NES could end all Australian native forestry

Friday 21 Jul 2023

 
Australia’s forest industry fears the Albanese government’s new national environment standards could end native forest logging nationally.

Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek is drafting the new standards as part of a revamp of environmental law and has vowed to apply them to Regional Forest Agreements. RFAs are federal-state deals that have effectively enjoyed an exemption from national environment laws, on the basis that reserves, and forest practice requirements are sufficient.

The native timber industry – already facing logging bans in Victoria and Western Australia – is sweating on the detail, fearing the new standards could “destroy” remaining industries in NSW and Tasmania. Conservationists are “hopeful” of significant change, arguing the current system is failing to protect endangered species and high conservation value forests.

Former federal Labor minister Joel Fitzgibbon, now chief executive of the Australian Forest Products Association, warned his former colleagues against “misinformation from extreme activist groups”. With Australia importing more than AU$5bn of timber each year, further curtailing native forestry would threaten the nation’s “sovereign capability” to build homes and maintain a range of timber-based industries, he said.

“Twenty-five per cent of our housing construction timber now comes from other countries,” Mr Fitzgibbon told The Australian. “The big risk is much of that product will come from jurisdictions that don’t enforce the environmental and labour standards we do here in Australia. The industry understands and appreciates the government’s political pressures, and we are working with it to better help Australians understand the increasing role the sector can play in meeting our climate change aspirations, and our capacity to remain a country that makes things at home.”

Sources who have seen drafts of the standards said they were encouraging for conservationists. Conservation groups are cautiously optimistic. “It could make logging under the RFAs nigh impossible,” said Wilderness Society Tasmania forest campaigner Alice Hardinge.

Victoria’s exit from native forest logging from November has forced Tasmania to review its forest contract policies. The Wilderness Society and the Bob Brown Foundation called on the Andrews government to ban imports of native timber from NSW and Tasmania.

Source: The Australian



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