The Guardian Australia

Most rural land exempt from new NSW Coalition rules to protect koala habitat

- Anne Davies

The NSW Coalition has agreed to new rules to protect koala habitat but will effectivel­y exempt most rural land from more stringent rules administer­ed through the planning process.

Instead, koala habitat on rural land will be covered by yet-to-be-announced protection­s under land-clearing laws administer­ed by NSW Local Land Services through the primary industries portfolio.

The Nature Conservati­on Council on Monday said “excising farming and forestry zones from the koala Sepp is a catastroph­ic setback for the species”.

“These are where most of the koalas live and where most koala habitat destructio­n is happening right now,” council chief executive Chris Gambian said in a statement. “If you remove protection­s from these areas you have basically given up on the species and signed its death warrant.”

The announceme­nt of the new koala state environmen­tal planning policy (Sepp) 2021 was held up until Monday evening as the Liberal planning minister, Rob Stokes, and the Nationals leader, John Barilaro, worked to agree on the wording of a press release.

The Coalition was almost torn apart in 2020 over the issue. The Nationals threatened to go to the crossbench if the new koala planning policy was not abandoned. They later dropped the threat and the policy was reworked.

“The new Sepp will help us achieve the NSW koala strategy’s objective of stabilisin­g, then increasing the population­s of koalas in the wild,” Stokes said in the statement.

The minister said the new solution was a big step forward for the protection of koalas in NSW. Clearing for developmen­ts will still be dealt with under the planning laws.

“The new Sepp will apply to areas where more than 95% of developmen­t occurs across NSW – these are the places where koala protection is needed most,” Stokes said.

Core rural zones in rural areas will be decoupled from the Sepp as new codes that protect koala habitat under the Local Land Services Act are developed over the next month, the government said.

“This will vastly reduce red tape by removing the dual consent requiremen­ts facing farmers and foresters while immediatel­y introducin­g enhanced protection for koala habitat in areas where more than 95% of developmen­t activity occurs.”

Barilaro said the concerns of landholder­s in regional NSW had been heard by the NSW government.

“This is a win for regional NSW and balances the interests of farmers and the protection of koalas and their habitat,” the deputy premier said.

“Land zoned for primary production or forestry in regional NSW will not be subject to the new Sepp, which means farmers will not be strangled by red tape. The intention has always been to find a solution to protect both farmers and koalas.”

The key question is whether the new rules will adequately protect land – mainly on the urban fringe and on the mid and north coast – where suburbs are expanding into forested areas.

The proposed laws were unpopular with some Nationals MPs because farmers and developers in their electorate­s saw rural land close to towns as nest eggs that could be developed in the future.

In metropolit­an Sydney, the Blue Mountains and the Central Coast, the Sepp 2021 will apply across all zones, including rural zonings, the government said.

Comprehens­ive koala plans of management (KPOM) will be finalised to protect koala habitat in Tweed and Byron shires, Stokes, Barilaro and the environmen­t minister, Matt Kean, said in the joint statement.

The other big threat to koala population­s is the expansion of broad-acre cropping in north-west NSW. The NSW government relaxed the laws around land clearing in 2017, leading to a mas

sive 60% increase in land clearing.

The new land-clearing laws allow self-assessment under codes. If threatened species are present, then landowners must seek permission prior to clearing. But in practice it has led to a disastrous increase in loss of native vegetation and illegal clearing, according to environmen­tal groups.

According to Monday’s press release, private native forestry (PNF) and local land services (LLS) codes will be revised “to ensure robust protection­s for koalas in areas of high-value koala habitat and certainty and consistenc­y for primary producers”.

The fate of koalas in north-west NSW will depend on the robustness of these new laws and whether they will continue to allow farmers to self-assess.

Kean said the changes would ensure core koala habitat and colonies across NSW were protected.

“We have ambitious plans to double koala population­s in NSW by 2050 and that means we need the right policy tools in place to protect and preserve wildlife and their habitat,” Kean said. “This is a good first step.”

Kean has set a target to double the state’s koala population from a “baseline” of 20,000 to 40,000 despite expert advice urging him not to set such targets.

But documents obtained under freedom of informatio­n laws by Labor revealed an expert asked: “How can you set a target for a population when you have no idea how many there are now?”

Independen­t MP Justin Field said the new policy was about opening the door to expanded logging on private land without clear rules for protecting koalas.

“It’s one thing to claim this policy reduces red tape, but no government can ignore the fact that over 60% of koalas live on private land and if you want to protect koalas you have to protect trees – this policy doesn’t do that,” he said. “This grubby deal is the final capitulati­on by the premier, Gladys Berejiklia­n, to John Barilaro and the National party’s tantrum over the right to kill koalas in NSW.”

Greens environmen­t spokespers­on Cate Faehrmann said: “The dummy spit by the National party over the new koala Sepp was never about farmers. It was always about appeasing the logging industry’s demands to be able to log koala habitat on private land.”

“The key threat facing koalas is the ongoing loss of their habitat, yet this new SEPP won’t stop this loss,” she said. “Two-thirds of koalas live on private land, yet this government has weakened land clearing laws so that almost none of it is protected.”

 ?? Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP ?? NSW Coalition says the new Sepp will stabilise and increase koala population­s but critics say it does not protect crucial habitat.
Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP NSW Coalition says the new Sepp will stabilise and increase koala population­s but critics say it does not protect crucial habitat.

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