Mid-term nature report card shows it’s time to deliver

One year on from the release of the damning State of the Environment report – and approaching the mid-point of the Albanese government’s first term – nature in Australia remains in a perilous state.

The Australian Conservation Foundation’s mid-term nature report card shows:

  • The government has made a strong commitment to zero new extinctions, but the Threatened Species Action Plan applies to only 110 of a growing list of 2,000 threatened species and habitats – and budget funding remains inadequate.
  • The government has committed to fit-for-purpose laws that will protect habitat and restore public trust and confidence in our environmental laws. Progress towards this is urgently needed.
  • Industrial logging of native forests and land clearing continues to push species like the Greater glider and Swift parrot to the brink of extinction, while contributing to the climate crisis by destroying our natural carbon stores.

“A year ago this week, the Albanese government released the overdue State of the Environment report, confirming what many of us already knew: nature in Australia is getting sicker, not healthier,” said ACF’s Biodiversity Policy Adviser Brendan Sydes.

“Habitat destruction is the leading cause of extinction in Australia, directly contributing to the listing of 60% of Australia’s threatened species.

ACF research shows our ineffective national laws are letting hundreds of thousands of hectares of habitat for threatened species be bulldozed without penalty or consequence.

“Nearly 8 million hectares of threatened species habitat in Australia have been destroyed since 2000 and ACF’s investigations show this destruction is continuing.

“Since the release of the report the government has made some good commitments, such as ‘no new extinctions’, and has promised an overhaul of national environment laws.

“Although there has been some progress, the Albanese government must now give priority to delivering strong laws that protect wildlife and ecosystems from destruction and a fully independent environment protection agency to enforce those laws.”

Mid-term nature report card

Eastern curlew pic by Birdiegal

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