
‘Self-serving tosh’: Woodside’s Browse gas would derail energy transition and wreck Scott Reef – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)
Off the coast of Western Australia, plans for extensive offshore drilling near Scott Reef have once again drawn scrutiny from environmental advocates. Woodside released a report this week asserting that its Browse gas project would not hinder the state’s net zero goals. Critics argue the assessment overlooks both ecological threats and broader energy realities.
Threats to a Fragile Marine Ecosystem
Scott Reef supports nesting sea turtles, endangered pygmy blue whales and other vulnerable species. Woodside’s proposal calls for at least 50 wells in the area, which the Western Australia Environmental Protection Agency previously flagged for unacceptable risks. Independent scientific reviews of the company’s revised plans found only marginal adjustments that fail to address core survival needs for these threatened populations.
The reef remains one of Australia’s few largely untouched oceanic systems. Turning it into an industrial gas zone, opponents say, would introduce long-term disturbance through drilling activity, infrastructure and potential spills. Such changes could compound existing pressures on marine biodiversity already stressed by warming oceans.
Disputed Claims on Emissions and Climate Targets
Woodside’s report maintains that the project would have no bearing on Western Australia’s net zero trajectory because the state is already projected to fall short. Greenpeace Australia Pacific described the document as reading like satire and labeled it self-serving tosh from a corporation seeking to expand fossil fuel extraction amid global energy volatility.
Senior campaigner Hannah Schuch stated that portraying a large-scale carbon project as compatible with the energy transition amounts to delusion. She noted that the Browse development would rank among the country’s most polluting undertakings if approved. The group emphasized that genuine progress requires displacing gas with renewables rather than the reverse.
Shortfalls in Meeting Local Energy Needs
Woodside has repeatedly fallen short on commitments to supply domestic markets. Data from the DomGas Alliance shows that less than 4 percent of gas from the company’s Pluto facility has reached West Australian consumers, well below the 15 percent threshold required under existing arrangements. This pattern raises questions about whether new offshore developments would prioritize local households and industries or focus instead on export profits.
Western Australia possesses abundant renewable resources capable of powering homes, hospitals and key sectors with lower-cost, cleaner energy. Modeling cited by critics indicates these alternatives could meet demand without expanding gas infrastructure. The choice, they argue, lies between accelerating renewables or locking in further fossil fuel dependence.
Pressure on Federal Decision Makers
Environment Minister Murray Watt now faces calls to reject the project outright. Greenpeace has urged him to heed the half-million Australians who have petitioned for protection of Scott Reef. The outcome, the organization contends, will test the Albanese government’s environmental record on one of the nation’s last pristine reef systems.
Approval would mark a significant expansion of gas operations in sensitive waters. Rejection, by contrast, would align with scientific warnings about cumulative impacts on threatened species and the urgent need to curb emissions growth.
What matters now: The federal government must weigh the project’s claimed economic benefits against documented risks to biodiversity and climate targets. Independent assessments have already questioned whether proposed safeguards deliver meaningful protection.