Posted: 2022-10-23 20:30:50

The CSIRO is being accused of failing to disclose that fracking information sheets for Indigenous communities were written by one of its research division's partially funded by gas companies.

Information included a statement that methane "may play a role" in climate change, which independent Senator David Pocock said was "straight out of the fossil fuel industry misinformation guide".

A moratorium on fracking in the Northern Territory was lifted in 2018 and, since then, information about the extraction process has been distributed to affected Aboriginal communities.

That information was included in a series of documents with the peak science agency’s logo on top, and translated by the Northern Territory government’s Aboriginal Interpreter Service into audio files in traditional languages.

However, a search of data embedded in the online versions of the information sheets showed they were drafted by a section of the CSIRO, called the Gas Industry Social and Environment Alliance (GISERA).

An aerial view of a fracking exploration site in the Beetaloo Basin.
Gas companies are ramping up exploratory drilling in the Beetaloo Basin, about 500 kilometres south-east of Darwin.(ABC News: Hamish Harty)

Inquiry recommended 'independent' fracking information

GISERA receives one third of its funding from gas companies, including Santos and Origin Energy, with the remainder sourced from governments and the CSIRO itself.

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