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Beetaloo Basin Gas Development – Northern Territory

Beetaloo Basin Gas Project

Beetaloo Basin Gas Development – Northern Territory

The Beetaloo Basin Gas Development is one of Australia’s most ambitious and controversial fossil fuel expansions. Located approximately 500 kilometres southeast of Darwin, the basin spans 28,000 square kilometres and is estimated to contain up to 500 trillion cubic feet of shale gas.

Several companies—including Santos, Tamboran Resources, Empire Energy, and Falcon Oil & Gas—are currently conducting exploration and pilot fracking trials. Full-scale production could begin as early as 2025, depending on final approvals and infrastructure development, including new pipelines linking Beetaloo gas to the East Coast grid.

The Northern Territory government has endorsed the project, and a 2018 scientific inquiry into fracking concluded it could proceed under strict conditions—though many of those recommendations remain only partially implemented.

Bear in mind that the terms of reference for the Pepper Inquiry, as the 2018 scientific inquiry into fracking was known, ensured that they only asked “how can the gas projects proceed” and questions such as “should the gas projects proceed” were not within the scope of the inquiry.

There’s a joke in politics – “never have an inquiry unless you know the outcome.”

The project has been fiercely criticised for its potential impact on the climate. If fully developed, Beetaloo could emit up to 1.2 billion tonnes of greenhouse gases over 25 years, making it one of the most carbon-intensive gas fields in Australia.

A CSIRO-backed report claimed the basin could be developed without increasing Australia’s net emissions, relying heavily on carbon offsets and capture technologies.

However, climate scientists and independent experts have challenged the report’s credibility, warning that it is overly optimistic and fails to account for downstream emissions.

With Traditional Owners opposing fracking on cultural grounds and environmental groups calling it a “carbon bomb,” the Beetaloo Basin has become a flashpoint in the broader debate over Australia’s role in the global transition away from fossil fuels.

Beetaloo Basin Gas Development Overview

Infrastructure and Investment

Beetaloo Basin Gas Emissions and Climate Impact

Environmental and Social Concerns

Company Information


The Beetaloo Basin represents one of the most consequential fossil fuel frontiers in Australia. Framed by industry and government as an economic bonanza, it is equally described by scientists and Traditional Owners as a climate and cultural disaster in the making. With predicted emissions in the billions of tonnes, Beetaloo raises urgent questions about Australia’s real pathway to net zero.

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