the government knows this is intended to support the development of the large Beetaloo Basin gas resource in remote country south of Middle Arm – it just doesn’t say so publicly.

Labor has struggled to get its story straight on gas in the NT. The project is described as a “sustainable development precinct”. Anthony Albanese told parliament on Tuesday that one project at Middle Arm was “potentially associated with fossil fuels” but five were for clean energy and resources, including hydrogen, critical minerals and solar.

We know from documents released under freedom of information laws this is not how it has been described internally.

A briefing to the government by environment department officials shortly after Labor took office in July last year described Middle Arm as “a key enabler” allowing the development of the Beetaloo so that gas could be transported north – that is, extracted, processed and mostly exported as liquified natural gas – with a goal of “further benefiting the NT economy”.

The ABC has reported on separate documents that showed the NT Labor government – an unabashed and at times aggressive supporter of gas industry expansion – describing Middle Arm as a “new demand gas centre” in its original pitch to Infrastructure Australia.

None of this means there won’t be climate-friendly elements to the development at Middle Arm. But it tells us that its reason for existing includes fossil fuel growth and distribution. The foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, this week described the project as “infrastructure that will develop clean industries as well as enabling Australia’s gas industry” during an economic transition.

Why does this matter? Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: because the evidence is that large-scale new gas developments are at odds with attempts to deal with the climate crisis. The International Energy Agency said more than two years ago that there should be no new oil and gas fields if we are serious about dealing with global heating and reaching net zero emissions by 2050. To claim otherwise is sophistry, not pragmatism.

Yes, gas will continue to be used for some time yet. We still use quite a bit of it, though not as much as is sometimes implied: about 80% is exported or used locally by the export industry. It will take time to electrify homes and businesses, and gas is likely to have an ongoing niche role in Australia as a standby electricity source and in a handful of industries where it cannot be easily replaced.

But if the government is to be consistent on climate – and if it is genuine in its support for attempts to limit average global heating to 1.5C, as it claims – it should publicly embrace the idea that we need to use as little gas as possible. The goal should be to have enough gas to meet falling demand, not to expand the industry in an offshore cash grab.

That’s the project that’s being embarked on in the NT and off the northern Western Australian coast. It’s not about helping address the climate crisis. There is ample evidence that gas has substantial emissions.

Climate Analytics found gas was the largest source of emissions growth globally, surpassing coal. Carbon offsets and carbon capture and storage are not the answers to stopping that. In many cases there are affordable, clean alternatives.

There are different views on how the gas industry should be regulated. A starting point should be that it doesn’t receive public funding. The resources minister, Madeleine King, might argue otherwise, but the current Middle Arm funding is a subsidy that at least in part works against what the country is trying to achieve.

Labor is clearly divided on gas. The NT government backs the industry in the name of economic development and dismisses scientific arguments as trolling from big-city southerners. King says gas can lift millions out of poverty, an argument that looks shaky given the biggest customer for Australian gas is Japan, a wealthy country that analysts say has been backtracking on its climate commitments.

Others in Labor have been more critical. Some doubt whether many new projects will be economically viable. The industry minister, Ed Husic, has acknowledged Australia is not short of gas and has suggested gas companies are greedy. The climate change and energy minister, Chris Bowen, has introduced policies that industry leaders have not welcomed. Those policies will have to get tougher: a new target for 2035 is due before the election.

There is a long way to go before then, but I suspect the biggest issue for the growing cohort of voters motivated by the climate crisis will be whether the government plans to keep supporting fossil fuel expansion.

As we saw last year, they are increasingly willing to take their vote elsewhere if they don’t like the answer.

• Adam Morton is Guardian Australia’s climate and environment editor

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