Local communities are fighting to stop New South Wales Forestry Corporation from logging聽an area critical for koala connectivity and聽habitat in Pine Creek State Forest on the NSW mid-north coast.
Forestry Corp plan to clear-fell swaths of Gumbaynggirr land, near Coffs Harbour. But many parts of Pine Creek State Forest are highly biodiverse, and numerous surveys have found the area to be prime habitat for endangered koalas.
The Pine Creek/Bongil Bongil National Park population is possibly the only stable population left in the Great Koala National Park (GKNP) proposal; it needs help now, as a聽National Parks and Wildlife Service survey confirmed late last year.聽
聽(FoPC) has organised public meetings to raise awareness of planned logging in the area and launched a campaign to stop logging in the forest.
The 648-hectare area slated for logging provides a critical wildlife corridor between Bongil Bongil National Park and Bindarri National Park. FoPC is calling for the protection of the 鈥溾 that聽allows koalas and other wildlife to move safely between the two parks.
FoPC facilitator Susan Harwood told聽麻豆传媒聽that the forest bridge proposal, if implemented, would connect the two 鈥渋ntergenerationally significant areas鈥 of Bongil Bongil National Park and Bindarri National Park.
The parks are listed as 鈥淎ssets of Intergenerational Significance鈥 under the聽National Parks and Wildlife Act, specifically because they provide habitat for koalas and other threatened species.
Harwood said the group lobbied the former Coalition government for three years. 鈥淲e鈥檝e written, or spoken to, the environment minister, the premier; we鈥檝e written to the agricultural minister,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou name it, we鈥檝e written letters to them.鈥
鈥淭he previous government鈥檚 responses have been basically, 鈥楽orry, but [the forests] are too important for the timber industry鈥. We鈥檙e yet to get responses back from the current [Labor] government.鈥
NSW鈥檚 mid-north coast has the largest remaining koala population, although it is declining due to habitat being clear felled.
A 2020 NSW聽聽found that koalas will be extinct by 2050 if no action is taken to stop habitat loss 鈥 the biggest threat to their survival.
础听聽commissioned by the World Wildlife Fund estimated that the 2019鈥20 bushfires killed more than 70% of koala populations across six sites in NSW.
But Pine Creek State Forest did not burn, along with nearby national parks. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why Forestry Corp is moving into this area,鈥 Harwood said. 鈥淏ecause there鈥檚 so many forests down south that were burnt.鈥
Forestry Corp has clear-felled thousands of hectares of koala habitat in the region, and breached the state鈥檚 already weak environmental protection laws聽.
Clear-felling also聽聽to climate change, both by releasing stored carbon in trees and through the loss of carbon-sequestering forests.
鈥淭he trees in the forest are actually worth much more left in the forest to help mitigate climate change,鈥 Harwood said. 鈥淭earing them down and digging up the soil; that鈥檚 not going to help with climate change.鈥
For more than a decade, mid-north coast residents have fought for a GKNP to be created 鈥 the conversion of 175,000 hectares of state forest to national parks 鈥 to protect remaining koalas in the region.聽
However, Labor and the Coalition voted together last year to聽聽a Greens bill that would have established such a park.
Since then, NSW Labor聽has聽聽funding and聽the establishment of聽the GKNP, but environment minister Penny Sharpe has聽allowed logging to continue within the proposed GKNP boundaries.
The continued logging of ecologically important state and native forests is聽聽with protecting koalas.
Sharpe has essentially given Forestry Corp the green light to continue destroying native forests and environmentally significant state forests, like Pine Creek, which would devastate koala populations.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not the only forest that鈥檚 being hit,鈥 Harwood said. 鈥淟ots of different forests in this region are being targeted by Forestry Corp.鈥
Forestry Corp聽聽to clear at least 16,000 hectares of native forest within the proposed GKNP over the next 12 months.
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