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Dominic Perrottet on Narrabri gas project: ‘We need this project up and running’

AAP reports on delays with the project:

The boss of Santos will meet the NSW premier to resolve confusion and delays to the $3.6 billion Narrabri gas project.

The controversial project across 95,000 hectares in the Pilliga forest and nearby grazing land in north-west NSW has the potential to provide up to half of NSW’s natural gas needs in the next 20 years.

But it has been bogged down in the first part of a four-stage approval process since the NSW Independent Commission green-lit the project in 2020.

NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet said he has stepped in, speaking with his bureaucrats this week ahead of a meeting with Santos chief executive Kevin Gallagher next week.

“We need this project up and running,” he told Sydney radio 2GB on Friday.

“This project also has a reservation policy attached to it. This is gas for the people of NSW. It can provide gas for the next 30 years and I want to see it up and running.”

Santos, which has approval to operate the project until 2045, can drill up to 850 new gas wells on up to 425 new well pads across the region.

Up to 1,300 construction and 200 operational jobs will be created, the oil and gas giant says.

A handful of pilot wells have been drilled already and the planning secretary has approved management plans for waste, onsite fires and Aboriginal cultural heritage.

But a rehabilitation management plan is still pending approval, having only been ticked off by the resources regulator in October.

Phase two of the project, comprising construction for production wells and activities, is expected to commence in mid-to-late 2023, Santos says.

Gas will potentially be routed through a yet-to-be-constructed gas pipeline between Queensland and Newcastle recently acquired by Santos.

The project has been heavily criticised by farming and conservation groups.

The Australian Conservation Foundation has called Narrabri a “climate bomb” while Lock The Gate says building fossil-fuel infrastructure as the world decarbonises “made no sense”.

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