Posted: 2022-10-10 08:36:04

The chief executive of a gas company pushing to frack the Northern Territory's Beetaloo Basin has rejected allegations the company used "intimidation" to gain access to properties for drilling.

Tamboran Resources, which owns Sweetpea Petroleum, has been at the centre of a stoush with pastoralists in the basin, about 500 kilometres south-east of Darwin, who do not want fracking to go ahead on their properties. 

The stand-off escalated earlier this year when Sweetpea Petroleum cut through fences at Tanumbirini Station against the wishes of the cattle station owners, Rallen Australia.

Chairing a Senate inquiry in Canberra on Monday, Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young said Tamboran Resources was "in a legal dispute with Rallen". 

"It's been put to this committee that your [company's] modus operandi is ... intimidation," she told Tamboran Resources chief executive Joel Riddle. 

"You cut fences to access the property — fences that are not yours — and you entered this property without approval.

"How is that upholding respectful relationships with stakeholders?"

A man stands in a suit in an office.
Tamboran Resources managing director Joel Riddle spoke at the senate inquiry. (ABC News: Timothy Ailwood)

Speaking to the inquiry, Mr Riddle said it was "categorically false that we've done anything to pressure anyone". 

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