Belinda Baggs has fought for years to protect her home coastline from the development of the PEP11 gas field. Photo Jon Frank

IT’S TIME FOR POLITICIANS TO TAKE A LATE DROP AND BAN OIL AND GAS OFF THE NSW COAST

A deep blue line looms somewhere between me and the collection of ships on the horizon. Paddling out and over toward the channel my arms begin to burn. The peak is rapidly growing in size and approaching fast. Somehow the rest of the line-up get caught inside and I’m confronted by a steep left. Time slows as the offshore wind sends feathers of sea spray high into the air. I catch the wave and racing down the line I spot my dad in the white water, hooting. Childhood memories never fade and family traditions never end, they just get more cherished with time.

 

You have to paddle hard sometimes to get the best rewards the ocean has to offer.

 

I’ve always felt a deep sense of responsibility to give back to the ocean. The simple pleasure of riding waves is extractive. Just like anything that is taken, the question follows… what is given back in return? With all the constant taking in a life lived by the wild sea, it’s so important that I give back somehow.

 

In 2018 I learned about a seismic testing plan out off the coast of Newcastle. Helping to stop this destructive project was a way for me to give back to the ocean. After countless rallies the seismic testing was scrapped, but this just meant another company was fast-tracking to the exploratory drilling of a well out over the horizon from my favourite beach.

 

More of us needed to paddle back out and fight.

 

The fight to stop the PEP11 offshore gas field went big. After several years of campaigning, visiting MPs in Canberra, paddle-outs and finally announcements in the right direction it felt like the entire country opposed the plan. For a short time PEP11 was dead, then alive again, then squashed, back on the table, and now… in limbo again. But a line in the sand is now revealing itself in an unlikely space.

“NSW could become a leader,” says Belinda of the proposed bill, “keeping their oceans free of fossil fuel extraction." Photo Jarrah Lynch

This June, a Bill was introduced into NSW Parliament that would see a ban on offshore oil and gas exploration, production and associated infrastructure in state waters. It’s legislation that, while not stopping PEP11 itself (which sits out in Commonwealth waters) the legislation puts a major hurdle in front of anyone fossil fuel prospector looking to plunder the waters off the NSW coast.

If oil and gas can’t be brought to shore for processing, the only options remaining for fossil fuel operations wanting to drill off the NSW coast is to either process the gas at sea (good luck getting a permit for that one) or shipping it north to Queensland for processing onshore there. Both options are cost prohibitive.

I know that politics can be a pain in the bum at times, but right now we have an amazing opportunity to see NSW become the first state in the country to ban oil and gas exploration in its waters. It’s time to make history for our ocean, not just stopping PEP11 but going even bigger and protecting the amazing coastline that many of us call home.

NSW could become a leader, keeping their oceans free of fossil fuel extraction. There has been leadership from the NSW Coalition and furious support from many Independents and Greens members of Parliament. A bipartisan outcome is very real and possible. This is the best outcome for sustainable and lasting legislation, when all sides agree on a law.

This historic Bill is currently under review by the NSW Committee on Environment and Planning. Right now we need to make sure politicians in NSW understand there is a big community of surfers and salty legends out there who want to make sure our coastal ecosystems are protected from future oil and gas exploration.

Surfers For Climate, the organisation I founded a few short years ago, is asking surfers in NSW to fill out a simple survey that takes two minutes, so we can deliver a powerful message to the committee, so they understand that coastal communities of NSW want politicians to paddle deep and take a late drop for our ocean.

It’s time for us to paddle out once more.

I want to share those same lefts I had with my dad, with my son for years to come. I’m tired, but like those beatings you sometimes get in the surf, you never stop paddling back out for more, because you know it will be worth it.

I won’t stop paddling, because the actions we take today will reduce the risks of marine pollution and prevent future carbon emissions tomorrow.

I’m drawing a line in the sand on oil and gas in our ocean, will you take two minutes right now to do the same?

Find out more here.

Belinda Baggs has fought for years to protect her home coastline from the development of the PEP11 gas field. Photo Jon Frank

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