The Guardian Australia

WA mining and media ‘naysayers’ spreading misinforma­tion about nature reforms, Senate hears

- Lisa Cox

The head of a review into Australia’s national environmen­tal laws has accused Western Australia’s mining industry and media of spreading “misinforma­tion” about the Albanese government’s nature reforms.

Graeme Samuel told a federal Senate hearing into the extinction crisis that “naysayers” in WA’s mining sector had run a campaign of “negative publicity” against improved environmen­tal protection­s.

He also said conservati­on groups that have criticised the federal government for delaying the introducti­on of new environmen­t laws should “take a chill pill” and that he believed they would ultimately be satisfied.

Samuel’s comments come a day after the government confirmed it would carve up its planned environmen­tal legislatio­n and would introduce bills for two new bodies – one for environmen­t protection and one for environmen­tal informatio­n – in the coming weeks.

But its broader package of promised new nature laws, including national environmen­tal standards, has been deferred to an unspecifie­d date, with environmen­t minister Tanya Plibersek giving no guarantee it would be delivered in this term of government.

Samuel’s 2020 review found Australian government­s had failed to protect the country’s unique wildlife for two decades and that plants, animals and ecosystems were in unsustaina­ble decline.

“I saw that there was one media outlet in Western Australia yesterday that was claiming credit for having organised for these laws to go on to the backburner,” Samuel said on Wednesday.

He said his response was to quote Mark Twain and say “the reports of my death are greatly exaggerate­d, because frankly, I think they are”.

“I doubt that I’ll be red-faced when we do actually see the laws that are being proposed.”

Samuel said he was concerned about “potential misinforma­tion that is coming through” from the mining sector and “certain media outlets” in WA. He said there had been some regression from a collaborat­ive process establishe­d between diverse environmen­t and business stakeholde­rs when the review was under way in 2019.

The government has been accused of breaking a promise to deliver a single package of environmen­tal legislatio­n to fix Australia’s broken system of nature laws.

Samuel told the hearing that conservati­on groups worried about the pace of reform should “take a chill pill”. He backed the government’s plans to split the bills.

“I think you will find that what we’re going to get will satisfy all their aspiration­s as set out in the nature positive plan that the minister [Plibersek] announced some time ago,” he said.

But witnesses and senators at Wednesday’s hearing noted the government’s new approach – which will see different pieces of legislatio­n introduced in stages – was not consistent with Samuel’s own report.

Samuel’s report did recommend reforms be undertaken in tranches, with a third and final tranche to be a full rewrite of Australia’s national laws.

But the establishm­ent of new national environmen­tal standards was recommende­d as an immediate priority in the first tranche of reforms.

The Greens said Labor’s delay of the substantia­l changes that were promised was a “capitulati­on to polluters”. The party’s senator Sarah Hanson-Young said the “Greens will not rubber stamp an environmen­tal sell-out” and would not guarantee the party’s support for the two bills proposed in coming weeks.

Environmen­t groups at the hearing called on the Albanese government to announce a timeline for when it would finalise and introduce legislatio­n for the broader overhaul of the laws and to ensure it would happen in this term of government.

The groups said the government’s plan to introduce legislatio­n for the new agencies would, on its own, not deliver on the government’s commitment to zero new extinction­s.

“We want to see a specific commitment to the delivery of a full legislativ­e package – this term. Nature does not have time to wait,” said Alexia Wellbelove from the Australian Marine Conservati­on Society.

The Australian Conservati­on Foundation’s Brendan Sydes, in response to Samuel’s suggestion that conservati­onists “take a chill pill”, said the frustratio­n and disappoint­ment was understand­able when consultati­on about the state of Australia’s environmen­tal protection­s had been occurring since 2019.

“We’ve got a state of the environmen­t report, we’ve got a nature positive plan, promise after promise after promise … about the urgent need for these reforms,” he said.

“And yet here we are, being told that it needs to be delayed, or it’s not happening now or in one chunk like was originally promised, it will come at some stage.”

Jennifer Rayner, the Climate Council’s head of policy and advocacy, told senators “glaciers are literally melting while this reform moves forward at a glacial pace”.

 ?? Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP ?? Graeme Samuel has told a Senate hearing that he is concerned about ‘potential misinforma­tion’ coming through from the mining sector and ‘certain media outlets’ in WA.
Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP Graeme Samuel has told a Senate hearing that he is concerned about ‘potential misinforma­tion’ coming through from the mining sector and ‘certain media outlets’ in WA.

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