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Former ambassador to US says ‘no way’ Australia would put boots on the ground

Amid questions over whether Australia should do more to support its major ally, former Australian ambassador to the US Arthur Sinodinos says combat troops are not the way forward.

Sinodinos, who served in the role from 2020 to 2023, told AAP after the US strikes on Iran:

There’s no way we would put troops on the ground. I don’t think the government or the political establishment here are suggesting that we just follow whatever the US is going to do.

I’d be very surprised if there’s anybody saying that we, automatically as a result of what the US has done, are now part of that conflict.

Former Australian ambassador to the US, Arthur Sinodinos, seen in 2019. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
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Lisa Cox

Lisa Cox

First legal challenge to fracking begins in federal court today

Anti-mining group Lock the Gate has challenged gas company Tamboran’s Shenandoah South pilot project in the Northern Territory, the first legal challenge to fracking under the federal water trigger in the federal court.

The pilot project in the Beetaloo basin is a 15 well exploration project, with the company planning to sell so-called appraisal gas – which is gas extracted during the exploration phase.

Environment groups last year, concerned about the pilot project’s potential impacts on water including nearby Lake Woods, had called for the project to be assessed under the water trigger in Australia’s environmental laws. The federal government expanded the water trigger in 2023 to include all forms of unconventional gas.

Georgina Woods, Lock the Gate Alliance’s head of research and investigations. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP

The Lock the Gate Alliance said the project should be referred to the federal environment minister for assessment and a decision under national environment laws designed to protect water from significant impacts.

Georgina Woods, the alliance’s head of research and investigations, said:

We are pursuing this case because we believe Tamboran’s fracking project is likely to contaminate precious groundwater in the Northern Territory and we want Australia’s national environmental law applied.

We believe the expanded water trigger should be used to assess this fracking project for its impacts on water resources. Since neither Tamboran nor the Federal Environment Minister have chosen to do this we have stepped in to take action ourselves.

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