Greens Senator Janet Rice: Noahā€™s Ark for threatened species doesnā€™t have to be the future

October 10, 2022
Issue 
The black greater glider has been added to the endangered list. Photo: Steve Smith/Environment Victoria

Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek released the governmentā€™s new threatened species action plan on October 4.

As she described Bruny Island, French Island, Kangaroo Island, Christmas Island, Norfolk Island and Raine Island as places that ā€œcan be like Noah's Arkā€ for threatened species in Australia, which she said was ā€œthe threatened species capital of the world,ā€ I felt a pit in my stomach.

If this Noahā€™s Ark scenario is indeed what weā€™re facing, surely Plibersek canā€™t be serious when she calls Laborā€™s approach ā€œambitiousā€.

As long as the government continues to approve new coal and gas projects, there will be habitat destruction from land clearing to make way for mines. As long as the government continues supportingĀ native forest logging, its zero extinction target remains a farce.

It is pouring fuel on the bushfires in which the greater glider went from ā€œcommonā€ to ā€œendangeredā€ in just six years.

Iā€™m a climate scientist, so when Laborā€™s climate bill came to the parliament, my heart sank: I knew it didnā€™t go far enough.

But while the government is unwilling to adopt science-based targets and commit to no new coal and gas, we need to start somewhere.

Fortunately, as part of negotiations with Labor, the Australian Greens were able to secure an important commitment to look at removing a Coalition loophole from the Renewable Energy Act, which allows wood sourced from the destructive logging of native forests to be classified as ā€œrenewableā€ energy when burnt in power stations.

The fact that logging native forests for energy could ever be seen as ā€œrenewableā€ is laughable.

°Õ³ó±šĢżĀ said in its sixth assessment report released earlier this year: ā€œThe protection, improved management, and restoration of forests and other ecosystems have the largest potential to reduce emissions and/or sequester carbonā€; and ā€œSafeguarding biodiversity and ecosystems is fundamental to climate resilient development, in light of theĀ threatsĀ climateĀ changeĀ posesĀ toĀ themĀ andĀ theirĀ rolesĀ inĀ adaptationĀ andĀ mitigationā€.

Our forests need to be protected for their role in soaking up and storing carbon and for their own sake, as the traditional lands of First Nations peoples, for their totems and songlines, water, wildlife and their beauty.

They should not be burnt in forest furnaces for fake renewable energy under scam ā€œbiomassā€ systems that undermine the integrity of real renewables.

is on the record opposing the woodchipping of native forests, stating in 2015: ā€œNative wood waste is neither clean nor renewable.ā€

However, so far his government has not guaranteedĀ their protection.

Sixty-six citizen scientists spent the night in some of Victoriaā€™s native forests on October 9. They sighted 60 endangered greater gliders, securing a halt to logging in the area.

The incredible greater glider is one of the worldā€™s largest gliding animals and was added to the endangered list by the federal government, with bushfires, logging and climate change listed as the key reasons for habitat loss.

The governmentā€™s so-called ambitious plan to get us to zero extinction will do little to protect the future of these precious greater gliders and other endangered species if there is no immediate and significant action on climate and habitat protection.

If this doesnā€™t happen soon, the gliders may be relegated to a future on Noahā€™s Ark.

[Janet Rice is a Victorian Greens Senator. on classifying native forest biomass as renewable are now open.]

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