The Guardian Australia

Net zero, saving koalas and forest wars: the crucial environmen­t battles looming in Australia

- Adam Morton and Lisa Cox

The trainwreck of 2020 was not limited to a global community hit by the worst pandemic in a century. The Australian environmen­t fared no better.

The year started amid the continent’s most widespread bushfires on record. As the Guardian revealed, an estimated 3bn animals were killed or affected. Subsequent major government reports outlined the extent to which the country’s unique environmen­t was in decline long before the fires hit.

The damage from the fires could not be divorced from the climate crisis, which also triggered a third mass bleaching event on the Great Barrier Reef in five years. But political debate on these pressing environmen­tal issues – specifical­ly, the need to transform conservati­on laws or introduce a climate plan to live up to the Paris climate agreement – remained stuck as the Morrison government resisted meaningful action on both fronts.

Will 2021 bring a change? Adam

Morton and Lisa Cox look at some of the major climate and environmen­tal questions the country will face this year.

Rising pressure to act on climate Scott Morrison ended 2020 notably isolated on climate change, having been embarrasse­d when the British and French government­s rejected his push to be given a speaking slot at a global leaders’ climate ambition summit.

The prime minister appeared surprised by the snub, which left him in climate pariah territory with the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Brazil and Russia. If he was surprised, he shouldn’t have been: the invitation to the summit made clear only leaders offering substantia­l new commitment­s would be given a slot, and Morrison had merely flagged that Australia may not follow through on a widely condemned plan to use a carbon accounting sleight of hand to meet national emissions targets.

A major political and diplomatic question will be how the government responds to what is certain to be escalating pressure. The US will be key. The Biden administra­tion has no shortage of problems needing its attention, but has made clear climate is near the top of its priorities. The new president has pledged to use “every tool of American foreign policy to push the rest of the world” to do more. His climate envoy, John Kerry, set out the scale of the challenge for business leaders at a G20 forum, including that coal needed to be phased out five times faster than it is now.

More than 120 countries, including the major powers of America, Asia and Europe, have mid-century net zero emissions or carbon neutrality goals, but Morrison – despite calls and rising action from business leaders, investors and state government­s – continues to resist, and deny that Australia is out of step.

The expectatio­n is this can only last so long, but the message from the incoming US leadership and the climate ambition summit is that moving on the 2050 target alone will not be enough.

The focus ahead of the November climate conference in Glasgow will increasing­ly be on what Australia – with no meaningful policies to reduce emissions from transport or major industry and which is still promising a “gasled recovery” and approving new coal projects – will do before 2030 to live up to the commitment it made in Paris five years ago.

Relying on the states to increase support for renewable energy, as many did last year, will not be enough.

Fixing failing environmen­tal protection

In the wake of the fires, last year’s official assessment of the state of Australia’s natural environmen­t by Graeme Samuel, the former competitio­n watchdog chief, could hardly have been more dire.

An interim report in July found Australia’s environmen­t was in an unsustaina­ble state of decline, and that the national conservati­on laws – the Environmen­t Protection and Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on Act – were ineffectiv­e and needed substantia­l change.

Meanwhile, the auditor general’s office found the government and federal environmen­t department were failing in their duty to protect nature.

Conservati­on groups were not surprised on either front. Australia has the world’s highest rate of mammal extinction due to what is widely agreed to be the failure of successive government­s to protect the wildlife for which the country is renowned. Funding for environmen­t programs was cut by more than a third after the Coalition was elected in 2013. Some was restored last year, much of it directed to “congestion busting” – increasing the pace at which industry and business developmen­t proposals were assessed.

The government’s response was to try and fail to ram through legislatio­n to transfer responsibi­lity for approving major developmen­ts that affect the environmen­t to the states and territorie­s, barely giving lip service to the need to strengthen environmen­tal protection.

It is still yet to release Samuel’s final report, which it has been sitting on since October. That will have to change when parliament returns next month if the government lives up to its legislativ­e requiremen­ts. It is also expected to release the national environmen­tal standards that Samuel said were needed to accompany the devolution in assessment powers to the states.

Several questions will follow. Will the standards be designed to not just maintain but improve the state of the Australian environmen­t? Will they be specific enough that they can be meaningful­ly and legally tested?

And, given the government has rejected the push for an independen­t environmen­t regulator, can the public be confident the new standards will be enforced?

Attention will also turn to whether the Senate crossbench­ers will continue to oppose the government’s legislatio­n if there are not steps to improve the monitoring and health of the country’s growing list of threatened species – at least 170 of which still have no plan for their recovery.

Will the Great Barrier Reef bleach again?

Australia’s most globally recognisab­le natural landmark suffered through its third major coral bleaching event since 2016 last year. Most of the damage was near the southern end around Mackay – an area that was mostly left untouched in 2016 and 2017. It means reefs along the full length of the 2,300km wonder have been severely affected over the past five years.

There are still healthy and vibrant areas and some damaged coral will recover, but a significan­t amount of shallow water coral died.

As recently as a few weeks ago, there were concerns this summer might be a fourth year of severe bleaching out of six. But Prof Terry Hughes, from James Cook University, says the risk has reduced since Christmas thanks to cooler, cloudier and wetter weather, in part due to the cooling La Nina over the Pacific.

An assessment by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion suggests the risk of bleaching is greatest north of Cairns, and a warmer than expected February could still change projection­s, but Hughes says the chance of a non-bleaching year is “pretty good”.

It is a less positive story in the west. The CSIRO has forecast a marine heatwave for the Western Australian coastline early this year, with temperatur­es expected to hit the highest level in a decade.

The Ningaloo Coast and Shark Bay, both world heritage listed areas, are threatened by warming ocean temperatur­es that could affect ecosystems and fisheries that have not recovered since a marine heatwave in 2011.

Saving the koala

The capricious­ness of New South Wales politics was on full display last year when the deputy premier, John Barilaro, threatened, but failed to resign ostensibly over a policy designed to protect koalas, just months after the iconic species was devastated by the summer bushfires.

A compromise deal between the governing Liberal and National parties over the koala state environmen­tal planning policy failed. Instead, NSW reverted to an old koala policy, from 1995, with a promise to develop a new one this year.

It meant that, despite a state inquiry finding the species was on track for extinction in NSW by 2050, nothing new has been done to improve its protection.

Whether that can be addressed will be a test for both state and federal government­s. It is linked to the broader issue of ongoing habitat destructio­n, one of the main threats to not just the koala, but Australian wildlife generally.

Sussan Ley, the federal environmen­t minister, has set an October deadline for the threatened species scientific committee to assess whether east coast koala population­s have been affected enough to warrant a national endangered listing – a step that should trigger greater protection.

Meanwhile, the government continues to sanction clearing of the forests that koalas rely on. Late last year Ley approved a quarry proposal that would clear 50 hectares of koala habitat near Port Stephens in NSW.

It is a similar story at state level. The NSW environmen­t minister, Matt Kean, has set a target to double the state’s koala population by 2050, but forestry operations and mining proposals in koala and other threatened species’ habitat continue, and the state government has continued to weaken landcleari­ng laws.

Stalling on electric vehicles Analysts say the shift to EVs is inevitable, with new models forecast to match fossil fuel vehicles on price by as early as 2025, but Australia trails other countries in their uptake, with fewer affordable models available.

A long-delayed Morrison government electric vehicle policy – now rebadged as a broader “future fuels” strategy – was due late last year, but has yet to be released. A leaked draft suggests it will not include direct incentives for consumers to switch to battery-powered cars.

Other countries have seen a climate and economic advantage in moving now. Britain and Japan – major countries that, like Australia, use right-handside drive cars – announced late last year they would ban the sale of new petrol cars by 2030 and 2035 respective­ly and introduce incentives to drive the change.

Australia appears headed in the other direction with no significan­t incentives, and with some states planning to introduce road-user charges on EVs and hybrids. Victoria and South Australia are heading down this path, and NSW is considerin­g it.

Academic analysis has suggested this would further deter uptake of the technology unless offset by other support. Meanwhile, national transport emissions continue to rise.

The forest wars (redux)

Court decisions loom large over native forest logging in two Australian states this year, and an industry that spent much of last year under siege.

A judgment is due next month in a case brought by the Bob Brown Foundation against Tasmania’s state-owned forestry agency, arguing its native forest logging is inconsiste­nt with federal laws. Conservati­onists argue the forest agreement in the state is not valid as it lacks a legally enforceabl­e requiremen­t that the state protect threatened species.

It follows a similar case in Victoria last year, when a federal court judgment banned logging in 67 coupes in Victoria’s central highlands on the basis that the state’s agency, VicForests, had breached a regional forestry agreement between the state government and Canberra.

In basic terms, the ruling challenged a controvers­ial effective exemption from environmen­tal laws granted to logging under the agreement. The agency is appealing.

Major retailers are increasing­ly refusing to sell paper logged by agencies without forest stewardshi­p council, or FSC, certificat­ion - and both the Tasmanian and the Victorian agencies have failed to get it.

It means the court decisions could have significan­t ramificati­ons for plans to continue native forest logging at current levels until 2030, in Victoria’s case, or indefinite­ly in Tasmania. And they could have major ramificati­ons for threatened species protection.

 ?? Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Forest burned by bushfire in Wingello. Major government reports have outlined the extent to which Australia’s unique environmen­t was in decline long before the fires hit.
Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Forest burned by bushfire in Wingello. Major government reports have outlined the extent to which Australia’s unique environmen­t was in decline long before the fires hit.
 ?? Photograph: Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images ?? A koala affected by 2019-20 bushfires is released back into native bushland following treatment at the Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park.
Photograph: Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images A koala affected by 2019-20 bushfires is released back into native bushland following treatment at the Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park.

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