PeakDukeEnergy

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Thursday, 24 November 2011

Coal Seam Gas - By The Numbers

Posted on 01:20 by Unknown
The ABC has a look at the coal seam gas industry - Water, salt and carbon in the coal seam gas future.
An ABC investigative report into coal seam gas extraction, suggests the industry will bring about a 'massive redirection of the water system in Australia.'

The ABC has launched Coal Seam Gas: By the Numbers, a website that maps the coal seam gas industry and explores its impact on water resources into the future.

The project calculates the amount of water which will be drawn from the ground as a result of gas extraction from the coal seam, considers waste materials collected and approaches to managing that waste.

ABC investigative reporters have used data and information from many sources, including environmental impact studies commissioned by mining companies at the request of Governments.

Investigative reporter Wendy Carlisle says "the research shows a large number of coal seam gas leases coincide with major underground water supplies used by farmers."

"What it shows is in broad terms coal seam gas will engineer a massive redirection of the water system in Australia.

"Landholders and governments don't yet know the impact this will have. It is the great coal seam gas experiment."

There will be as many as 40,000 gas wells in Australia in less than 20 years.



The article refers to this background piece -Coal Seam Gas - By The Numbers.
Coal seam gas has emerged as a major industry in Australia in little more than a decade.

The scale and speed of its growth has been nothing short of astonishing: billions of dollars have poured into regional areas; new jobs have been created; state and national coffers have swelled; export contracts have been signed and sealed; massive liquefied natural gas facilities have been approved for construction at regional ports.

Farmers fear they are losing control of their land. Miners and some politicians say coal seam gas offers a much greener energy choice. Environmentalists and other politicians have cast doubt on those claims.

The ABC's data journalism project has pulled together information from dozens of sources to provide an insight into the promise and the dangers inherent in the coal seam gas rush.

Did you know:

- it is estimated there will be at least 40,000 coal seam gas wells in Australia by 2030?
- conservative estimates suggest coal seam gas wells could draw 300 gigalitres of water from the ground each year?
- the industry could produce as much greenhouse gas as all the cars on the road in Australia?
- modelling suggests the industry could produce 31 million tonnes of waste salt over the next 30 years? ...

Over the next 20 years coal seam gas operations are expected to continue expanding.

The Queensland Government has approved up to 40,000 wells, and as more gas is discovered it is likely that number will rise. ...



How much water will the CSG industry use?

Australia's Great Artesian Basin and its underground aquifers are a vital source of water; farmers and other bore users are given allocations for their use.

By 2014, the Commonwealth will have spent nearly $150 million under the Great Artesian Basin Sustainability Initiative, capping bores and fixing pipes to conserve water.

The coal seam gas industry is entitled to remove massive amounts of water from groundwater systems.

The Queensland Government says that if CSG mining causes groundwater levels to drop below specified "trigger" points then companies must "make good" to affected water users. The trigger points are:

- a five-metre drop in the level of agriculture bores; and
- a 0.2 of a metre drop in the water table surrounding naturally occurring springs, creeks and rivers.

The make-good arrangements have not yet been fully spelt out by government.

In addition to these provisions, the forthcoming Murray Basin Plan will set limits on groundwater extraction, including by the CSG industry. The states must enact these limits by 2019.

There is a fierce debate about the amount of water the coal seam gas industry will extract from underground, and what impact it may have on the sustainability of the Great Artesian Basin.

The industry suggests it will pull out somewhere between 126 gigalitres and 280 gigalitres a year, while the National Water Commission puts the figure above 300 gigalitres a year. Others, including the Water Group advising the Federal Government, suggest it is higher still.

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in australia, coal seam gas | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • The Ecuadorian Library
    Bruce Sterling has popped up at Medium with a great essay (following up on an older one called "The Blast Shack") on Manning, Assa...
  • The Bicycle Barometer
    "Optimise For the Common Case" has a description of a nifty device indicating the best form of transport on a given day in London ...
  • Sit tight, the tidal wave of clean energy is on the horizon
    The SMH has a suprisingly optimistic article on some Australian cleantech companies - Sit tight, the tidal wave of clean energy is on the ho...
  • Guerilla Grafters
    The LA Times has an article on a new variety of guerilla gardener - In San Francisco, a secret project bears fruit . All Tara Hui wanted to...
  • Iran Oil Bourse To Open Next Week ?
    Cryptogon points to a few interesting datapoints, amongst which is a claim the fabled Iranian oil bourse finally opens next week - IRAN’S BA...
  • Commentary: Is Peak Oil Dead?
    Resilience.org has a post by Steve Andrews of ASPO USA - Commentary: Is Peak Oil Dead? . Q: So, in your opinion, M. King Hubbert more or les...
  • Paul Hawken Visiting Australia
    I’m a bit late mentioning this (as half the dates have already passed by) but Paul Hawken is in the country and has been doing a few speakin...
  • Supermajordämmerung
    The Economist has declared "The day of the huge integrated international oil company is drawing to a close" - Supermajordämmerung ...
  • Peak oil can fuel a change for the better ?
    The SMH has a rare mainstream media opinion piece on peak oil (albeit of the doomy circa-2005 variety) - Peak oil can fuel a change for the...
  • A Material That Could Make Solar Power “Dirt Cheap”
    Technology Review has an article on solar power research at UNSW - A Material That Could Make Solar Power “Dirt Cheap” . A new type of solar...

Categories

  • 3d printing (10)
  • abu dhabi (1)
  • acquion (1)
  • afghanistan (1)
  • africa (1)
  • agl (2)
  • agriculture (4)
  • air transport (1)
  • airborne wind turbines (2)
  • alan jones (1)
  • algae (1)
  • alinta (1)
  • altarock (2)
  • ammonia (1)
  • amory lovins (1)
  • apple (1)
  • aquaculture (1)
  • arctic ice (9)
  • artificial meat (2)
  • aspo (1)
  • australia (49)
  • bakken (2)
  • banff mountain film festival (3)
  • baseload fallacy (1)
  • baseload power (1)
  • batteries (2)
  • bay of fundy (2)
  • bees (5)
  • belgium (1)
  • better place (3)
  • beyond zero emissions (2)
  • bhp (3)
  • bicycle (5)
  • big brother (1)
  • bill gross (1)
  • biomimicry (1)
  • bioplastic (3)
  • biopower (1)
  • bipv (1)
  • bob brown (1)
  • botswana (1)
  • brightsource (4)
  • browse (1)
  • bruce schneier (1)
  • bruce sterling (3)
  • buckminster fuller (1)
  • california (2)
  • canada (3)
  • canberra (1)
  • car sharing (1)
  • carbon tax (3)
  • carnegie wave energy (1)
  • ccd (2)
  • cdte (1)
  • censorship (1)
  • chart (1)
  • chernobyl (1)
  • chevron (2)
  • china (5)
  • cigs (1)
  • cleantech (1)
  • climategate (1)
  • cng (2)
  • coal (3)
  • coal seam gas (12)
  • cold fusion (1)
  • cpv (3)
  • craig venter (1)
  • csiro (1)
  • csp (16)
  • cypherpunks (1)
  • daniel yergin (2)
  • data centres (1)
  • david attenborough (1)
  • denmark (1)
  • desertec (2)
  • deserts of gold (1)
  • distributed manufacturing (8)
  • drought (6)
  • east timor (1)
  • eastern star gas (1)
  • ebook (1)
  • ecat (1)
  • economics (1)
  • electric bikes (2)
  • electric vehicles (6)
  • electricity demand (1)
  • electricity grid (6)
  • electricity prices (1)
  • elon musk (2)
  • energy (1)
  • energy efficiency (5)
  • energy storage (9)
  • energy white paper (2)
  • enhanced oil recovery (1)
  • envia (1)
  • esolar (1)
  • ethanol (1)
  • eu (1)
  • europe (1)
  • exergy (1)
  • export land (2)
  • exxon (2)
  • fabber (3)
  • fairfax (1)
  • fedex (1)
  • feed in tariffs (1)
  • fermi paradox (1)
  • fertiliser (1)
  • finance (1)
  • first solar (2)
  • fish (1)
  • floating lng (1)
  • floating offshore wind power (1)
  • floating wind power (1)
  • food (2)
  • food prices (6)
  • ford (1)
  • four day week (2)
  • fracking (1)
  • france (1)
  • fukushima (3)
  • futurism (1)
  • gallium arsenide (1)
  • gas (1)
  • gazprom (1)
  • ge (1)
  • geodynamics (1)
  • geoengineering (6)
  • george monbiot (2)
  • george orwell (1)
  • geothermal energy (19)
  • geothermal power (21)
  • germany (3)
  • geysers (1)
  • giles parkinson (1)
  • glenn greenwald (1)
  • global warming (50)
  • globalisation (2)
  • gm (1)
  • google (4)
  • google earth (1)
  • greece (4)
  • green buildings (4)
  • green it (3)
  • green roofs (1)
  • greenland (3)
  • gross feed in tariffs (1)
  • gtl (1)
  • guerilla gardening (1)
  • halliburton (1)
  • high frequency trading (1)
  • high speed rail (2)
  • hugo chavez (1)
  • hydra tidal (1)
  • hydraulic fracturing (1)
  • hydro (1)
  • hyperloop (1)
  • ian dunlop (1)
  • ibm (1)
  • iceland (1)
  • ichthys (1)
  • iea (4)
  • india (4)
  • inpex (1)
  • internet (7)
  • internet of things (1)
  • iran (2)
  • iran oil bourse (1)
  • iraq (6)
  • ivanpah (1)
  • japan (4)
  • jaron lanier (1)
  • jeremy grantham (1)
  • jeremy rifkin (3)
  • jevons paradox (1)
  • jobs (1)
  • jorgen randers (2)
  • julian assange (4)
  • kashagan (1)
  • kazahkstan (1)
  • kenya (2)
  • kuwait (1)
  • latin monetary union (1)
  • led lighting (1)
  • leonardo maugeri (4)
  • limits to growth (3)
  • linkedin (1)
  • liquid metal battery (1)
  • lithium (1)
  • lithium ion batteries (1)
  • lloyd energy systems (1)
  • lng (12)
  • london array (1)
  • maine (2)
  • makani (1)
  • malaysia (1)
  • malcolm turnbull (3)
  • mapping (1)
  • marine current turbines (1)
  • martin ferguson (2)
  • massive change (1)
  • meat (1)
  • media (7)
  • merit order effect (2)
  • methane hyrates (1)
  • michael klare (2)
  • microbial fuel cells (1)
  • mighty river (1)
  • mitt romney (1)
  • mojave desert (1)
  • mongolia (1)
  • monitoring (1)
  • nab (1)
  • nanosolar (1)
  • natural gas (17)
  • natural gas pipelines (1)
  • new york (1)
  • new zealand (2)
  • nicholas stern (1)
  • nikolai tesla (1)
  • northern territory (1)
  • norway (1)
  • nsa (3)
  • nuclear power (14)
  • ocean (1)
  • ocean energy (30)
  • oceanlinx (1)
  • offshore wind power (2)
  • oil (6)
  • oil price (10)
  • oil production (2)
  • olympic dam (2)
  • origin energy (2)
  • orkney islands (1)
  • otec (2)
  • ows (3)
  • participatory panopticon (2)
  • pascal's wager (1)
  • paul hawken (1)
  • peak demand (1)
  • peak oil (41)
  • peak timber (1)
  • peaking plant (1)
  • pentland firth (1)
  • petratherm (3)
  • photography (2)
  • pine beetles (1)
  • plastic (1)
  • poland (1)
  • population (1)
  • printcrime (1)
  • rail transport (1)
  • rare earths (3)
  • ray anderson (1)
  • recycling (3)
  • renewable energy (18)
  • road transport (2)
  • ron paul (4)
  • rsi (1)
  • russ hinze (1)
  • salton sea (1)
  • salvador option (1)
  • santos (3)
  • sasol (2)
  • saudi arabia (3)
  • saul griffith (1)
  • scenario planning (1)
  • scotland (7)
  • semprium (1)
  • sergey brin (1)
  • severn estuary (3)
  • shale gas (16)
  • shale oil (9)
  • shell (2)
  • siemens (1)
  • silex (1)
  • smart appliances (1)
  • smart grids (3)
  • smart meters (5)
  • solar oasis (1)
  • solar power (39)
  • solar pv (11)
  • solar thermal power (17)
  • solarreserve (1)
  • south australia (3)
  • south korea (3)
  • spain (1)
  • subsidies (2)
  • suntech (1)
  • surveillance (8)
  • sydney (3)
  • system d (1)
  • tar sands (1)
  • technocracy (1)
  • tenax (2)
  • tesla (2)
  • texas (1)
  • thames (1)
  • the oil drum (3)
  • thin film solar (3)
  • third industrial revolution (1)
  • tidal energy australia (1)
  • tidal power (25)
  • tin o'reilly (1)
  • tony blair (1)
  • transport (1)
  • trapwire (1)
  • trigeneration (1)
  • uk (5)
  • us (2)
  • us politics (2)
  • venezuela (1)
  • vestas (1)
  • victoria (1)
  • video (1)
  • volt (1)
  • wa (1)
  • warren buffett (1)
  • water (4)
  • wave power (7)
  • wheatstone (1)
  • whyalla (1)
  • wikileaks (4)
  • wildlife photographer of the year (1)
  • william gibson (1)
  • wind power (15)
  • wizard power (1)
  • woodside (1)
  • zero carbon australia (2)
  • zinc (1)

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (156)
    • ►  August (23)
    • ►  July (74)
    • ►  June (7)
    • ►  May (19)
    • ►  March (14)
    • ►  February (12)
    • ►  January (7)
  • ►  2012 (191)
    • ►  December (3)
    • ►  November (11)
    • ►  October (7)
    • ►  September (25)
    • ►  August (25)
    • ►  July (29)
    • ►  June (24)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (8)
    • ►  March (23)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (34)
  • ▼  2011 (153)
    • ►  December (38)
    • ▼  November (52)
      • Denmark aims for 100 percent renewable energy in 2050
      • BrightSource Strikes World's Biggest Solar Energy ...
      • The Utopian Impulse: Buckminster Fuller and the Ba...
      • A New Era of Gunboat Diplomacy
      • Google Quits Renewable Energy Research
      • Which way will wind power blow ?
      • New Climategate emails reveal life is tough for sc...
      • Coal Seam Gas - By The Numbers
      • Australia Could Be A Geothermal Powerhouse
      • Climate change episode of Frozen Planet won't be s...
      • Saudi Oil Production Declining
      • Advance Could Challenge China's Solar Dominance In...
      • Counterproductive Crackdowns
      • Origin Seeking at Least One More Buyer to Expand C...
      • Why solar parity scares big utilities
      • Mongolian city to be cooled by giant ice cube
      • Why Is China Building These Gigantic Structures In...
      • South Korea to build 2.5 GW offshore wind farm
      • Interesting Video
      • Radio National: Coal Seam Gas Report 'Suppressed'
      • Prices of Rare Earth Metals Declining Sharply
      • Technocrats
      • Biggest Find in Decades Becomes $39 Billion Cautio...
      • Batteries Made Of Salt Water Last 10 Times Longer ...
      • Suntech calls an Australian solar boom
      • Peak oil: the five most common misconceptions
      • The Declines Incline
      • Italy’s Monti appointment a concession to bewilder...
      • Lab-Grown Meats Face Long Road to Supermarket
      • Energy for the 99 Percent
      • Coal Seam Gas and The Great Artesian Basin
      • IEA World Energy Outlook: “If we don’t change dire...
      • 100% renewables, no hot air
      • Radical Reels
      • The Cause Of Riots And The Price of Food
      • 24 Hours to Massive Change: Global Design Workshop
      • System D
      • We can recycle plastic
      • Green Day: Australian Carbon Tax Passes Senate
      • Seven Billion: The Graph
      • Murmuration
      • William Gibson, The Art of Fiction No. 211
      • Gas prices to double in 20 years as demand explode...
      • Wind like Spain? It's a no-brainer
      • Origin and Sasol to look for coal seam gas in Bots...
      • In marine current energy, Siemens wants to be 800-...
      • Merkel Won’t Let Euro Split, May Cause Dark Age, R...
      • Kenya to start work on new geothermal plant
      • UK court upholds Assange extradition
      • Obama administration announces desert 'solar energ...
      • Europe's moment of truth
      • Rolls-Royce Orkney Tidal Turbine Operational
    • ►  October (32)
    • ►  September (31)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile