Chapter 1 Context
1.1
The Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Amendment (Significant
Incident Directions) Bill 2011 is one of a series of amendments to the Offshore
Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006 that have been introduced
this Parliament. The bills are intended to improve regulation of the offshore
petroleum industry in response to the 2009 Montara incident and the 2008
Varanus Island gas pipeline explosion, which ‘highlighted inadequacies in the offshore
petroleum regulatory regime’.[1] The bills are also
intended to implement some of the recommendations of the 2009 Productivity
Commission report, Review of Regulatory Burden on the Upstream Petroleum
(Oil and Gas) Sector.[2]
Offshore petroleum regulation
1.2
The current regulatory regime for the offshore petroleum industry can be
traced back to a High Court decision of 1975, in which the Commonwealth’s
sovereignty over Australia’s offshore waters and the seabed beneath them was
upheld. This decision led to the Commonwealth and the States agreeing on a
division of rights and responsibilities over offshore waters, collectively
known as the Offshore Constitutional Settlement (OCS). Under the OCS, the
States and the Northern Territory were conferred with title and jurisdiction
over the sea within three nautical miles of their coastlines, while the
Commonwealth retained jurisdiction over waters beyond three nautical miles. In
relation to petroleum exploration and exploitation, the OCS agreement was
enacted in the Petroleum (Submerged Lands) Act 1967, predecessor of the
current Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006 (the
OPGGS Act).[3]
1.3
The role of the OPGGS Act has been summarised as follows:
The OPGGS [Act] regulates the exploration for, and production
of, petroleum resources, as well as infrastructure construction, through
requirements to obtain titles in the form of exploration permits, retention
leases, and pipeline, production and infrastructure licences. Special
prospecting authorities and access authorities can also be allocated to allow
for exploration activity (excluding the drilling of wells).
All titleholders must carry out operations in accordance with
‘good oilfield practice’, including carrying out operations in a manner that is
safe and prevents the escape of petroleum into the environment. In order to
retain title, titleholders must meet conditions of work and pay annual fees.
The OPGGSA also regulates key areas of resource management
through a variety of regulations which the Australian Government, in
consultation with the State and Territory Governments as well as industry, has
been implementing since the early 1990s. The existing regulations cover well
operations, safety on offshore facilities, occupational health and safety, diving
safety, environment, pipelines, data management and fees.[4]
1.4
The administration of the OPGGS Act is shared between the Commonwealth
and each of the States and the Northern Territory. Decisions concerning the
granting and conditions of petroleum titles and ‘core decisions’ about resource
management and security are made by the Joint Authorities, consisting of
the responsible Commonwealth Minister and the relevant State or Northern
Territory Minister. The ongoing administrative and regulatory functions of the
Act have to date been performed by the Designated Authorities,
consisting of the State and Northern Territory Ministers, acting through their
departments.[5]
1.5
The National Offshore Petroleum Safety Authority (NOPSA) was established
in 2005 as the national regulator of occupational health and safety in both
Commonwealth and State and Northern Territory waters.[6]
Its introduction was in response to a 2001 report which found that regulation
of health, safety and the environment in the offshore petroleum industry was
‘complicated and insufficient to ensure appropriate, effective and cost
efficient regulation’.[7]
2009 Productivity Commission regulatory review
1.6
In April 2009, the Productivity Commission released its Review of the
Regulatory Burden on the Upstream Petroleum (Oil and Gas) Sector. The
review was prompted by ‘widespread concerns about delays and uncertainties in
obtaining approvals for oil and gas projects, duplication of compliance
requirements, and inconsistent administration of regulatory processes across
jurisdictions’. It aimed to identify ways to ‘reduce unnecessary regulatory
burdens on the sector’ and consider options for a national regulatory authority
to reduce duplication and inconsistency.[8]
1.7
Amongst its key recommendations, the Productivity Commission recommended
that the Federal Government establish a new national regulator to hold
responsibility for ‘resource management, pipelines and environmental approvals
and compliance’, with functions including administration of exploration permit,
production and pipeline licensing; and administration and approval of
production, well construction, drilling and pipeline consents (subject to NOPSA
approval).[9] It recommended that NOPSA
be retained as a separate entity, with its role extended to include
responsibility for ‘the safety and integrity of offshore pipelines, subsea
equipment and wells’,[10] and that the States and
Territories consider conferring to NOPSA their powers to regulate occupational
health and safety matters in the offshore petroleum sector.[11]
The Montara incident and its Commission of Inquiry
1.8
On 21 August 2009, a ‘blowout’ occurred at the Montara Wellhead
Platform, around 250 kilometres off the northwest coast of Australia, resulting
in the uncontrolled release of oil and gas into the Timor Sea for over 10
weeks, affecting an area of up to 90 000 square kilometres. The incident
represented the third largest oil spill in Australia’s history and the worst
incident of its kind in Australia’s offshore petroleum industry.[12]
1.9
The Montara Commission of Inquiry concluded that the operator of the
platform ‘did not observe sensible oilfield practices at the Montara Oilfield’
and that there were ‘widespread and systematic’ shortcomings in the company’s
procedures which directly led to the blowout.[13] It also found that the
incident could have been prevented with more effective regulation by the
Northern Territory based regulator:
Well control practices approved by the delegate of the
Designated Authority, the Northern Territory Department of Resources (the NT
DoR), most likely would have been sufficient to prevent the Blowout if PTTEPAA
[the platform operator] had adhered to them and to its own Well Construction
Standards. However, the NT DoR was not a sufficiently diligent regulator: it
should not have approved the Phase 1B Drilling Program for the Montara Oilfield
in July 2009 as it did not reflect sensible oilfield practice; it also adopted
a minimalist approach to its regulatory responsibilities. The way the regulator
(the NT DoR) conducted its responsibilities gave it little chance of
discovering PTTEPAA’s poor practices. In this case, the regulatory dog did not
bark.[14]
1.10
The Commission of Inquiry recommended that a ‘single, independent
regulatory body’ be created with responsibility for safety (‘as a primary
objective’), well integrity and environmental approvals. It supported the
Productivity Commission’s proposals that a new national regulator be
established (‘at a minimum’) and that NOPSA be given responsibility for well
integrity.[15]
Package of OPGGS bills introduced in May 2011
1.11
On 25 May 2011, the Minister for Resources, Energy and Tourism
introduced a package of five bills into the House of Representatives as part of
the Government’s response to the recommendations of the 2009 Productivity
Commission review and the Montara Commission of Inquiry. By far the largest of
these bills was the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Amendment
(National Regulator) 2011. The bills were inquired into by committees of both
the House and the Senate, and received Royal Assent on 14 October 2011 after
passing both houses in September. A brief summary of each of the bills is
provided below.
Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Amendment (National Regulator)
Bill 2011
1.12
The bill amended the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage
Act 2006 to establish two new regulatory bodies to administer and regulate
petroleum and greenhouse gas storage operations in Commonwealth waters in the
Australian offshore area—the National Offshore Petroleum Safety and
Environmental Management Authority (NOPSEMA) and the National Offshore
Petroleum Titles Administrator (NOPTA). The new bodies will replace the role of
the Designated Authorities (i.e. State and Northern Territory Ministers).[16]
1.13
NOPSEMA will be an expanded version of NOPSA. In addition to NOPSA’s
current occupational health and safety functions, NOPSEMA will be responsible
for the ‘structural integrity of facilities, wells and well-related equipment;
environmental management; and regulation of day-to-day petroleum operations’.[17]
NOPSEMA will begin operations from 1 January 2012.
1.14
NOPTA will operate within the Department of Resources, Energy and
Tourism (RET). Its key functions will be to provide information, assessments,
analysis, reports, advice and recommendations to the Joint Authorities in
relation to the performance of their functions and the exercise of their
powers, the collection, management and release of data, titles administration,
approval and registration of transfers and dealings, and the keeping of the
registers of petroleum and greenhouse gas titles.[18]
Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage (Registration Fees) Amendment
Bill 2011
1.15
The bill amended the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage
(Registration Fees) Act 2006 to correctly reference the new National
Offshore Petroleum Titles Administrator (NOPTA).[19]
Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Regulatory Levies Legislation
Amendment (2011 Measures No. 2) Bill 2011
1.16
The bill amended the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage
(Regulatory Levies) Act 2003 to impose new cost-recovery levies on holders
of offshore petroleum and greenhouse gas storage titles to recover the costs of
NOPTA in undertaking its functions in relation to titles administration and
NOPSEMA in undertaking its functions in relation to environmental management.[20]
Offshore Petroleum (Royalty) Amendment Bill 2011
1.17
The bill amended the Offshore Petroleum (Royalty) Act 2006 to
confer the functions currently exercisable by the Designated Authority under
that Act on the responsible State Minister. This bill also modified some
functions to take account of the fact that the State Minister individually does
not have any functions under the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas
Storage Act 2006. [21]
Offshore Resources Legislation Amendment (Personal Property Securities) Bill
2011
1.18
The bill amended the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage
Act 2006 and the Offshore Minerals Act 1994 to exclude application of the Personal
Property Securities Act 2009. [22]
The OPGGS (National Regulator) Bill and the power to issue directions
1.19
Of the five bills, the OPPGS (National Regulator) Bill is the most
directly relevant to the current inquiry. Prior to the bill’s passage, the
OPGGS Act granted the Designated Authorities the power to issue directions
to petroleum titleholders ‘as to any matter in relation to which regulations
may be made’.[23] The Act also enabled the
Designated Authorities to issue ‘remedial’ directions in relation to the
restoration of the environment, requiring the removal of property, the plugging
or closing off of wells, conservation and protection of natural resources,
and/or restoration of damage to the seabed or subsoil by the petroleum titleholders
or former titleholders.[24]
1.20
The OPGGS (National Regulator) Bill conferred the full range of the
Designated Authorities’ direction-giving powers onto NOPSEMA. This includes the
power to issue directions in relation to resource management, which are outside
NOPSEMA’s areas of responsibility. Primary responsibility for resource
management rests with the Joint Authorities. For this reason, the Bill inserted
additional sections into the Act that enable the Commonwealth Minister (acting
on behalf of the Joint Authorities for reasons of expedience) to also issue
directions, but only in relation to resource management and security. The
Commonwealth Minister may not issue directions of a standing or permanent
nature without approval of the Joint Authorities. In the unlikely event that
directions issued by NOPSEMA and the Commonwealth Minister (in relation to
resource management and security) are inconsistent, the Minister’s direction
takes precedence.[25]
1.21
Under the OPGGS Act, as amended, directions given to the registered
holder of a title by NOPSEMA or the Commonwealth Minister are also taken to
apply to employees or agents of the holder and persons performing work or
services on behalf of the titleholder. The direction may also be taken to apply
more broadly to any person who is in the offshore area, or in the vicinity of a
vessel, aircraft, structure, installation or other property for the purposes of
petroleum exploration or exploitation.[26]
1.22
It is an offence of ‘strict liability’ to not comply with a direction
and the penalty for not complying is 100 penalty units (currently around $11 000).
Under prosecution for a breach of direction, the OPGGS Act stipulates that it
is a defence (with the onus of proof on the defendant) ‘if the defendant can
prove that they took all reasonable steps to comply with the direction’ or if
they ‘can provide evidence that they did not know, and could not reasonably be
expected to have known, of the existence of the direction’.[27]
Previous inquiry findings
1.23
On 25 May 2011, the package of bills was referred to both the House of
Representatives Standing Committee on Agriculture, Resources, Fisheries and
Forestry and the Senate Economics Legislation Committee for inquiry and report.
Both committees expressed their support for the ‘essential’ reforms contained
in the bills, in light of the Productivity Commission’s report and the report
of the Montara Commission of Inquiry. The Senate report, however, also
incorporated a dissenting report in which Coalition Senators raised concerns
about a perceived lack of consultation and cooperation with the Western
Australian Government.[28]
1.24
In its submission to the two inquiries, the Western Australian Government
indicated that it was opposed to the formation of NOPTA and NOPSEMA, arguing
that it would only complicate the regulatory framework and stating that ‘the
establishment of NOPTA and NOPSEMA does not, in itself, improve the areas of
the regulatory system which really need reform—environment and native title’.[29]
The WA Government recommended that further measures be introduced to improve
information sharing and consultation measures between NOPSEMA and the States
and Northern Territory. In a public hearing, the WA Department of Mines and
Petroleum stated:
We still think that the old joint authority and designated
authority system was not broken, so we do not see a need to throw out the baby
with the bathwater. There were improvements being made almost daily, and we
think it could be improved to the extent that it would offer a better system
than what is proposed in these amendments.[30]
1.25
The other submissions to the inquiries were broadly supportive of the
legislation and its creation of a national regulator, although some more
specific issues concerning the transition, funding model, safety
responsibilities and industry consultation were highlighted. No specific issues
were raised during these two inquiries in relation to the direction-giving
powers of the legislation.
1.26
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills also examined
the bills, and raised one concern about the ability of the Minister or
regulator to incorporate in its directions a code of practice or standard as
existing from time to time. This concern was addressed in a government
amendment to the National Regulator bill.
The OPGGS Amendment (Significant Incident Directions) Bill 2011
1.27
The Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Amendment (Significant
Incident Directions) Bill 2011 was introduced into House of Representatives on
21 September 2011.
1.28
According to the explanatory memorandum, the purpose of the bill is to
amend the OPGGS Act to ‘specifically enable NOPSEMA to issue a direction to a
petroleum titleholder in the event of a significant offshore petroleum incident
occurring within the title area that has caused, or might cause, an escape of petroleum’.[31]
The direction would require the titleholder to ‘take an action or not take an action
in relation to the escape or possible escape of petroleum and its effects’, and
unlike existing direction-giving powers in the OPGGS Act (discussed above), significant
incident directions may ‘apply either within or outside the titleholder’s title
area’.[32]
1.29
In delivering the bill’s second reading speech, the Minister for Regional
Australia, Regional Development and Local Government explained that the bill
was one of a number of amendments being introduced by the Government in
response to the Montara incident.[33] He explained that the bill
would provide ‘a clear legal basis on which to issue directions that extend to
requiring action outside the title area’:
In the unlikely event of a future significant petroleum
incident, such as the uncontrolled release of hydrocarbons into the marine
environment, remedial action would be required to be taken as quickly as
practicable. These amendments will ensure that regulators have a clear and
unambiguous power to direct petroleum titleholders to take remedial action as
quickly as practicable to mitigate and manage the impacts from an escape of
petroleum.[34]
1.30
Matters that can be covered by a significant incident direction include
actions to:
- prevent or eliminate the escape of petroleum; and/or
- mitigate, manage or remediate the effects of an escape of petroleum.[35]
1.31
The bill stipulates that NOPSEMA must not issue a direction ‘of a
standing or permanent nature’ without approval from the Joint Authority;
however, the direction remains valid if this approval is not obtained.
1.32
As with other directions provided for under the OPGGS Act, discussed
above, the bill identifies non-compliance with a significant incident direction
as an offence of strict liability and imposes a penalty of 100 penalty units.
As noted in paragraph 1.22, this is currently approximately $11 000.