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These Traditional Owners are calling out super funds for investing in 'reckless' gas producer Santos

The complainants have asked Santos' investors to ensure the company upholds its human rights obligations.

BAROSSA OFFSHORE DRILLING COURT

Antonia Burke of the Tiwi Islands has accused gas giant, Santos, of leaving "a trail of destruction across this entire country". Source: AAP / James Ross/AAP Image

Traditional Owners in New South Wales and the Northern Territory have made human rights complaints against Australia's top superannuation companies over investments in gas producer Santos.

The complainants say 20 funds, including AustralianSuper, REST Super and Hostplus, have failed to prevent harmful human rights impacts by investing members' money in Santos' "polluting" Barossa and Narrabri gas projects.
Antonia Burke, Indigenous Human Rights Advocate from the Tiwi Islands, said Santos was "reckless" and had left "a trail of destruction across this entire country".

"Their projects are unsafe for the environment, Indigenous Traditional Owners and residents, the people that work for them and landowners," she said on Wednesday.
tiwi islands
The Tiwi Islands contain some of the most pristine natural environments in the world which will be threatened by the Santos development. Source: Supplied
Indigenous groups from the Tiwi Islands, Larrakia Country and the Gomeroi/Gamilaraay Pilliga Forests in northern NSW claim Santos' projects threaten their spiritual and cultural lives.

They said sacred sites and the environment are at risk from potential pipeline eruptions and toxic spills that could impact groundwater and wildlife, including threatened marsupials, endangered birds, dugong, turtles and other sea animals.

Compliance with human rights obligations

The complainants want the funds to dump their Santos investments or ensure the company upholds its human rights obligations.

"Traditional Owners and members are asking funds to justify their investment in Santos and disclose how they are complying with human rights standards," said Vidhya Karnamadakala, a lawyer representing the Indigenous groups and superannuation members.
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The Pilliga state forest on Gomeroi Country near Narrabri in northern NSW. Credit: AAP
Santos-operated Barossa Gas Project, worth $3.6 billion, is an offshore gas and condensate production project northwest of Darwin that will supply an onshore liquefied natural gas facility via a 385km undersea pipeline, with first gas targeted for 2025.

The Narrabri Gas Project, also worth $3.6 billion, is an onshore coal seam gas project that could provide up to half of NSW's gas needs once operational. It has received commonwealth environmental and National Native Title Tribunal approvals.

Customer uproar

Some superannuation fund members have also made complaints to their respective companies about alleged human rights obligation failures.

Jan McNicol, a UniSuper member, said the investments were "morally reprehensible" and ignored Indigenous peoples' rights.

"This is not the investment policy of a socially responsible twenty-first-century superannuation fund," she said.

"I implore UniSuper to take its investments out of fossil fuels in general, to save our money and the planet."
Equip Super member Neil Barber said it was unacceptable for his fund to invest in the Barossa and Narrabri gas projects.

"Equip prides itself with being named by SuperRatings as a top performer, an accolade that is hollow when investing in companies that are top performers in the demise of human existence," he said.

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3 min read
Published 26 April 2023 2:52pm
Updated 4 May 2023 8:53am
Source: AAP


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