
Climate, environment and water campaigners are fighting what they see as Laborās walk back on its promised reforms to the main environmental law, the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation ActĀ (EPBC).
They are concerned it is moving to speed up the approvals process for large-scale gas developments and disarming water trigger laws, which only passed late last year.
Environmentalists and Greens and independent MPs won a major victory, late last year, when Labor agreed to extend the water trigger in theĀ EPBC to cover coal and gas projects.
However, industry and business seem to have since persuaded Labor to water down its environment-friendly reformsĀ in its āā packageĀ and speed up approvals of new gas projects.
Ā concluded in October 2020 that many changes were needed, including new national environmental standards, within two years. Labor in opposition criticised the Coalition for only introducing piecemeal reforms.
The review also concluded that the currentĀ EPBC ādoes not clearly outline its intended outcomesā and that āthe environment has suffered from 2 decades of failing to continuously improve the law and its implementationā.
It noted that the EPBC is ācomplex and cumbersomeā and it āresults in duplication with State and Territory development approval processesā.
New EPA
Labor announced on April 16 it would establish two new agencies ā (EPA) and Environment Information Australia ā to make decisions on developments and enforce regulations ā thereby separating the decision-making from the EPBC.
A coalition of environment groups responded the same day saying they were concerned the new proposed agencies were about fast-tracking fossil-fuel projects.
Kirsty Howey, Executive Director of Environment Centre NT said āpushback from self-interested and well-resourced mining and gas magnatesā had led to Laborās ācapitulationā.
Dave Copeman, Director of Queensland Conservation Council, said environment minister Tanya Plibersekās delay in the long-awaited fundamental reform means that Australia will have an EPA āwithout all the tools it needs to protect natureā.Ā
āAustralia does need a Federal EPA,ā said James Overington, Executive Officer of Environment Tasmania, but āin the absence of underpinning legislation, and when the Minister can override its decisions, we are struggling to see how there will be any reliable benefits to natureā.Ā
David Bacon, President of the Conservation Council of South Australia, said Plibersek must āhow and when the plan to āturn the tide from nature destruction to nature repairā that she announced in December 2022 will be deliveredā.Ā
Glenn Walker, Head of Nature at Ā asked how the new agencies would relate to the EPBC to deliver improved nature laws.
āThe EPA will not have the teeth it needs until a strong national nature law also comes into place.ā He said it is āessentialā the āEPA is given powers to assess and reject large coal and gas projects where the climate impacts on nature are assessed as significantā.
āFollowing the hottest year on record, itās completely untenable that the existing nature law fails to allow this ā another reason why itās critical that the government gets on with the job of introducing the new nature law into parliament as soon as possible.ā
Water assessments
Plibersek has also said she wants to establish an āaccredited approvalā scheme for States and Territories to take control of assessing environmental and water resource impacts and the power to approve their own massive coal and oil projects.
But environment organisations fear that devolving federal environmental approval powers to the States and Territories in separate legislation would render it toothless.
said the proposed change wouldĀ be a ābetrayalā and that the States and Territories cannot be trusted to properly assessĀ environmental and water resource impactsĀ on fossil fuel projects.
Currently, such assessments have to be madeĀ federally.
Kelly Albion forĀ said: āFour months after we won our campaign to expand the water trigger to unconventional gas projects in NT [Northern Territory] and WA [West Australia], the governmentās proposed changes would put precious water at risk everywhere.
āThe states and territories simply cannot be trusted with water protection.
āOffshore oil and gas have huge environmental impacts and the potential to unleash a climate bomb.
āMassive gas projects like North West Shelf in WA, Barossa in the NT and drilling off the Surf Coast in Victoria will have a massive impact on our already warming climate,ā Albion said.
The governmentās proposed changes to the environmental approvals process for large gas projects were rejected in March by Greens, Teals and Independent MPs.
Albion said changes to the National Offshore Petroleum Safety and Environmental Management Authority (NOPSEMA) regulations on oil and gas project approvals would hand power to resources ministerĀ Madeleine King and weaken environmental protections and the consultation process.Ā
āKing is a big supporter of the industry, repeating the lie that gas is an incredibly important part of efforts to reach net zeroā, Albion said.Ā
King has rejectedĀ suggestions that changes to the EPBCĀ are about bypassing environmental laws and fast-tracking new gas projects.Ā Ā environment groupsā concerns.
Georgina Woods, who heads ās Ā research and investigations team, said Labor only expanded water trigger protections on gas and coal assessments last DecemberĀ under pressure.
IfĀ Labor goes ahead with āa mechanism to hand those powers back to states and territories ⦠it will breach a very clear election commitment.ā
Woods likened LaborāsĀ Streamlining Environmental Approvals Bill, which did not pass, to former Coalition PM Scott Morrisonās āā mining approvals system in 2020. It would have created a āĀ of major projects, she said.
It would have handed responsibility to states to approve and manage major project development impacts on threatened species, habitat and biodiversity, as well as World Heritage areas.
āState and territory governments have proven time and again that they canāt be trusted with our water,ā Woods said. A federal approval role on water is needed āto prevent coal and gas projects draining our groundwater and polluting our creeks and riversā.
First Nations' input
First Nations peoples have long called for theĢż·”±Źµž°äĀ to beĀ strengthenedĀ and for a greater say in heritage and environmental management on their lands.Ā
Ā saidĀ in 2021Ā that the Morrison governmentās bid to delegate environmental approvals to states and territories raised āred flagsā.
āAnytime you think of someone trying to streamline the process, alarm bells can go off,ā Lowe told NITV.
āThe āred tapeā is there for a reason, to make people follow process, follow procedure and, in this case, making sure the environment is protected, as much as you can when youāre mining.ā
Environment, climate, heritage and water defenders are organising a week of protest -Ā #WeRiseĀ ā from April 29 to May 10.Ā
They are calling for an end to new coal and gas projects and for federal laws to enshrining climate, environmental and heritage protections.
The national week of action,Ā #WeRiseĀ ā like the flood waters and flames, is organising under the slogan: āLabor: keep us safe āĀ No more coal and gas!ā