Theia Energy's fracking proposal was published by the EPA for public comment this week (Jan 2022)
The Kimberley project could unearth Australia's largest oil supply
Environmentalists have called for the project to be rejected and for a ban on fracking
An energy economist says the world will be watching as an Australian company's proposal to frack onshore oil in the Kimberley is considered by Western Australia's environmental watchdog.
The WA Environmental Protection Agency released Theia Energy's application for seven days of public comment this week (January 2022), which outlines plans to drill and frack two exploratory wells 155 kilometres south-east of Broome.
It is the second application for fracking in the region since a moratorium on the practice was lifted in 2018, with a proposal from Texan-based Black Mountain Energy currently under assessment by the EPA.
Curtin University researcher Roberto F Aguilera said if proven to be viable, Theia Energy's proposal had the potential to develop into Australia's largest oil project.
"It could theoretically be a huge project when you consider the resource of nearly six billion barrels of oil and compare that with the proven oil reserves in Australia that are around two and a half billion," he said.
"But of course, it's one thing to have abundant resources; it's another thing to be able to access them."
Unlocking Australia's largest oil supply
There has been a lot of speculation about the potential for Theia Energy's Great Sandy Desert project, located in the in the north west's Canning Basin — which has some of the largest reserves of onshore oil and gas in the country.
A project fact sheet produced by the Perth-based company and dated 2018 suggested that of the tens of billions of barrels of oil estimated to be locked in the shale rock on their petroleum lease, six billion barrels were recoverable.
The oil find is described as "unconventional", meaning it is locked in dense rock that will need hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, to allow the oil to flow to the surface.
The company, which has been contacted for comment, also previously published a conceptual graphic showing a network of wells, pipelines and a new port on the Kimberley coast to support the project if it was to successfully scale up.
Economic and social challenges ahead
Dr Aguilera, who is also a petroleum consultant, said the idea had promise but there were many financial, logistical, and social licensing challenges ahead for this fledgling industry.
"That includes upstream infrastructure to be able to produce the resource, but also the midstream installations like pipelines to be able to deliver it to a market," he said.
"Not to mention other factors like environmental and public acceptance, which are also very important in determining a company's social licence to operate.
"Without that licence development becomes very difficult, as we've seen in many parts of the world."
Dr Aguilera said building infrastructure like pipelines was particularly costly but with oil prices holding strong at nearly $90 per barrel, this could tip the balance in favour of the project.
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