Humane Society International Inc. ABN 63 510 927 032 PO Box 439 Avalon NSW 2107 Australia Telephone (02) 9973 1728 • Facsimile (02) 9973 1729 Email admin@hsi.org.au • www.hsi.org.au
TECHNICAL BULLETIN INCORPORATING WILDLIFE LAND TRUST & HUMANE CHOICE NEWS
Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists slams Prime Minister’s plans to devolve environmental powers
EXTINCTION
Issue 21 2012
DENIED PROGRAM
HSI gains first protections for hammerhead sharks and giant kelp forests See articles on pages 9 and 34
In September of this year, the Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists* issued a nine-page statement to the Australian Government which outlined their case against the Commonwealth Government’s intent to hand environmental approval powers to the states and territories, at the insistence of the Business Council of Australia and with the agreement of the Council of Australian Governments (COAG). The opening page of their statement is reproduced below:
Statement on Changes to Commonwealth Powers to Protect Australia’s Environment “The prognosis for the environment at a national level is highly dependent on how seriously the Australian Government takes its leadership role.” Australian State of the Environment Committee, 20111 In August 2011, COAG agreed on major reform of environmental regulation across all levels of government to “reduce regulatory burden and duplication for business and to deliver better environmental outcomes”.2 This sensible and responsible decision was overturned in April 2012 following lobbying by the Business Council of Australia, with the Commonwealth now agreeing to hand over its environmental approval powers to state governments.3 This action by the Commonwealth, without any prior consultation with the wider community, will take environmental policy in Australia back decades. It will not only damage the environment, it will also result in project delays because of the inevitable opposition to such poor environmental protection. Since the intervention of the Hawke government in the early 1980s there has been a maturing of environmental policy in Australia. In 1997, COAG agreed to delineate areas of environmental responsibility, with the focus of the Australian Government being on the protection of matters of national environmental significance, including its international treaty obligations such as the 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity. 4 This was embedded in law by the Howard government when it introduced the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act in 1999.
School of hammerhead sharks. © Shutterstock/Brandelet.
In Defence of the EPBC Earlier this year, Andrew Macintosh of the Australian National University and Richard Denniss of the Australia Institute, published a critique of the EPBC Act on Crikey (The greentape slugfest that is the EPBC Act — Crikey 24 May 2012). In response to this piece, HSI’s Alistair Graham and Michael Kennedy developed the following response which was conveyed to Crikey for publishing, but with no luck:
Prof Lesley Hughes, Prof David Karoly, Prof Hugh Possingham FAA, Mr Robert Purves AM, Dr Denis Saunders AM, Prof Bruce Thom AM, Dr John Williams FTSE.
Our view, as professional campaigners who worked under the old Whitlam-era Environment Protection (Impact of Proposals) Act, 1974 (EPIP Act) system for 22 years and under the Howard-era EPBC Act system for a subsequent 12 years, is that the latter regime is clearly the superior legal response to environmental management in the federal system that is the Commonwealth of Australia. Pronouncements by Macintosh and Denniss on the effectiveness of the EPBC, we would suggest, are constrained by limited real-world experience, reflected in the obviously academic nature of his assessments, and have little to do with the realities of our day to day campaigning under the opportunities offered by the EPBC Act. As Brendan Sydes at the Environmental Defenders Office (EDO) in Melbourne titled his article in response to Macintosh and Denniss on Crikey, “Whoa! Reality check please for Dr Andrew and Dr Richard.”
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* Mr Peter Cosier, Dr Richard Davis, Prof Tim Flannery, Dr Ronnie Harding,
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