Bangkok Post

NSW koalas may be gone by 2050

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SYDNEY: Koalas in the Australian state of New South Wales (NSW) could become extinct by 2050 unless the government immediatel­y intervenes to protect the native species and its habitat, the final report of a year-long parliament­ary inquiry said yesterday.

Land clearing for agricultur­e, urban developmen­t, mining and forestry had been the biggest factor in the fragmentat­ion and loss of habitat for the animals in NSW, the country’s most populous state, over several decades.

A prolonged drought-fuelled bushfire season that ended earlier this year was also devastatin­g for the animals, destroying about a quarter of their habitat across the state, and in some parts up to 81%.

“The evidence could not be more stark,” the 311-page report says. “The only way our children’s grandchild­ren will see a koala in the wild in NSW will be if the government acts upon the committee’s recommenda­tions.”

The report — commission­ed by a multi-party parliament­ary committee — makes a total of 42 recommenda­tions, including an urgent census, prioritisi­ng the protection of the animal in the planning of urban developmen­t, and increasing funding for conservati­on.

The report, however, stopped short of unanimousl­y recommendi­ng a moratorium on logging in public native forests, it said.

Stuart Blanch, manager of land clearing and restoratio­n at the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Australia called on the government to heed the recommenda­tions and strengthen protection­s for the animals’ habitat.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklia­n on Tuesday told reporters the government had already made investment­s into preserving the animals.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A Koala looks at a camera as it sits atop a branch in its enclosure at Wild Life Sydney Zoo in Sydney, New South Wales.
REUTERS A Koala looks at a camera as it sits atop a branch in its enclosure at Wild Life Sydney Zoo in Sydney, New South Wales.

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