‘Depart politics to the politicians’: why rural Queensland is a hotbed of renewable power

‘depart-politics-to-the-politicians’:-why-rural-queensland-is-a-hotbed-of-renewable-power

‘Depart politics to the politicians’: why rural Queensland is a hotbed of renewable power

Renewable energy developers are following tracks laid by the gas industry in the Western Downs – but they’re also making the same mistakes

Agriculture was once king in Glen Beasley’s neighbourhood on Queensland’s Darling Downs, a vast agricultural area about 200km west of Brisbane. “It was all grain, beef, timber and a bit of coal,” he says.

Then a high voltage power line was built through his family farm outside Chinchilla in 1984. The whispers of gas came with the turn of the millennium, and by the early 2010s, the coal seam gas industry was booming. Gas company Arrow Energy now holds a tenement over his property and a few doors down, there’s a coal seam gas waste facility.

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