The Saturday Paper

Logging Black Summer forests. Drew Rooke

Despite warnings from environmen­tal experts, logging has recommence­d in NSW forests ravaged by the Black Summer bushfires. Now, the EPA is investigat­ing alleged regulation breaches by logging contractor­s, with habitats and wildlife at risk of irreparabl­e

- Drew Rooke is a freelance journalist and the author of One Last Spin: The Power and Peril of the Pokies.

Lindenmaye­r says this went against the unequivoca­l advice he gave the NSW government: the environmen­tal risks of any form of post-fire logging could not be sufficient­ly mitigated by any set of measures. “I told them it was nonsensica­l. You shouldn’t be doing it.”

On January 20 this year, while swaths of eastern Australia were still ablaze, the New South Wales government held an urgent workshop about logging in the state’s forests, which had been decimated by the summer’s catastroph­ic bushfires.

The meeting, hastily organised just a week before it happened, was attended by several representa­tives from the state’s Department of Planning, Industry and Environmen­t and the state-owned Forestry Corporatio­n of NSW (FCNSW).

A handful of independen­t scientific experts were also invited, including Associate Professor Cristopher Brack and Professor David Lindenmaye­r, both from the Australian National University, and Professor Ross Bradstock of the University of Wollongong.

A report, obtained by The Saturday Paper, outlines that the workshop examined the many risks of logging in bushfire-affected forests, including the “risk of social backlash”, and how these risks might be mitigated so that post-fire logging – seen as “an opportunit­y to harvest high-value timbers and provide employment for the forestry industry” – could recommence.

It is clear rural jobs were a key considerat­ion for the workshop. Bradstock says the need to support communitie­s that had suffered during the bushfires was central to the discussion: “There was pressure on the government to sustain rural communitie­s and support rural industries.”

As long as post-fire logging was “managed with appropriat­e conditions and care”, Bradstock saw no issue with logging restarting. And it did: less than two months after the workshop.

Lindenmaye­r says this went against the unequivoca­l advice he gave the NSW government: the environmen­tal risks of any form of post-fire logging could not be sufficient­ly mitigated by any set of measures.

“I told them it was nonsensica­l,” Lindenmaye­r tells The Saturday Paper. “You shouldn’t be doing it.”

While he couldn’t attend the workshop in person, Lindenmaye­r – described by the NSW Environmen­t Protection Authority (EPA) as an “internatio­nal salvage logging expert” – says he provided the agency with an extensive body of recently published scientific research, much of which he was involved in.

This research clearly demonstrat­ed that logging fire-affected forests can significan­tly impair the recovery and rehabilita­tion of plants and animals, reduce the amount of biodiversi­ty and adversely alter the compositio­n and nutrient levels of soils.

There are more dangerous risks, too. Logging changes the compositio­n of forests, Lindenmaye­r says, making them hotter and drier over time. It also leaves behind a large amount of debris – known as “slash” – which increases the fuel load on the ground.

As he and several colleagues wrote in a recent comment piece published in the respected journal Nature Ecology and Evolution: “… there is compelling evidence that Australia’s historical and contempora­ry logging regimes have made many Australian forests more fire prone and contribute­d to increased fire severity and flammabili­ty.”

In the South Brooman State Forest, on the NSW south coast, a car kicks up dust as it rumbles along a dirt road. All around, charcoaled trunks are covered in epicormic shoots resembling thick green fur – a sign the forest, near Batemans Bay on Yuin country, is slowly recovering.

In December last year, the Currowan fire swept through South Brooman. It was a fierce and massive blaze: raging for 74 days across nearly 500,000 hectares, destroying more than 300 homes.

Nine months on, Paul* and Melanie*, both local conservati­onists, are auditing logging operations in this region. They have been doing this for the past four years, acting, Paul says, as the “ears and eyes of the authoritie­s on the ground”. He is driving, while Melanie navigates from the backseat.

Like all state forests subject to logging, South Brooman is divided into compartmen­ts, which are themselves subdivided into coupes. Melanie announces the car has entered compartmen­t 58A, where logging began in May, just a few months after the fires tore through.

At first, South Brooman was just one of two state forests where the NSW government allowed logging after the Black Summer bushfires. By September 2020, the EPA had extended that to 12 different forests that had been burnt across the state.

Each of these logging operations is subject to a set of new, site-specific environmen­tal conditions, which augment the existing rules set out in the coastal integrated forestry operations approval (IFOA).

The new conditions, an EPA spokespers­on told The Saturday Paper, “aim to mitigate the specific environmen­tal risks caused by the bushfires at each site, including impacts on plants, animals and their habitats, soils and waterways”.

But there are signs the EPA’s new rules are not sparing vital trees from logging.

The Saturday Paper can confirm the EPA is now investigat­ing alleged logging breaches in 14 separate state forests across NSW.

In July, the agency hit the FCNSW with a 40-day stop-work order after an investigat­ion alleged 26 hollow-bearing trees in compartmen­t 58A were either felled or damaged by loggers.

The environmen­tal conditions issued for the compartmen­t require all hollow-bearing trees to be retained because they provide vital habitat, shelter and foraging opportunit­ies for at least 174 species of mammals, birds, reptiles and frogs in NSW – 40 of which are listed as threatened.

The EPA’s executive director of regulatory operations, Carmen Dwyer, said at the time that this “could result in irreparabl­e environmen­tal harm”, including to several vulnerable species such as the yellow-bellied glider and the glossy-black cockatoo, which are known to inhabit the area.

The EPA investigat­ion – which is ongoing – was triggered after another local conservati­onist, a member of the Brooman State Forest Conservati­on Group, reported they had found more than 40 hollow-bearing trees felled in 58A.

Melanie and Paul, whose nearby home was destroyed by bushfires on New Year’s

Eve, have come to compartmen­t 58A today to follow up a tip about another potential breach – this one in relation to the cutting down of a “giant tree”, defined by the EPA as having a diameter of at least 1.4 metres. The IFOA requires that all giant trees be retained.

In a large clearing, Paul and Melanie step out of the car and walk to a large red mahogany stump, crossing bare earth covered in machinery tracks. They measure the felled tree’s diameter, careful to follow EPA protocols: 145.2 centimetre­s, a giant tree.

The pair photograph­s the felled giant and enters it into their database to report to the EPA.

Lying on its side, amid piles of logging slash, the tree seems to have been chopped down for no apparent reason. If it was felled by loggers, they have left it behind. In its crown is a large hollow.

A termite mound stands next to the stump, defaced with a crudely spray-painted smiley face in fluoro green. The colour of the paint is the same used by FCNSW to mark the habitat and trees that are to be retained.

Later, in another area of the compartmen­t, Paul and Melanie find two more giant trees lying on their side. The bark on both is significan­tly damaged – evidence, Paul says, that a machine, not the wind, pushed them over.

In a statement to The Saturday Paper, a FCNSW spokespers­on said all forestry contractor­s are required to “undergo comprehens­ive training and accreditat­ion in the implementa­tion of the conditions of the IFOA” and that “additional instructio­n” is provided relating to any site-specific conditions for any operation.

However, there have been many recent alleged breaches of both the IFOA and the additional site-specific conditions governing logging of burnt forests across the state.

In July, the EPA issued FCNSW with another 40-day stop-work order for harvesting operations in Wild Cattle Creek State Forest, on the NSW north coast, after finding two giant trees that had allegedly been felled.

At the time, the EPA’s Carmen Dwyer described these trees as “irreplacea­ble”.

According to Stephen Cocks, the owner of a logging business on the NSW south coast, widespread breaches are almost inevitable.

He says it’s “so hard to log within boundaries” – referring to the EPA’s new environmen­tal conditions, particular­ly the requiremen­t to retain all hollow-bearing trees – while trying to keep a business viable.

Cocks recently agreed with FCNSW to suspend a logging operation that his company had been contracted for in Mogo State Forest, which lies just south of South Brooman. “We were struggling to meet the new regulation­s,” he says.

Cocks claims FCNSW is now trying to get the new post-fire environmen­tal regulation­s “rolled back” for Mogo State Forest, so logging can continue. A spokespers­on for FCNSW would not confirm this but said the forestry corporatio­n is now “seeking clarity” from the EPA on the new conditions.

In the report from the post-fire logging workshop held in Sydney in January, Victoria is cited as a case study. The report said the state had “gained considerab­le experience” managing logging after the Black Saturday fires in 2009, and the NSW government “should learn from the Victorian experience”.

But Victoria has recently changed tack: last November, its government announced a $120 million plan to end native logging and transition entirely to plantation-based timber, which already comprises nearly 90 per cent of all timber harvested across Australia, by 2030.

Professor Lindenmaye­r wants NSW to learn from this as well, especially in the wake of the Black Summer and as the next bushfire season begins. “These forests are already badly affected by fire,” he says. “The worst possible thing you can do is add another major disturbanc­e.”

* Names have been changed.

 ?? Supplied ?? A logging site in South Brooman State Forest.
Supplied A logging site in South Brooman State Forest.

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