Criticism
The construction of the Woodside-operated North West Shelf project in the 1980s included the destruction of more than 5,000 sacred rock art sites.[36] Ngarda-ngarli, the Traditional Owners, were blocked from protecting sites at the North West Shelf site, and consent was never provided for the construction of the Gas Plant, as per letters and records from Traditional Owners and archaeologists.[37][38] Letters from Traditional Owners in 2025 show consent was never provided, and had still not been obtained in 2025, despite Woodside publicly committing to the United Nations Declaration on the Right of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP).[39] The final commonwealth approval[40] for the extension of the North West Shelf oil and gas project until 2070 was ironically provided the day prior to the 28th anniversary of the UN adopting UNDRIP.[41] This was despite Traditional Owners publicly stating they had not consented to the original construction nor the extension of the Gas Plant.[42][38]
In February 2006, the Mauritanian military junta led by Col. Ely Ould Mohamed Vall denounced amendments to an oil contract made by former President Maaouya Ould Sid'Ahmed Taya with Woodside Petroleum. In 2004, Woodside had agreed to invest US$600 million in developing Mauritania's Chinguetti offshore oil project.[43][44] The "controversial" amendments, which Mauritanian authorities declared had been signed "outside the legal framework of normal practice, to the great detriment of our country", could cost Mauritania up to US$200 million a year.[45][46] In June 2006, the Australian Federal Police were investigating Woodside for allegations of bribery and corruption in Mauritania.[47][48]
In 2006–2007, as part of the Pluto LNG project, Woodside faced opposition over plans to build an onshore processing plant on the Burrup Peninsula in Western Australia, as the site is home to significant petroglyphs up to 30,000 years old.[49]
It has been suggested that intense lobbying by Woodside Petroleum contributed to the coalition Howard government's initial decision against emissions trading in August 2000.[50] The company also opposed the Rudd Labor government's Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme in 2009.[51]
Woodside is among six companies accused of making deceptive public statements in an attempt to get free carbon permits. The Australian Conservation Foundation says the companies exaggerated in public, but told a different story to their shareholders and investors. In June 2009, the ACF lodged an official complaint[52] with the Federal consumer affairs watchdog asking that the matter be investigated.[53] The Australian Competition & Consumer Commission took no action against the companies.[54]
In April 2011 Australia's Fair Work Ombudsman began an investigation into claims that foreign workers were underpaid on two North West Shelf oil rigs operated by Woodside Petroleum.[55] In April 2013, the Federal Court in WA heard allegations that the workers were paid less than A$3 an hour to work on the oil rigs. Documents tendered to the court claimed that the four men worked as painters on Woodside rigs on the North West Shelf off northern WA from July 2009 until early 2011.[56]
In the corporation's annual offshore performance report, published in mid-2013, the failure of an oil mist detector at Woodside Petroleum's Vincent oilfield in Western Australia was caused by faulty wiring and inadequately designed equipment. The issue was identified during a visit by a third party at Woodside's largest single source of oil production.[57]
In April 2016, Woodside concealed a 10500 L oil spill off the coast of Western Australia, which went on for two months without anyone from the company noticing. Woodside's responsibility only came to light after intense public pressure.[58] In March 2019, Woodside led a lobbying effort to force the Western Australia EPA to abandon new guidelines to protect the climate. The Australian Centre for Corporate Responsibility described the affair as a ‘week of shame.’[59]
In mid-2020, Woodside tried to avoid decommissioning costs by convincing regulators that dumping all the equipment from its Echo-Yodel field, including 400 tonnes of plastic, under the pretence of the waste being an 'artificial reef'.[60] The same year, after calls to pay over A$200 million to clean up an old gas processing facility they had decommissioned, Woodside convinced the government to instead grant them millions of taxpayer dollars, through a shadowy limited tender process, to ‘consult’ on the clean up.[61] Woodside have attracted condemnation for their role in the wiretapping of the East Timor government in order to "force East Timor, one of the poorest countries in the world, to surrender most of the revenues" to Woodside.[62]
In 2023, Woodside continued to face criticism for the sale of the Northern Endeavour in 2016, to a company that then collapsed 4 years later, leaving responsibility for decommissioning to the Australian Government.[63]
James Price Point gas industrial complex
The "Save The Kimberley" campaign was an organised protest against Woodside's involvement with a proposal to construct the James Price Point gas industrial complex in Western Australia's Kimberley region.[64] A protest concert was held at Federation Square in October 2012,[65] followed by a second event in early 2013 at Esplanade Park, Fremantle that featured Bob Brown, former leader of the Australian Greens political party.[66] A march to protest the proposed gas refinery construction at James Price Point accompanied the Fremantle concert, and campaign supporters were photographed with banners and placards.[67] Community blockades of preliminary construction work at the site, as well as mass submissions and actions in the courts, delayed the project's progress.[68]