Caldera

Burning wood for electricity doesn’t pass the pub* test [*Parliament]

North East Forest Alliance Media Release

“The writing is on the wall for wood-fired power stations”, said NEFA spokesperson Susie Russell.

“We are relieved that both Liberal and Labor politicians who participated in the parliamentary inquiry into “Sustainability of energy supply and resources in NSW” have recommended that native forest biomass not be allowed in energy generation facilities.

The Parliamentary committee presented its report to the Government on Friday.

“The committee heard and accepted evidence that burning wood adds to greenhouse emissions and negatively impacts the environment.

“They also stated that “Native forest biomass isn’t a renewable energy source. It reduces the ability of NSW forests to absorb atmospheric carbon and produces carbon emissions”. read more

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Invitation for public comment on the draft National Recovery Plan for the Koala.

The Department of the Environment and Energy have drafted a “National Recovery Plan for the Koala.”

“The National Recovery Plan for the Koala identifies national-level strategic actions to support recovery of the EPBC Act listed Koala.”

The plan “sets out the research and management actions necessary to stop the decline, and support the recovery, of the nation’s threatened Koalas.”

The plan is to “align with relevant state and territory planning, programs.”

Comment on this draft national recovery plan by 24 September.

Your feedback is provided to the Threatened Species Scientific Committee for the Minister for the Environment. All comments “will be considered by the Minister for the Environment in making the final recovery plan.” read more

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World Environment Day Festival – Knox Park Murwillumbah

UN: “THERE HAS NEVER BEEN A MORE URGENT NEED TO RESTORE DAMAGED ECOSYSTEMS THAN NOW.”

UN Secretary General: “Humanity is waging war on nature. This is suicidal. Biodiversity is collapsing. Ecosystems are disappearing before our eyes.”

Ecosystems are the systems of inter-related, inter-dependent lifeforms on this planet.

This year’s event launched “The UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, which aims to prevent, halt and reverse the degradation of ecosystems on every continent and in every ocean.”

UNEP theme for this year’s event: ‘Ecosystem Restoration’.

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Public Statement to Au & NSW.gov from AFCA et al [incl. CEC]: “Reject plans by Verdant Technologies to recommission Redbank Power Station.”

We call on the governments of NSW and Australia to reject plans by Verdant Technologies to recommission Redbank Power Station near Singleton and use native forest biomass as fuel. 

Redbank operated as a coal-fired power station from 2001 to 2014 when it was mothballed after the company went into receivership. 

The new owner, Verdant Technology, has applied to reopen the 151MW facility, in which it intends to burn more than 1 million tonnes per annum of biomass, including wood and wood waste from native forests.

This is likely to result in the release of more than 2 million tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere each year. 

The company says it plans to source biomass from forests within 400 kilometres of Singleton, a huge area stretching from Moruya in the south, Yamba in the north, and Dubbo in the west.  read more

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The Caldera Environment Centre opposes any further expansion of water mining and extraction facilities in the Tweed Shire.

To the General Manager, Tweed Shire Council.


Submission Re: DA 19-0346.

The Caldera Environment Centre opposes any further expansion of water mining and extraction facilities in the Tweed Shire. Last year (May 2020) the Tweed Council passed a moratorium on new water mining facilities and we ask that this policy continue to be acknowledged. During the drought of 2019 there were serious stream flow issues in areas adjacent to water mining operations. The impacts of this industry on the water table are poorly quantified, and the cumulative impact of farms and residential lots as well as the mining industry have not been adequately considered.  The bottled water industry also increases plastic pollution, and with the Tweed  Zero Waste Target, it would be appropriate to consider the impacts of the businesses that the Council supports.  read more

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Hope, Resilience and Healing for Humanity and the Earth – Workshop

A Work that Reconnects workshop at the Chillingham Community Centre on the 23rd of May Time: 8.30am-4.30pm.

“We are living through difficult times, witnessing immense growing social injustices and the sixth mass extinction of life on Earth. Many of us feel called to act, and while political engagement is crucial, many are also asking, how do we sustain ourselves on this journey? How do we live with the fear, heartbreak and anger? How do we create a regenerative culture from within as we move toward a life-sustaining culture and society? How can we recognise the extent of the solutions needed if we cannot fully feel the depth of our despair?

We build resilience when we come together and share our grief and our love for the world. To advocate and re-organise human society for the flourishing of life we ourselves must return again and again to the ground of our own aliveness. This workshop will offer embodied and experiential practices to support you in doing this. We will make space to give gratitude for what we have, mourn what is being lost; take a deep time lens at the unfolding and to rediscover the energy to take action. We prioritise restorative practices that nourish self and community. read more

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The Caldera/Greens planned meeting regarding the SEPP/LLS situation is being rescheduled, …

Caldera Environment Centre & Tweed Greens 

Invite representatives from Tweed based environmental and Koala groups and individuals to discussion of the SEPP 2021 and LLS Amendment Act, with ! Cate Faehrmann MLC NSW Greens, ! Cr Katie Milne, ! Dailan Pugh (NEFA). 

“What actions can the community take to rectify the detrimental changes to policy and legislation by the NSW Liberal/National Coalition?”

The originally planned meeting was postponed (due to COVID contacts found in Byron).

The rescheduled date, time and place shall be here when decided. 

Thank you.

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The SEPP 2021 Explained

State Environmental Planning Policy (SEPP) (Koala habitat Protection) 2021, in the Ministers words: 

1. SEPP21 Gets land zoned for primary production or forestry out of the SEPP

  • “Land zoned for primary production or forestry in regional NSW will not be subject to the new SEPP.”
  • read more

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    To STOP SEPP 20 and #saveourkoalas here is an example of what to say and where to facebook, @, email and say it to 5 politicians

    Here is a (1) an example text, (2) a list of contact details (fb,@,eMail,ph) for 5 key office holding politicians, and (3) a list of key points to use.

    Example text written by Nola Firth

    I am writing to register my extreme outrage and distress at the SEPP 21 deal done by your government at the expense of koalas and other wildlife. Saving about 140 koalas on the Tweed coast, adding a few hectares to the Cudgen reserve and opening a hospital in our Tweed shire is not going to make a tiny dint in the loss of thousands and thousands of hectares of land no longer protected for koalas in our shire and across the state.

    My demands as a Murwillumbah resident are that the SEPP21 covers all of the Tweed and the northern rivers as it does in Sydney shires. The recommendations of the koala inquiry must also be immediately implemented. The Koala National Park needs to be declared straight away. Your government said it would increase koala populations. This latest SEPP action has destroyed any chance of them surviving at all. I believe people of all parties care about this issue and we intend to let you know it. read more

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    D Day for Koalas

    Dailan Pugh, North East Forest Alliance.

    It is D Day in the Koala Wars, this is the day we need to turn around Koala’s extinction trajectory and begin their recovery. First we need to urgently identify where their core habitat is and then we need to protect it, to save Koalas we need to stop their homes being indiscriminately cleared and logged on both private and public lands. The Government’s latest attack is not just about Koalas, they also intend to take away Council’s rights to include high conservation value vegetation in environmental zones, and their rights to prohibit or constrain clearing and logging in them. The politicians aren’t listening, we need a community uprising.

    Our iconic Koalas are in dire straits, their populations in western NSW and on the south coast are on their last legs, NSW’s Koalas are likely to be extinct in the wild by 2050.

    On the north coast Koala populations had declined by 50% in the 20 years before the Black Summer fires burnt 30% of their habitat, killing thousands of Koalas.

    It is loss and degradation of habitat that is primarily responsible for their decline. As they lose the large feed trees they need, the survivors need to expand their territories.

    As habitat becomes more fragmented they have to wander in an increasingly dangerous world to find food and mates, exposing them to dog attacks and car strikes. As they become increasingly stressed they succumb to diseases, such as chlamydia.

    The increasing frequency and intensity of droughts and heatwaves due to climate heating is taking a huge toll, particularly in western NSW. In extreme events Koalas can no longer rely upon leaf moisture and need access to permanent water. Permanent water is harder to find as landscapes dry because of the loss of forests and their conversion to regrowth, and pools become silted.

    Then there’s intensifying bushfires.

    The key to their survival is protecting and rehabilitating the places where they still survive, along with climate refuges, rehabilitating degraded habitat, and re-establishing habitat linkages.

    The NSW Government began to address these needs, at least in theory, in 1995.

    The 1995 Koala State Environment Planning Policy – SEPP 44 – required Councils to prepare Koala Plans of Management (KPoMs) to identify “core Koala habitat” and zone it for environment protection.

    In 2007 the logging Code of Practice for Private Native Forestry prohibited logging in core Koala habitat identified by Councils.

    Outside core Koala habitat loggers are required to protect a number of feed trees where there is a record of a Koala, but with few records on private land and no requirement to look before logging, Koala’s homes are usually indiscriminately logged.

    In 2016 Cabinet agreed that core Koala habitat would be identified as sensitive regulated lands under the Local Land Services Act, which just means it requires approval before it can be cleared, there are a variety of exemptions for things like roads, fencing, sheds, stockyards, ”sustainable” grazing, dams, and power and telephone lines.

    Since 2016 land clearing has more than doubled, with 60,800 ha of woody vegetation cleared in 2018, most worryingly over half this clearing is unexplained, it is not approved and the Government doesn’t care. Outside core Koala habitat there is no protection for Koalas.

    The trouble was that by 2020 only 6 KPoMs had been approved, often covering just parts of Council areas, so there was only 5-6,000 ha of core Koala habitat identified for protection, after 25 years. And most of this has pre-existing logging approvals that were allowed to continue.

    The SEPP 44 definitions made it hard to identify core Koala habitat, in many areas the koalas were living in forests that did not have 15% of the 10 tree species that were allowed to be considered. It cost over $100,000 to prepare a Koala Plan of Management and took years. Even after Councils prepared plans the Government often refused to adopt them, 5 were still waiting, Tweed and Clarence since 2015 and Byron since 2016.

    In December 2019 Cabinet approved the new SEPP (Koala Habitat Protection) 2019 that rectified many of the definitional problems with SEPP 44, including increasing the number of feed trees from 10 to 123, 42 of which occur on the north coast. It came into effect in March 2020, when the Guidelines were released.

    By then the loggers were beginning to freak out because they were concerned that the new rules made it easier for Councils to identify core Koala habitat, and they wouldn’t be able to log it.

    NSW Farmers joined in as they wanted no constraints on land clearing. The map of likely Koala habitat, the Koala Development Application Map (pink DA Map), was a focus of their concerns as they thought it would be used to constrain what they can do and devalue property prices, even though it was only intended to limit the area where Development Applications had to consider Koalas.

    By mid May the Government had succumbed to the pressure and began the formal process of changing the SEPP and the Guidelines, with a focus on removing the pink DA Map. They intended to make a new SEPP in June.

    On 30 June 2020 the bipartisan inquiry into Koala populations and habitat in New South Wales released their report, finding that without urgent government intervention to protect habitat and address all other threats, the koala will become extinct in New South Wales before 2050. They made 42 recommendations, only 11 of which the Government subsequently agreed to support. The inquiry report was like a red rag to the National Party who labelled it as “hysterical”.

    While the Nationals had originally approved the new SEPP, by early July Stuart Bocking, Barilaro’s Director of Policy and Legal, was complaining “There are echoes of marine parks and greyhounds here. It would be a free kick to the Shooters at a time when they are struggling for relevance. All three lower house SFF seats will be impacted by the DA “pink” aspects”
    The Nationals sought to have thresholds and tree species used for identifying core Koala habitat reduced, but their focus was on decoupling the SEPP from rural lands, meaning that core Koala habitat identified in a KPoM would no longer have logging excluded or require consent before it was cleared.

    The Liberals had repeatedly agreed to decoupling since the SEPP was adopted in 2019, but wanted the Nationals to first put forward alternative protection for Koalas from logging and clearing. The Nationals failed to provide any alternatives.

    The Nationals upped the ante in early September, when first Clarence MP Chris Gulaptis and then Coffs Harbour MP Gurmesh Singh claimed they would move to the cross-benches. On the 11 September the whole of the National Party piled in and made a hollow threat to move to the cross-benches, provided they kept all their perks. This was dubbed the Koala Wars.

    Disgracefully their campaign was built on misinformation, prompting someone from Barilaro’s office to comment on 20 September “It would be appreciated if those compiling these member communications could actually do some research and present the facts as they are. Otherwise you may be accused of intentionally misleading the public”. The pink DA map was a primary focus of the Nationals attempts to discredit the SEPP, misrepresenting it as “core Koala habitat”, even though the Government had agreed to remove it 4 months previously. No wonder the Liberals were outraged.

    Under the pressure the Liberals surrendered, Planning Minister Rob Stokes amended the SEPP to narrow the definition of core Koala habitat, and the Nationals were given carte- blanche to write their own Local Land Services Amendment (Miscellaneous) Bill, which was introduced to the Lower House on 14 October 2020.

    This was dubbed the Koala Killing Bill as it removed protection for core Koala habitat on rural lands while offering no alternative protection for Koalas, allowed logging to over-ride all Council’s Local Environment Plans and the Government’s State Environmental Planning Polices, allowed some self-assessed clearing in environmental zones, and doubled logging approvals to 30 years.

    The Nationals had been goaded by the Shooters, Fishers and Farmers to override “greenie local councils” to allow logging everywhere. North coast Councils’ zoning currently prohibits logging of 167,000 ha, and requires development consent for logging over 600,000 hectares, all of which they wanted to get rid of.

    Rob Stokes reputedly also gave the Nationals a promise that Councils would not be allowed to protect identified core Koala habitat in environmental zones.

    While far north coast Nationals Chis Gulaptis, Geoff Provest and Ben Franklin voted for the Koala Killing Bill, it came to a halt in November when north coast Liberal Catherine Cusack took a principled stand by crossing the floor and referring the bill to the Upper House Planning and Environment committee for review. This was the same Committee that undertook the Koala inquiry.

    In retribution Premier Berejiklian did a deal with the National’s leader John Barilaro to revert to SEPP 44, remade as SEPP (Koala Habitat Protection) 2020 on 26 November.

    To pre-empt the inquiry Planning Minister Rob Stokes and Environment Minister Matt Kean did a deal with Deputy Premier John Barilaro which was announced on 8 March 2021. There is at yet no detail, though it resurrects most provisions of the Koala Killing Bill, including that:
    • The 90% of private forests zoned for primary production or forestry in north east NSW will not be subject to the new SEPP.

    • Logging would be allowed to over-ride local environmental plans, removing Council’s rights to prohibit or regulate it, and opening all environmental zones for logging.

    • That only the Minister for Planning, and not councils, will be empowered to rezone rural land to an environmental zone.

    This attack is not just about Koalas, the NSW Government wants to take away Council’s rights to include high conservation value vegetation in environmental zones, and their rights to prohibit or constrain clearing and logging in them.

    They also promised to revise the rules for land clearing and logging by April, though given there has been no progress on this for over a year it is unlikely to result in any meaningful protection for Koalas.

    This time they intend to avoid parliamentary scrutiny by implementing most of this through changes to the SEPP and ministerial directions.
    The new SEPP (Koala Habitat Protection) 2021 was made on 17 March. As foreshadowed it does not apply to rural and forestry zones (RU1, RU2, RU3), which comprise 90% (2.4 million ha) of private forests in north-east NSW. The 2020 revision of SEPP 44, with its 10 feed trees and manifest problems, continues to apply to these lands.

    In a significant change, the Department of Planning can only approve KPoMs if agreed to by the Secretary of the Department of Regional NSW (Barilaro’s Department).

    The SEPP adopts the KPoMs for Tweed and Byron Shires, for some inexplicable reason leaving out the Clarence Valley’s mini KPoM, even though all three had been identified for approval in August 2020.
    • Tweed Council’s Coastal KPoM was originally submitted in 2015, so it has taken 6 years to be approved. Tweed Council manages over 110,000 hectares, of which 30% was identified as likely Koala habitat. The Tweed Coast KPoM covers only 18% of the shire – the coastal strip – which encompasses some 3,800 ha of highly fragmented Koala habitat supporting some 140 Koalas. 82% of the Tweed will receive no protection and all environmental zones will be opened up for logging.

    • Byron Council’s Coastal KPoM was originally submitted in 2016, so it has taken 5 years to be approved. Byron Council manages over 50,000 ha, of which 30% was identified as likely Koala habitat. The Byron Coast KPoM only covers 23% of the shire – the coastal strip – which covers about 2,000ha of highly fragmented habitat supporting some 240 Koalas. 77% of Byron will receive no protection and all environmental zones will be opened up for logging.

    Tweed MP Geoff Provest had written to Rob Stokes in May about:
    the views of many landholders in this area who are frustrated and angry by a perception that Tweed Shire Council, being dominated by Greens/Labor aligned councillors, is using planning instruments and overlays to advance their own agenda and frustrate development and expansion in rural areas of the shire.

    Rob Stokes has not yet released his new Ministerial Guidelines, nor Adam Marshall the changes to the Local Land Services Act. Regrettably it is intended that Councils will be prohibited from protecting core Koala habitat in environmental zones, and it appears it will not be safe from logging or clearing, with the SEPP limited to Development Applications.

    There are many landholders who are good stewards of their land and who do care about Koalas, but most who want to clear and log are not. A 2017 survey of logging contractors found that 67% believed that the majority to vast majority of landowners were only interested in maximising the income from their forest, with 78% of landowners understanding very little about the PNF requirements, and few caring about sustainability.

    Though we need to recognise that landowners who look after Koala habitat or increase carbon storage are providing a community benefit that they deserve recompense for.

    We need a carrot and stick approach. Making sure we give core Koala habitat the legal protection it needs while providing financial assistance to landholders who protect it.

    With over 60% of Koalas on private lands, their survival is at stake. The Government has already removed protection of core Koala habitat for the 20% of Koalas that live on State Forests. It is not just core Koala habitat on private lands that we need to protect, we need to protect it on public lands too, for a start there are 2 proposals covering exceptional Koala habitat:
    • the Great Koala National Park covering 175,000 hectares of State Forests west of Coffs Harbour, NSW’s most important Koala stronghold,
    • the Sandy Creek Koala Park covering 7,000 hectares of State Forests south of Casino, some of the most important Koala habitat on the Richmond River Lowlands.

    We know the community doesn’t like logging of native forests, particularly Koala habitat. A 2018 logging industry survey found 65-70% of Australians consider logging of native forests unacceptable. A 2018 NPA survey found 71% of Lismore and Ballina residents support the creation of national parks to protect koalas from logging.

    But how do we turn this community sentiment into the protection Koalas need? On these issues the National Party refuse to represent the community, and the Liberal Party are beholden to them to stay in power.
    If we want to save Koalas at this critical time for their survival, we need to reach out to our communities, make them aware of their plight and how this Government is hastening their extinction. It is only when politicians think that people care enough about Koalas to affect their vote that they will take action.

    It is D Day in the Koala Wars, this is the day we need to turn around Koala’s extinction trajectory and begin their recovery. It is clear that if we want to save Koalas we need to urgently identify where they live, on both private and public lands, and stop their homes being indiscriminately cleared and logged.

    Koalas can’t protect their homes, and the politicians refuse to. We need a community uprising to make them listen.

    Koalas need you to stand up and speak out for them, their future depends on what you do now.

    It is not just the future of Koalas that is at stake, we are in a global emergency, in the midst of extinction and climate crises. We need forests to protect a plethora of species threatened with extinction and to take up and store our increasing carbon emissions.

    The 21st March is the United Nation’s International Day of Forests, and the start of the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration. It is past time to stop clearing and degrading forests and begin restoring them.

    D Day for Koalas
    Dailan Pugh, North East Forest Alliance, 21 March 2021.

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    Submission – ‘Nightcap on Minjungbul’ (DA21/0010) Caldera Environment Centre

    Submission opposing DA21/0010 ‘Nightcap on Minjungbul’.

    A concept development application (DA) was lodged with Tweed Shire Council on 14 January 2021 over land at 2924, 2956, 2984 and 3222 Kyogle Road, Kunghur & Mount Burrell, hereafter referred to as “the site”. The application seeks approval for: Integrated Development – staged concept development application under s4.22 of the EP&A Act 1979 for multiple rural land sharing communities with stage 1 seeking approval for the upgrade of the existing private road and associated earthworks, vegetation removal and site construction office and storage area (NRPP).

    In overview, the development is described in the application documents as a conglomerate of Rural Land Sharing Communities (RLSCs) that will establish 392 residential dwelling allotments and associated infrastructure (i.e. roads, essential services, community facilities etc.) in multiple stages over the approximately 1,584-hectare site(1). Notably, the application documents cite approximately 326 hectares of vegetation clearing to establish developable areas and to upgrade existing forestry tracks to trafficable, dual carriageway internal roads per the Rural Fire Service (RFS) and Australian Standards. The proposed concept plan and development staging plan are attached in Appendix 1. read more

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    Make a submission to TSC regarding DA21/0010 Nightcap on Minjungbal, before 24th March.

    NRG sponsored a public meeting on Sunday, 14 March, to air information and views on (Tweed Shire) DA21/0010 for a proposed development known as Nightcap on Minjungbal, located off Kyogle Road between Mount Burrell and Kunghur. Turnout for the meeting was good, and much information was shared. This message is to let you know that the deadline for submissions to Council is at the end of business on Wednesday, 24 March 2021.

    NRG does not support this development of 392 dwellings in 10 off-grid Rural Land Sharing Communities (RLSCs). We note that:
    •  Tweed Shire Council’s LEP does not permit further development of RLSCs.
    •  The proposal is not aligned with the 2019 State Environmental Planning Policy for Rural Development.
    •  The size and scope of the development is highly unsuitable for the area.
    •  The development would do significant harm to the environment and to the many threatened/endangered species that inhabit the site.

    We urge you to learn more and make a submission to Tweed Council by 24 March. Here are useful links:

    The DA and a Have Your Say link (for submissions) is on Council’s website:
    https://datracker.tweed.nsw.gov.au/Pages/XC.Track/SearchApplication.aspx?id=877619&a=DA21/0010

    You can find information about why the development should be refused here:
    www.northernriversguardians.org
    (See the link “Nightcap on Minjungbal” on the home page.)
    calderaenvironmentcentre.org
    (See the link “Submission: Nightcap on Minjungbal” on the home page)

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    Local Koala Protest – National Day of Action

    MEDIA RELEASE
    Northern Rivers Guardians Inc.

    Koala advocates demand Koala habitat protection

    The clouds parted and the sun was shining on koala advocates who gathered at Knox Park in Murwillumbah on Saturday, for the Northern Rivers Guardians (NRG) hosted #SaveOurKoalas Day of Action. The Murwillumbah event was one of many similar public gatherings scheduled to be held across NSW over the weekend to reject current regressive Liberal National Party (LNP) environmental policy direction leading to the imminent extinction of koalas and other native species in NSW.

    A strong and enthusiastic crowd of around 200 listened to NRG’s president Scott Sledge and guest speakers including Dailan Pugh OAM from North East Forest Alliance (NEFA) and local animal and environmental activist Susie Hearder. The speakers collectively delivered a strong rebuke to the NSW State Government.

    “NRG’s message is simple”, said Mr Sledge, “without immediate and urgent action to permanently halt government sanctioned habitat destruction on private and public land by individuals and companies with commercial vested interests, the Northern Rivers and NSW will lose its remaining koala populations, which have already been significantly impacted from ongoing and unmitigated habitat loss and the Black Summer bushfires. “

    NRG event organiser, Lori Scinto confirmed, “NRG distributed flyers to those who attended encouraging people to contact NSW members of parliament to demand immediate and meaningful legislative reforms. One of the demands was for the urgent implementation of all 42 recommendations from the bipartisan NSW Inquiry into koala populations and habitat in NSW. The Government has agreed to support only 11 of the 42 recommendations.”

    Dailan Pugh delivered a strong overview and reminder of the alarming government failures with critical koala protection legislation, confirming the ongoing and rapid regression in meaningful reforms has left koala populations more vulnerable than ever before.  Pugh said, “It is D- Day in the Koala Wars, this is the day we need to turn around koalas’ extinction trajectory and begin their recovery. First we need to urgently identify where their core habitat is and then we need to protect it. To save koalas we need to stop their homes being indiscriminately cleared and logged on both private and public lands.” Pugh went on to say, “The Government’s latest attack is not just about koalas, they also intend to take away councils’ rights to include high conservation value vegetation in environmental zones, and their rights to prohibit or constrain clearing and logging in them.

     the “The Government has taken 6 years to approve the Tweed Coast Koala Plan of Management (KPOM), which only covers 18% of the shire, the coastal strip, encompassing some 3,800 ha of highly fragmented Koala habitat supporting some 140 Koalas. 82% of the Tweed will receive no protection and all environmental zones will be opened up for logging”.

    Ms Hearder spoke about the local impact of industrial logging “witnessing willful koala habitat and environmental destruction on high conservation land on an adjoining property and the distress of seeing koalas fleeing their homes for safety as well as the destruction of platypus habitat in the local creeks.”  She went on to say that “NSW Government agencies turned a blind eye and the only agency that took an interest in the environment and koalas was Tweed Shire Council, yet now all local councils’ rights to prohibit or regulate logging will be removed and environmental zones opened up for logging. It is unacceptable that John Barilaro, National MP who reportedly refers to koalas as “tree rats” can continue to pull the strings of the NSW government and now apparently has the final say on yet another new koala State Environmental Planning Policy (SEPP). It appears the Government is more intent on saving the coalition, rather than endangered koalas.”

    “Whilst NRG welcome the acquisition of the 73.5 ha of land on Clothiers Creek Road to be added to Cudgen Nature Reserve for koala habitat protection, as Mr Pugh highlighted, the new SEPP (Koala Habitat Protection) 2021 made on 17 March does not apply to rural and forestry zones, which comprise a staggering 90%, equating to 2.4 million ha of private forests in north-east NSW. The Government has already removed protection of core Koala habitat for the 20% of Koalas that live in State Forests, and now they have removed critical protection for the over 60% of koalas that live on private land.”

    Ms Hearder said, “Geoff Provest voted for the previous Local Land Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill 2020 dubbed the ‘Koala Killing Bill’ and the Premier and Ministers Matt Kean and Rob Stokes have left a trail of broken promises.”

    NRG has vowed to continue to collaborate with all like-minded organisations to fight the NSW government to ensure meaningful protection for all NSW koalas and urges readers to email NSW legislators with a message similar to this:

    Dear [Legislator’s title and name]:
    I am confident that I speak for the majority of NSW residents as well as the larger Australian community when I say that your party’s latest koala killing bill is a national and global disgrace. You and your party seem intent on writing off our endangered koalas. If that’s not the case, here’s what you should do to enact the will of the majority of the people of our state and country and protect our koalas at the same time:

    • Urgently implement all 42 recommendations from the bipartisan inquiry into koala populations and habitat in NSW. How do you justify enacting only 11 of the 42 recommendations?
    • Australia is the only developed nation in the Top 10 for land-clearing. End all land-clearing and fragmentation on public land for urban development, agriculture and mining and end private native forestry logging on private land.
    • Fast track, fund and endorse mandatory Koala Plans of Management (KPOMs) for all NSW Councils.
    • Reinstate and strengthen the State Environmental Planning Policy (Koala Habitat Protection) 2019.
    • Create the Great Koala National Park on the NSW Mid-North Coast.
    • Develop and implement a comprehensive suite of meaningful and enforceable state and commonwealth koala protection and conservation policies.

    As the [legislator’s title], you have an obligation to the people of NSW to listen to us, the larger Australian community, and to pay attention to the inquiry and to science. Please stop playing politics with our koalas.

    Sincerely,

    Send your version of this to one or more of these legislators:

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    NEFA: Forest Media

    NEFA: Forest Media

    Koalas continue to be the key issue. Kean came under attack from the ALP and the right-wing shock-jocks when it was revealed that he had been strongly advised not to set a target for Koalas before he announced he was going to double their populations. He thought it was good politics. His estimates answers indicated he is supporting removing Koala protections from private lands and relying on financial incentives. There was a fair bit of interest in the launch of the NCC’s Koalas Need Trees campaign, interestingly they vowed to hold the government to account for their promise to double the koala population. Various Koala groups, and NEFA, have been applying pressure on Geoff Provest in Tweed. Out of the blue Prime TV gave the Sandy Creek Koala Park a run. In south-east Queensland they rescue a lot of Koalas, but have trouble finding places to release them. I am concerned by the efforts to breed super Koalas for release, particularly as habitat dwindles. The oldest captive Koala is 24 years old, and lives in Japan.

    Everyone wants Koala ‘sanctuarys’/tourist parks, now we are expanding to platypus. Though captive breeding of critically endangered Bellinger River snapping turtles are returning them to the wild. The benefits of keeping animals wild is displayed by the ecosystem engineering of Echidnas. The 3 species of Greater Glider are still garnering attention, and Bungabbee gets a mention.

    NSW estimates hearings are dealing with more than Koalas, some highlights are:

  • The stoush between the EPA and Forestry over logging of burnt forests without applying the site specific conditions – it seems Forestry will get away with it on the grounds they had pre-fire approvals and the site specific conditions were only meant to last 12 months.
  • Forestry apparently gave a voluntary undertaking to the EPA to not log in unburnt forests in Lower Bucca State Forest that they subsequently reneged on.
  • Forestry timber revenue is expected to decrease by 25 per cent, largely due to a loss of pine plantations, though the Government has chipped in 46 million primarily to expand nurseries and replant plantations.
  • The net return that the taxpayers of New South Wales got from the hardwood division last year was $400,000. Forestry have done an assessment of the loss of hardwood resources and the impact on100 year sustainable yields, which they should release within a month. Once this is done they will start renegotiating expiring (2023) Wood Supply Agreements.
  • Barilaro claims he was misrepresented as supporting the phase out of logging public native forests.
  • The shock was that despite Redbank claiming they are ready to go, Forestry claim they have no intent to provide biomass resources to them and the EPA say they have had no discussions with them.
  • read more

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    NEFA: Forest Media Review

    Forest Media Review from the North East Forest Alliance (NEFA)    

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    The Nambucca Guardian had an in-depth story on biomass (with a focus on Way Way, Newry, Tarkeeth, and Redbank) (citing Michael Jones, Susie Russell, Dailan Pugh). 

    https://www.nambuccaguardian.com.au/story/7118714/will-nambuccas-forests-be-burnt-for-electricity/  

    A group of over 500 international scientists have written to the president of the European Council, the president of the European Commission, the US president, the prime minister of Japan and the president of South Korea, asking them to intervene to end the practice of burning wood for energy at an industrial scale as it is seriously undermining efforts both to tackle climate change and to protect biodiversity read more

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    EPBC Act Review Condems EPBC Act

    “… the EPBC Act does not position the Commonwealth to protect the environment, … it is not fit to manage current or future environmental challenges.”

    “Australia’s natural environment and iconic places are in an overall state of decline and are under increasing threat. The current environmental trajectory is unsustainable.

    “The EPBC Act is ineffective. It does not enable the Commonwealth to play its role in protecting and conserving environmental matters that are important for the nation. It is not fit to address current or future environmental challenges.

    “Fundamental reform of national environmental law is required, and new, legally enforceable National Environmental Standards should be the foundation.” read more

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    The Wollumbin Caldera

    Caldera pic

    The Wollumbin Caldera is one of the three top biodiversity hotspots in Australia. It covers an area of approximately 1500 sq km and supports around 1250 types of plants. The Caldera includes a high diversity of ecosystem types because it is in an area where temperate and sub-tropical bio-geographic areas, both terrestrial and marine, converge. The area supports one of the highest vertebrate biodiversities of any Australian region as well as one of Australia’s highest concentrations of threatened plants. It is so rich in significant native flora and fauna that it has received World Heritage status. The area includes the rainforest areas of the Border Ranges, and Nightcap National Parks, as well as Mebbin and Mooball National Parks and Limpinwood and Numinbah Nature Reserves. read more

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    End the subsidies that destroy our forests

    NCC: “… we are subsidising the destruction of our remaining native forests.

    Over the past seven years, we have propped up the uneconomic native forests logging industry to the tune of $79 million.”

    Taxpayer handouts to destroy the ecology.

    “End subsidised and unprofitable logging of our public state forests.”

    Read the full report here

    The NCC (The Nature Conservation Council) is the peak body for environment groups in the state, representing over 150 community conservation organisations with a combined membership of over 60,000 people.

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    Australian Native Forests Are To Replace Coal As Furnace Fuel For Electricity

    Australian Native Forests are to be industrially fed into electricity power station furnaces overseas – to replace coal – to boil water to turn turbines to make electricity to be used momentarily then it is gone.

    ‘Somehow’, The European Union have legally declared that burning Native Forests as coal-replacement furnace fuel for electricity generation plants is “Sustainable”, and “Carbon Neutral”, which is plainly untrue.

    Those in control of NSW.gov have changed the laws, removing protections for native forests, facilitating and encouraging the industrial scale destruction of native forests for export furnace fuel.

    The Australian NSW Government Department of Primary Resource (DPI) are highly complicit, ‘the DPI’ have identified and mapped the remaining native forests in Northern NSW, on both public and private land, ‘the DPI’ have identified the best 3 sites for Industrial Scale Forest Pelletising Factories, with 3 close marine ports for bulk export, ‘the DPI’ have marked on the map the distance between each forest remnant and the forest pelletising factories, … ‘the DPI’ are building a-global-scale-native-forest-to-furnace-fuel-export-industry.  read more

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    UN Secretary General: “Humanity is waging war on nature. This is suicidal.”

    “Biodiversity is collapsing. Ecosystems are disappearing before our eyes. Human activities are at the root of our descent toward chaos.”

    The UN Secretary General listed the human-inflicted wounds on the natural world: the spread of deserts; wetlands lost; forests cut down; oceans overfished and choked with plastic; dying coral reefs; air pollution, …

    “Next year gives us a wealth of opportunities to stop the plunder and start the healing.” Said UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres.

    The UN Secretary General was speaking at an address on the release of the ‘UN State of the Global Climate 2020 – Provisional Report’, published by the UN World Meteorological Office. read more

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    CEC Movie Club: Forest Defenders – The Fight to Protect Tasmania’s Native Forests

    Forest Defenders: The Fight to Protect Tasmania’s Native Forests, takes you straight to where ordinary people are stepping up to protect some of the most incredible forests in the world from the archaic practice of native forest logging.

    Made entirely by those involved in the fight, this film has a simple aim: To inspire you to join them and take Action for Earth. 

    “…, captures the passion, bravery and humanity of the activists fighting to save Tasmania’s ancient forests from the chainsaws, bulldozers and firebombs.”

    Watch the movie here

    Pledge here to hear about more opportunities to get involved with their actions: https://www.bobbrown.org.au/t_pledge_…

    Made by the Bob Brown Foundation in collaboration with The Alleged Arts Collective, Ramji Creations & Manic Seeds Media. read more

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    Urgent: The Senate Vote will be the final nail in the coffin for our Native Forests and Koalas.

    The Local Land Services Amendment (Miscellaneous) Bill 2020 is likely to be voted on in the Upper House on 11th November.

    This bill will be the final nail in the coffin for our Native Forests and Koalas.

    There are three members who could change the outcome if we contact them now. They need to know we don’t accept them destroying native forests and extincting Koalas!

    Tell them

    1. The requirement that core Koala habitat identified in Koala Plans Of Management (POMs) be identified as State Sensitive Regulated Land under the Local Land Services Act, with current protections from logging and broadscale clearing to be maintained.

    2. Retain the ability of Councils to prohibit, or require consent for, logging and clearing in environmental zones. read more

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    Gutting of Koala SEPP, Changes To The NSW Local Land Services (LLS) Act, Update From NEFA

    From NEFA [North East Forest Alliance]:

    The changes to the LLS Act passed by the NSW Lower House will go to the Upper House in November. So there is still time to lobby Upper House MPs to vote it down – such as Catherine Cusack, Ben Franklin (who seems to have already sold his soul), and Fred Nile.

    It is still worth holding Lower House MPs such a Geoff Provest and Leslie Williams to account.

    For those in Bellingen, it is extraordinary that of the 6 LGAs with 6900 ha of core Koala Habitat identified as Environmentally Sensitive Land, only Bellingen’s 900ha is to be stripped of its protection.

    If passed the Local Land Services Amendment (Miscellaneous) Bill 2020 will:

    • stop core Koala habitat identified in draft and future council Koala Plans of Management from being included as Sensitive Regulated Land, and thereby require approval for broadscale clearing, as well as removing prohibition on logging.
    • allow up to 6,000 ha of core Koala habitat identified as Sensitive Regulated Land in the Ballina, Coffs Harbour, Kempsey, Lismore and Port Stephens LGAs to remain, though remove 900 ha of core Koala habitat identified in the Bellingen LGA
    • stop Councils being able to include core Koala habitat in environmental protection zones: ”e-zones will not be created in relation to any koala plans of management” Ben Franklin
    • create the concept of ‘allowable activity land’, which is land that at some time has been rezoned from rural zoning to environmental zoning, and permits clearing for ‘allowable activities’ (including buffers) without approval in these E zones (i.e. allowable activities include construction timber, farm forestry, gravel pits, grazing, powerlines, water and gas pipelines, fire breaks, fences, roads, tracks, sheds, tanks, dams, stockyards, bores, pumps, water points or windmills).
    • prevent local environment plans from requiring development consent for Private Native Forestry (PNF)
    • double the duration allowed for PNF plans from 15 years to 30 years.

    The EDO have an excellent assessment of the changes: https://www.edo.org.au/publication/local-land-services-amendment-miscellaneous-bill-2020-summary-of-key-concerns/ read more

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    Thunberg and Attenborough were at the Regent!

    “The story of teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg is told through compelling, never-before-seen footage in this intimate documentary from Swedish director Nathan Grossman. Starting with her one-person school strike for climate action outside the Swedish Parliament, Grossman follows Greta — a shy student with Asperger’s — in her rise to prominence and her galvanizing global impact as she sparks school strikes around the world. The film culminates with her extraordinary wind-powered voyage across the Atlantic Ocean to speak at the UN Climate Action Summit in New York City.”

    Friday, October 16th 1:00 PM Saturday, October 17th

    4:30 PM read more

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