ID :
127429
Fri, 06/11/2010 - 21:55
Auther :

State may take land for Browse: Barnett



West Australian Premier Colin Barnett has threatened to compulsorily acquire land
earmarked for a multi-billion-dollar gas development if a dispute between rival
native title claimants continues.
Mr Barnett wants an indigenous land-use agreement to be signed by the end of June
for the Woodside Petroleum Ltd-led Browse liquefied natural gas (LNG) processing hub
at James Price Point, about 60km north of Broome.
But talks between the Goolarabooloo/Jabirr Jabirr people and the Kimberley Land
Council (KLC) have broken down, suggesting Mr Barnett's deadline will not be met.
The KLC said in a statement on Friday it had advised the Traditional Owner
Negotiating Committee (TONC) to suspend negotiations with Woodside and the state
government while the KLC deals with legal action brought against it by the
Goolarabooloo/Jabirr Jabirr people.
"I am both disappointed and sad about today's development," Mr Barnett told AAP in
an interview on Friday.
"There have been good negotiations conducted entirely in good faith, but now there
seems to be a very severe division in the claimant groups.
"That makes it very difficult for government.
"We can only deal with a single unified representative group of traditional owners.
"I have, through the heads of agreement that was signed back in April last year
(between Woodside, the state government and KLC), allowed time for an indigenous
land-use agreement to be reached.
"The deadline for that is the 30th of June, so until we get to that deadline, I
remain committed to reaching a final agreement through an ILUA (indigenous land use
agreement) by consent, though I would acknowledge that looks unlikely it will be
achieved given today's development."
If an agreement between the native title groups can't be reached, Mr Barnett said
Woodside would either have to return to the drawing board or the land would be
compulsorily acquired by the state government - a possibility Australia's only
Liberal state leader first flagged last year.
"I've never ruled it out," Mr Barnett said.
"It's not my preferred way.
"But after the Inpex project was lost back in 2008, I have said that I would be
prepared to use compulsory acquisition."
Mr Barnett said most of the details of an ILUA had been agreed upon, "so it would be
very disappointing to see this negotiation fail at the last hurdle".
"The smaller group seems to be undoing the process, which is really sad."
Mr Barnett said the project was set to bring $1.5 billion worth of economic and
social improvement to the Kimberley region.
"There has never been an opportunity for Aboriginal people of that scale in
Australia's history ... direct payments, direct jobs, direct health, direct
education, direct housing ... not just potential benefits."
Woodside said in an emailed statement to AAP on Friday that the KLC's action was
"not unexpected".
"We intend to deliver on our commitments to Kimberley indigenous people as outlined
in the heads of agreement struck between Woodside, traditional owners and the state
in April 2009," the energy giant said.
Woodside said it would continue to work towards making a final investment decision
on the Browse project by mid-2012.



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