The Lock the Gate Movement spreads across the country

The Lock the Gate movement is gathering momentum as more and more communities around the country are refusing to negotiate access to coal and coal seam gas companies, regardless of what approvals governments might have given.

3,000 people yesterday marched through the streets of Murwillumbah in northern New South Wales calling for the gate to be locked on the coal and coal seam gas industries right around the country.

Lock the Gate at Murwillimbah

National Lock the Gate Alliance acting president Drew Hutton, who was a speaker at the rally, said the large mobilisation at Murwillumbah was merely the beginning of similar events wherever these industries tried to move on closely settled area, good agricultural land or sensitive environments.

“In Kingaroy several days ago and down the road from where former Queensland premier Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen lies buried, 150 farmers voted to lock the gate on a proposed mine,” Mr Hutton said.

"Two days ago a little Italian-Australian woman – one of the owners of the Bimblebox Nature Refuge at Alpha in central Queensland – locked the gate on Clive Palmer whose company, Waratah Coal wants to put an open cut coal mine right across her 8,000 hectare property."

"The farmers at Felton near Toowoomba – all 100 of them – have locked their gates on a coal mine and a petrochemical plant and 500 farmers and landholders at Gowrie Junction to the west of Toowoomba have done the same."

"At Drillham, west of Miles in Queensland, farmers have locked their gates under the banner ‘Gas companies bugger off!’." 

"A nd, of course, the Tara blockade has now entered its third month."

"To these Queensland examples can be added the New South Wales regions that have also locked their gates – the Hunter Valley, the Liverpool Plains, the Southern Highlands and now, of course, the Northern Rivers. Environmentalists are discussing how they will block coal seam gas companies coming onto the Pilliga Scrub, the largest continuous semi-arid woodland in New South Wales. Even in and near Sydney, communities are mobilising to get rid of coal seam gas."

Mr Hutton said that all around the country landholders and environmentalists are imposing their own moratorium on a CSG industry that has had too little scrutiny prior to getting approvals from government and a coal industry which should be phased out, not expanded.

Farming NGOs needed to recognise this phenomenon and lend support to the movement.

"Communities are no longer naive enough to wait for the official environmental assessment process, knowing that this process that originally began as an expansion of democratic practices has become corrupt and serves only the interests of the big developers," Mr Hutton said.

"Communities all around the country are withdrawing the social licence from industries which have had far too easy a ride from governments."