ENVIRONMENTAL LAW REGIMES—PETROLEUM OPERATIONS IN AUSTRALIA'S OFFSHORE AREAS
The APPEA Journal
35(1) 813 - 821
Published: 1995
Abstract
Increasing petroleum activity in Australia's offshore areas is heightening industry, government and community awareness of the potential impact of these operations on marine ecosystems and coastal environments.The Offshore Constitutional Settlement of the late 1970s has resolved the issue of allocation of governmental rights and powers over the resources of the sea and the seabed. However, the application of environmental laws to those areas remains largely untested. A complex web of legislation—State, Territory and Commonwealth—may apply to proposed and on-going petroleum activities.
The Commonwealth Government has substantial power to intervene to protect environmentally sensitive areas whether they are within areas of the sea over which that government or the states or the Northern Territory have primary jurisdiction. Despite the recent Intergovernmental Agreement on the Environment, substantial ultimate power resides with the Commonwealth to protect the environment, particularly through the use of the external affairs power. The politically fluid nature of environmental management in offshore areas adds an important dimension to the commercial risk assessment process for the petroleum industry.
https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ94058
© CSIRO 1995