Caldera

Nesting Boxes for Wildlife – Workshop

Conservation Volunteers Australia would like to invite you to their next event in the Tweed Shire about Nest boxes happening on May 25 in Uki.

Come along on May 25 and learn about nest box installation with Nick from Sentinel Tree Care.

This free event is an introduction to all things nest boxes. Tree hollows are an essential resource for numerous fauna species, and their loss is a threat to hollow-dependent fauna. One solution to alleviate this problem is to install artificial hollows such as nest boxes. We will provide a flat pack nest box and guidance on how to assemble the various styles of boxes. Learn where to place them in one of Australia’s most biodiverse regions.


Bookings essential as places are limited. Brunch provided. See booking link below.https://volunteerportal.conservationvolunteers.com.au/… read more

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nefanews: [Final?] Forest Media 31 (April 2023)

Hi, I [Dailan] started doing regular media summaries in late 2019. The format has changed over time. My coverage significantly improved when NCC gave me access to their daily media monitoring results – I thank them for it. I find it interesting to keep up with what’s happening in NSW and around the world, though it takes a large part of my time. I wanted to keep going untill after the election, though will now be calling it quits, instead focusing on occasional articles.

New South Wales

The North East Forest Alliance welcomed the election of the Minns Labor government with their promise to create a Great Koala National Park, and called for a moratorium on logging within the park proposal until the promised assessment is complete. The Bellingen Environment Centre also did a media release calling for an immediate moratorium, saying the unions and industry have no role in what should be a scientific review. read more

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“They’re STILL woodchipping wildlife habitat”

NSW is blessed with an amazing diversity of forests. These are home to thousands of amazing plants and animals found nowhere else on earth. 

We have rainforests that have survived since Gondwana and tall eucalypt forests that contain some of the tallest trees in the world.  
 
Please watch the 1 minute video below: “They’re STILL woodchipping wildlife habitat”.  

A future exists in which NSW is a leader in reforestation and conservation, rather than a global deforestation and extinction hotspot. Ending native forest logging and moving to 100% plantation timber is the first step on the path to achieving this.  

It is realistic, Victoria and Western Australia have already committed to phasing out native logging.   read more

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NEFA: Forest News – March

New South Wales

Forest protectors walked into closed forests in Yarratt SF, and Doubleduke SF, claiming they have been closed to the public by the Forestry Corporation to hide the destruction that is occurring at taxpayer expense. Brooman State Forest Conservation Group and Friends of the Forest (Mogo), Knitting Nannas in the M.U.D (Milton Ulladulla District) and Manyana Matters Environmental Association had a solidarity action in Bateman’s Bay. There was a good turnout at all locations, with 70 protestors at Doubleduke met by 7 police cars.

Sean O’Shanessy locked on to the front gate, with a tree-sit attached, to give the Forestry Corporation a taste of their own medicine by shutting access to their headquarters in Pennant Hills. Sean was cut off and let go, the person in the tree-sit came down after their line to the gate was cut, and let go. It got good coverage on Channel 7 in Sydney, but no other mainstream media. read more

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The Seeding – Caldera Music

Caldera Music is a modest platform for the promotion and encouragement of Environmental and Social Justice Music by musicians of the Caldera.

[The Seeding are from Mullum.]

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Deep Ecology with John Seed, an experiential deep ecology workshop.

Deep Ecology with John Seed, weekend 14th – 16th, followed by optional stay-over:  

“Human identity exists at the intersection of the ancient cycles of air, water and soil. In spite of the pervasive illusion of separation, in reality no separation is possible between nature and ourselves.
“ … community therapies “healing our relations to the widest community, that of all living beings”. By acknowledging our interconnectedness we invite the spontaneous healing of the psyche. In this workshop we participate in a series of processes and rituals informed by those used by indigenous peoples throughout time. Using personal sharing, experiential deep ecology and a Council of All Beings, we will dissolve the separation between person and planet. Vision and empowerment arise naturally from realigning ourselves with the living Earth.” read more

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Caldera Music – Manoa

Caldera Music is a modest platform for the promotion and encouragement of Environmental and Social Justice Music by musicians of the Caldera.

“Manoa … completed his PhD in Environmental Education & Ecopsychology and shares his ecologic knowledge and his belief in the healing potential of the natural world through education, workshops and retreats.

“Manoa has shared his music at a range of folk festivals including Woodford Folk Festival, Pranafest, Splendour In The Grass, Mullum Music Festival, Earth Frequency Festival, and Wallaby Creek Festival.

Life In The Garden, Manoa: > 🎶Play

“Manoa brings the summer vibes by weaving uplifting reggae grooves that inspire audiences to move and soothing folk melodies that calm the mind and inspire a contemplative flow. read more

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Caldera Music – Lauren

Caldera Music is a platform for the promotion and encouragement of Environmental and Social Justice Music by musicians of the Caldera.

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Caldera Music – Murray Kyle

Caldera Music is a platform for the promotion and encouragement of Environmental and Social Justice Music by musicians of the Caldera.

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END THE KOALA WARS – TELL GOVERNMENT MEMBERS TO END THE KOALA WARS NOW!

UPDATE: The proposed Bill of the Nationals to further remove protections for native forests has been withdrawn because of community response made the passing of the bill unlikely [a success for forest protection and those who responded to the call for action].

———-

The koala wars are back and we only have days to stop another National party koala-killing bill in its tracks. 

Two-thirds of koala habitat is found on private land here in NSW, yet the National Party has just introduced a bill that would give loggers access to clearfell precious koala habitat for another 30 years!

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Selling out Koalas

UPDATE: The proposed Bill of the Nationals to further remove protections for native forests has been withdrawn because of community response made the passing of the bill unlikely [a success for forest protection and those who responded to the call for action]. 

[Original] NEFA MEDIA RELEASE: 

Perrottet’s Private Native Forestry logging bill is an all-out assault on Koalas, while taking away community rights to have a say in how, when and where logging occurs by giving them to the National Party controlled Local Land Services.

The Liberal-National government has removed protection for Koala habitat on State forests, now Perrottet intends to put the nail in their coffin by stopping protection of core Koala habitat on private lands, NEFA spokesperson Dailan Pugh said. read more

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NCC > Breaking: The NSW Government just introduced a bill to scrap protections for koala habitat and fast-track logging.

If you thought the news for koalas (and hence forests) couldn’t get any worse read the forwarded email from the Nature Conservation Council. If the NSW Nationals have their way that will be the outcome. They want to relax restrictions on private native forestry and strip Councils from having any say. Our local member Geoff Provest has championed his concern for the plight of koalas so needs to be reminded that he’s not representing us if he supports this bill. It’s as simple as clicking on the link and saying so. The next State election is not far off, next March.

———

Koalas were declared endangered just six months ago. It was meant to mark a turning point for protecting and restoring koala homes.

Instead, we are watching this desperate ploy by certain parliamentary forces to reduce already weak koala safeguards for their powerful logging mates.

Email your local member of parliament now to ask them to scrap this plan? 

This plan is laid out in the proposed Environmental Planning and Assessment Amendment (Private Native Forestry) Bill 2022.

This bill, if enacted, would strip local councils of their ability to limit destructive native forest logging and implement controls to protect threatened species.

It also extends the life of logging approvals on private land from 15 to 30 years.

With koalas facing extinction in less than 30 years, this would lock in future tree clearing, and make it even harder to stop the downward spiral koala populations are on.

Email your local member now to let them know that any reductions to koala protection are unacceptable. 

By emailing Premier Perrottet and your local MP, we can show them that going ahead with the koala killing plan will is a deeply unpopular move with a NSW election just five months away.

Together, let’s show them just how many people care about a future with koalas.

We won’t accept anything less.

In determination,

Jacqui Mumford
CEO
Nature Conservation Council 

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NEFA News: Federal Gov’t Falls at First Forest Hurdle

Report by SEAN O’SHANNESSY:

North coast conservationists are dismayed, that the Albanese Federal Government have failed to seize the opportunity to exclude wood from native forests being used as a substitute for coal and classed as ‘renewable energy’.

A Senate Committee report released this afternoon that investigated potential amendments to the Climate Change legislation, has recommended that using forest wood should be further investigated, but not taken the opportunity to rule it out at the outset.

“How much more investigation is needed” asked North Coast Environment Council Vice-President, Susie Russell.

The recent NSW parliamentary inquiry into ‘Sustainability of energy supply and resources in New South Wales’ found: read more

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Tweed Growth Management and Housing Strategy Survey

Below is the link to the survey and also the Caldera Environment Centre’s priority issues as a guide to help with your survey responses. Closing date is 12th Sept.

CEC points – from the perspective of preserving Tweeds internationally significant biodiversity and maintaining the character of local ‘village’ communities as well as preserving productive farmlands.

Suggested responses to survey questions:

Q on places and types of residential development for future population growth it is important that urban in-fill is prioritised. Increased density in areas that already have infrastructure will help protect natural bushland and agricultural land from clearing. It is VITAL that Environmental Offsets are not used in the process of urban development. The priority must be Avoid and Minimise – Offset only as last resort and ONLY within the development footprint. Priority sites to be funded under the proposed State Government Affordable Housing Fund should NOT be located on environmentally sensitive Crown Land, particularly on the Tweed Coast. read more

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See the Draft North Coast Regional Plan Update

The North Coast Regional Plan is the strategic plan for the future of the this region

View the document with our highlighted texts for clarity and speed of reading: http://calderaenvironmentcentre.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Draft_North_Coast_Regional_Plan_2041.pdf

Submissions closed 24 August 2022

Caldera Environment Centre

To NSW Dept Planning & Environment
Email: northern@planning.nsw.gov.au

Submission: Draft North Coast Regional Plan 2041 (NCRP).

The Caldera Environment Centre Inc. (C.E.C.) is a Tweed Shire environmental group, a registered Voluntary Conservation Organisation, a registered Charity and an Incorporated Association of 25 years standing.

Re Land for New Housing

We note the following regarding land for new housing from the draft plan:
“… population growth in the region is expected to be particularly strong.
“Before approving secondary dwellings or detached dual occupancies in rural areas, councils should consider possible land use conflicts and impacts on local agricultural activities.
“Housing delivery targets for new housing will be achieved though development of land generally within the urban growth area boundary … the extension of the urban footprint for future
growth … infill housing is to be prioritised as it takes advantage of existing infrastructure and services and is a more sustainable option … greater residential density within the urban growth area boundary … maximising the density of land proposed to be rezoned for urban purposes.”
“The priority will be to direct growth to existing zoned land and investigation areas within existing urban growth area boundaries in the first instance.” read more

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Inquiry into Australia’s Extinction Crisis

The inquiry has been re-referred, with a revised title and terms of reference, included below. 

… you are invited to make a new submission to this inquiry by 31 August 2022previous submissions are still to be considered. 

… lodge a submission through the committee’s website. 

Inquiry into Australia’s Extinction Crisis. 

Terms of Reference. 

Australia’s extinction crisis, including:

  • the ongoing decline in the population and conservation status of Australia’s nearly threatened fauna and flora species;
  • the wider ecological impact of faunal and flora extinction;
  • the international and domestic obligations of the Commonwealth Government in conserving threatened species;
  • the adequacy of Commonwealth environment laws, including but not limited to the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999, in providing sufficient protections for threatened species and against key threatening processes;
  • the adequacy and effectiveness of protections for critical habitat for threatened fauna under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999;
  • the adequacy of the management and extent of the National Reserve System, stewardship arrangements, covenants and connectivity through wildlife corridors in conserving threatened fauna;
  • the use of traditional knowledge and management for threatened species recovery and other outcomes as well as opportunities to expand the use of traditional knowledge and management for conservation;
  • the adequacy of existing funding streams for implementing threatened species recovery plans and preventing threatened fauna loss in general;
  • the adequacy of existing monitoring practices in relation to the threatened species assessment and adaptive management responses;
  • the adequacy of existing assessment processes for identifying threatened species conservation status;
  • the adequacy of existing compliance mechanisms for enforcing Commonwealth environment law;
  • final report of the Independent Review of the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (the Samuel Review);
  • the Australia State of the Environment 2021 report; and
  • any related matters.
  • read more

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    Australian State of The Environment Report

    Biodiversity – Executive Summary:

    “Australia’s biodiversity is under increased threat and has, overall, continued to decline.

    “… many species and communities suffer from the cumulative impacts of multiple pressures. Most jurisdictions consider the status of threatened species to be poor and the trend to be declining.

    “Invasive species, particularly feral animals, are unequivocally increasing the pressure they exert on Australia’s biodiversity, and habitat fragmentation and degradation continue in many areas. The impacts of climate change are increasing.

    “The outlook for Australian biodiversity is generally poor, given the current overall poor status, deteriorating trends and increasing pressures.” read more

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    … to force a debate in the NSW parliament to End Public Native Forest Logging

    Update: Petition succeeded, it will be debated in the Legislative Assembly at 4pm on 15/09/2022.

    You can watch the debate on the webcast at https://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/pages/la-webcast-page.aspx .

    —————

    NCC is sponsoring a Parliamentary petition aimed at ending forest logging.

    The Petition must get 20,000 signatures in the by August 1, to force a debate in the NSW parliament.

    Please do sign the e-petition, link below.

    https://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/la/Pages/epetition-details.aspx?q=quge-8rdRlyn4PTcuMj_PA .

    Well Done. Thank you.

    Caldera Environment Centre.

    website: www.calderaenvironmentcentre.org . 
    email: caldera@calderaenvironmentcentre.org

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    World Environment Day 17th July Knox Park Murwillumbah – #OnlyOneEarth

       
    The Caldera World Environment Day Event 

    • promotes sustainability and protection of the natural environment, 
    • celebrates the environmental culture and ecological bio-diversity in our region, 
    • is a coming together to learn about and to discuss the challenges we face in living in the age of the ecological crisis, and 
    • is designed to be encouraging, inspiring, positive and productive. 

    The event will include presentations, demonstrations, Information, children’s entertainment, musical entertainment and food and goods stalls. 

    The  United Nations World Environment Day 2022 campaign is: #OnlyOneEarth.

    #OnlyOneEarth calls for  collective, transformative action on a global scale to celebrate, protect and restore our planet.

    #OnlyOneEarth.

    The Caldera Environment Centre CEC will host their annual WEDfest Sunday July 17 in Knox park Murwillumbah.

    The International World Environment Day is celebrated annually – this year marks its 50th anniversary.  In 1972 the UN launched the event in Stockholm with the motto “Only One Earth”.  Half a century later this message and the #OnlyOneEarth campaign is as  important as ever. read more

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    NEFA: Cherry Tree Four Get Justice

    All charges were dismissed in Kyogle Court for the four forest protectors arrested in November for defending Cherry Tree State Forest from logging. Malveena Martyn, Naomi Shine, Ian Gaillard and Dee Mould, collectively known as the “Cherry Tree Four” who had their final day in court after over six months of legal action were relieved and proud to have had their efforts exonerated by the court.

    Ms Shine said she was proud of what she had done. “Cherry Tree is a beautiful native forest and the wildlife corridor is part of is so valuable,” she said.   Ms Martyn was clear about why she was involved in the protest. “We want logging in public native forests stopped,” she said. “The Forest Corporation has been doing what it likes for decades.”   read more

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    Echo: Tweed Council excludes ‘burning of wood or waste’ as a renewable energy supply

    The NSW government rejected the recommendation by the parliamentary inquiry into ‘Sustainability of energy supply and resources in New South Wales’ to stop burning native forests for electricity. However, earlier this year (17 March) Tweed Shire Council passed an amendment to exclude the purchase of renewable energy sourced from the burning of wood or waste as part of their procurement of Large-scale Generation Certificates (LGCs).

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    [nefanews] Forest Media 8 April 2022

    New South Wales: 

    At the south coast Upper House hearings into the ’Long term sustainability and future of the timber and forest products industry’ concerns were raised about the frequency of logging breaches, the slow investigations, the lack of third-party enforcement, the logging of burnt forests and the pitiful returns on native forest logging, whereas the industry was concerned about restrictions on logging big trees.

    Susie, Greg and Jane ventured from Elands to set up a soup kitchen in Lismore called Trees not Bombs, a collaboration between the old NEFA liberation cafe and Food Not Bombs in Newcastle, serving 300 to 400 hot meals a day and unlimited hot drinks.

    The first wave of fish kills in the Richmond River were massive as inundated exotic pastures on river banks and floodplains rotted and deoxygenated waters, suffocating millions of fish. Another wave is expected to result from runoff from activated acid sulphate soils (in drained wetlands) with high levels of sulphuric acid and metals. Though the good news is that all our streams have had a thorough flush-out of fine sediments and toxins deposited by our activities.

    Australia

    Last week Bob Brown and three other protesters had their charges suddenly withdrawn in court in relation to protests in the Eastern Tiers in 2020, and then two other protesters also had charges dropped this week regarding Wentworth Hills protests. Since the mid 1980s the Government has been approving logging illegally, and they can’t retrospectively fix it for over a month. Bob Brown said the decision called into question the legality of native forest harvesting in Tasmania spanning decades, stating “The government should prepare to compensate hundreds of good people who have been wrongfully charged, convicted and even sent to jail for obstructing this illegal logging.”

    The Morrison government has launched its Farm Forestry: Growing Together strategy which aims to encourage tree planting for loggers, which can be double counted as carbon storage until they log it. They are antithetic to the concept of planting trees for the environment or the future.

    Two men have been convicted and fined $25,000 each plus costs in the Mildura Magistrates Court for the destruction of more than eight hectares of wildlife habitat near Mildura.

    Species

    The National Koala Recovery Plan has finally been released, with the Commonwealth, NSW and ACT signing onto it, and Queensland refusing to. There are promises of a new national koala recovery team to oversee and co-ordinate recovery efforts, with the plan “implemented through regional-scale implementation plans” (covering anywhere from whole bioregions to Council KPoMs). So while the goal is to protect and recover Koala populations, it seems to be business as usual, with more committees and buck-passing as Koala habitat continues to be logged and cleared while Koalas decline.

    The NSW Government has purchased 73ha for Koalas adjacent to Cudgen Nature Reserve in the Tweed. This was likely already zoned for protection, though this entrenches protection and improves management, though Provest is gilding the lily by claiming it significantly increases their habitat area and decreases their risk of extinction (particularly given he supported the Koala Kill Bill). Sue Arnold bemoans media focussing on politicians kissing Koalas while they ignore track records and lack of any pre-election policy focus on biodiversity loss, let alone koalas. Now you can experience Allen’s Chew’Ems Gummi Koalas fruity flavoured fun or get zapped with the tanginess of Chew’Ems Sourz Gummi Koalas, while helping fund a new WIRES online National Koala Rescue Training Course.

    A company claims its trials were able to reliably identify an individual koala with 94 percent accuracy from its call and are now applying for Phase 2 of the NSW Small Business Innovation and Research Program, which will allow tracking of individual animals through their bellows using multiple recorders.

    Recent research found that revegetation can help restore populations of some woodland birds in farming landscapes, though remnant vegetation was far more valuable for increasing the diversity of woodland birds, with many dependent on the resources provided by older trees.

    The Deteriorating Problem

    The issue of the week was the IPCC’s release of Working Group III’s report ‘Climate Change 2022 Mitigation of Climate Change’. From 1850 to 2019 we released 2,400 billion net tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere, though it is truly frightening that 42% of these emissions occurred since 1990, after we were meant to begin curbing our emissions. Average annual GHG emissions during 2010- 2019 were higher than in any previous decade, while the rate of growth has slowed we are quickly burning through our carbon budget, the chance of limiting warming to below 1.5℃ is rapidly disappearing and we are on track to over 3℃ (2.5 to 4℃) heating. THE KEY MESSAGES ARE THAT ITS NOT YET TOO LATE – BUT SOON WILL BE – AND IF WE TAKE URGENT AND DRASTIC ACTION WE CAN STILL DO IT. Even if we do reduce our carbon emissions we still need to remove carbon from the atmosphere, and while unjustified reliance is been placed on pumping a proportion of emissions underground, it is clear we need the proven ability of forests. Protecting forests, changing diets, and altering farming methods could contribute around a quarter of the cuts we need by 2050.

    The European energy crisis accentuated by the Russian invasion of Ukraine has biomass companies touting their wares, leading to warnings from conservation groups of the folly of burning more forests.

    A new study highlights hotter-drought conditions are causing instances of mass tree dieback around the world across the full range of environmental variation. It is estimated that under +2 °C and +4 °C scenarios, mortality-year climate condition frequencies increase by 22 and 140%. Forests will have to change to adapt to the changed conditions with losers and winners, unfortunately it is oldgrowth forests that evolved in more stable climates that are likely to be the biggest losers.

    An experimental study that increased soil temperatures and water supply found that climate change reduces the abundance of wildflowers and causes them to produce less nectar and fewer and lighter seeds.

    Bird Populations have been quietly declining for years in Panama’s forests due to climate change. 35 species of birds have declined by more than 50 per cent and 9 bird species declined by 90 per cent or more.

    Turning it Around

    While NSW attempts to construct carbon balances of its forests using an assumption that all forests originated in 1920, often dubious logging history data and assumptions about storage off-site in wood products (see previous forest news), there are actual measurements being taken using lidar, even from the orbiting space station.

    In America they are resolving a logging debate by generating carbon credits from protection, generating tens of millions of dollars in the coming years to help fund public schools and county services, while also protecting a major watershed.

    Dailan Pugh

    For further details and links to articles see: https://www.nefa.org.au/forest_news

    .

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    NEFA: … focus attention on forests.

    Forests are the most biologically diverse ecosystems on land and accommodate more than 80% of the terrestrial specifies of animals, plants and insects.

    Forests cover 30% of the earth’s surface and are vital habitats for millions of species, they are sources of clean air and water, and of course crucial for fighting climate change.

    A study from the UN shows that forests actually can lift one billion people out of poverty and create additional 80 million green jobs.

    https://unric.org/en/international-forest-day-2022/

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    North East Forest Alliance Statement for International Day of Forests

    “If the NSW and Federal Governments continue to refuse to [stop logging public native forests and stopping clearing forests], it is your responsibility to stand up and speak out to make them.”

    Big old trees are awesome, hundreds of years old, towering 8-12 stories high, apartment complexes for hollow-dependent animals with larders for Koalas, gliders, possums and a multitude of honeyeaters.

    Forests improve our health, generate rainfall, cool the land, regulate streamflows, sequester and store carbon, reduce flood risk by storing water and slowing flows, reduce landslips by reinforcing soils, and support most of our biodiversity.

    It is essential that we recognise that forests support our civilisation, climate and biodiversity. Forests are under unprecedent threat due to increasing droughts, heatwaves, wildfires and floods. At the very time we need them to take our carbon out of the atmosphere and store it safely in their wood and soils, and to mitigate flooding by storing and slowing the water during extreme rainfall events.

    Nineteen Australian ecosystems have been identified as already in collapse. In the marine environment climate change is causing the decline of the Great Barrier Reef which once again is ravished by another mass coral bleaching event. Most of the giant kelp forests off southern Australia have already gone, and many species are moving south as the waters warm.

    Forest ecosystems identified as already collapsing are: Mountain ash forest; Murray-Darling River Basin – riverine; Gondwanan conifer forest; Wet Tropical Rainforest; Mediterranean-type Forests and Woodlands; Australian Tropical Savanna; and Mangrove forests.

    NSW’s coastal forests are suffering similar fate as droughts and heatwaves kill multitudes of trees and animals, spreading dieback through degraded forests, while increasing wildfires are eliminating our alpine forests and burning a third of our rainforests in the Black Summer bushfires.

    Last month the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)warned that many forests have already been severely affected by climate heating, with many forest ecosystems likely to collapse if heating exceeds 1.5oC for too long. Australia has already warmed by 1.4oC, our forests can’t afford anymore.

    Humans depend on the world’s forests to absorb a third of our annual emissions of carbon and store it out of harms way. As trees die, and forests collapse, they stop removing our carbon and release the vast quantities they store. Losing our forests threatens runaway climate heating.

    Stopping climate heating not only requires us to stop our emissions, it also depends on removing more carbon from the atmosphere, and we need trees to do it.

    Logged native forests have already lost over half the carbon they once stored, if we allow them to recover they can remove huge volumes from the atmosphere and help us deal with this existential crisis.

    Logging of forests dries them, increases fire risk, reduces stream flows, increases flood risk, reduces nectar, reduces tree hollows, spreads weeds, creates erosion, and makes them more vulnerable to collapse.

    Last October at the UN Biodiversity Conference Australia signed onto the Kunming Declaration, saying we supported the commitment to “protect 30 per cent globally of land areas and of sea areas” by 2030. Last November at COP 26 Australia signed on to the Glasgow Leaders’ Declaration on Forests and Land Use with the aspirational goal “to halt and reverse forest loss and land degradation by 2030”.

    NSW has only protected 9% of our land area (18% nationally). We have a long way to go to honour our commitments and there is not much time left.

    We must act immediately to turn the accelerating climate and biodiversity crises around before it is too late. Two easy changes we need to make are stopping logging public native forests and stopping clearing forests.

    If the NSW and Federal Governments continue to refuse to do so, it is your responsibility to stand up and speak out to make them.

    Dailan Pugh, NEFA President.

    On International Day of Forests.

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    [nefanews] Independent MP calls on NSW Forestry Minister to halt plans to extend North Coast logging contracts

    NSW Forestry Minister Dugald Saunders has confirmed negotiations are on foot to extend North Coast logging contracts for five years to 2028 despite a Government report warning that existing logging cannot continue and that post fire logging presents a risk of “serious or irreversible harm” to native forests.

    Independent NSW MLC Justin Field said “It’s totally unacceptable that the Minister would even consider extending contracts when the Government still hasn’t responded to the impact of the 2019/20 fires on our forests. 

    The acknowledgement of negotiations came in Budget Estimates hearings (see link to video here) this morning with the Minister challenged over a letter sent by Forestry Corporation of NSW (FCNSW) to North Coast customers late last year suggesting contracts would be renewed at existing quantities. Contracts could be signed as early as this month.  read more

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    nsw.gov ePetition by NCC: ‘Native Forests Are Worth More Standing’. Please sign!

    Western Australia has banned it. Victoria has set an end date. Queensland is ceasing it in two years.

    By contrast, the NSW government is still logging native forests. Taxpayers are being forced to fork out $441 for every hectare of native forest cut down.

    That’s $20 million of public money each year to subsidise the destruction of the Australian bush.

    NCC members started an official parliamentary petition to end native forest logging. If this petition gets 20,000 signatures it will trigger a formal parliamentary debate. By reaching this milestone, we will test the politicians on whether they will protect native forests in the lead up to the state election.

    SIGN THE PETITION

    In the last two years alone, koalas have been listed as ‘endangered’, yellow-bellied gliders and gang-gang cockatoos as ‘vulnerable’ and greater gliders have been decimated by bushfires.

    It’s time NSW caught up with other states and protected native forests by ending logging.

    SIGN THE PETITION

    This morning the Sydney Morning Herald reported the dreadful financial loss native logging makes each year. That’s dollars wasted. But the catastrophic loss of trees and wildlife is incalculable. Native forest are Worth More tanding.

    Professor Andrew Macintosh from the Australian National University told the Herald:

     “If this was a true commercial operation it would be closed. It is only surviving because the state government is essentially choosing to underwrite it for an increasingly small number of jobs”

    The petition to protect native forests calls for:

    • A plan to switch to 100% sustainable plantation timber by 2024
    • The release of the secret Natural Resource Commission report into logging.
    • The expansion of national parks with additions of high-value state forests
    • A ban on burning native forests to generate electricity
    SIGN THE PETITION

    A year out from the state election we are launching the Worth More Standing campaign.

    Forests are worth more standing for the koalas, gliders, quolls, birds and other species that live in them.

    Forests are worth more standing for their natural beauty.

    Forests are worth more standing for regional economies and recreation.

    Forests are worth more standing to stop the drain on public funds.

    Forests are worth more standing storing carbon and mitigating climate change. read more

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