For decades companies have tried to develop gas reserves from the Canning Basin in the Kimberley.Credit:Damien Kelly
Environs Kimberley director Martin Pritchard said the Kimberley needed protection from industrialisation.
“The Cook government has not explained why the Kimberley,a global icon,can be sacrificed to fracking,” he said.
A recent submission for federal environmental approval for Black Mountain’s plans about 120 kilometres south-east of Derby attracted almost 3000 public comments.
Now,the public has eight weeks to comment on the proposal to the WA Environmental Protection Authority.
Authority deputy chair Lee McIntosh said the plan had a high level of public interest and the potential to affect the environment in numerous ways.
Fracking in WA is allowed in parts of Kimberley and Mid West after the WA Labor governmentweakened a statewide moratorium in 2018,following an inquiry led by then-EPA chair Tom Hatton.
No fracking can occur until all Hatton’s recommendations are implemented. Almost six years on,that work continues,said a spokesman for the Department of Energy,Mines,Industry Regulation and Safety,but declined to say when it would be finished.