049 - Australia’s extinction crisis and national environmental law reform
049 - Australia’s extinction crisis and national environmental law reform
NOTING that Australia is one of 17 mega-biodiverse countries globally;
DEEPLY CONCERNED that three vertebrate species have gone extinct in Australia since 2009;
DEEPLY CONCERNED that a number of ecosystems in Australia demonstrate evidence of collapse;
CONCERNED that Australia has been identified as a global deforestation hotspot;
FURTHER CONCERNED that since Australia’s national environmental law has been in operation it is estimated more than 7.7 million hectares of habitat for nationally-listed threatened species have been destroyed;
NOTING that Australia is reviewing its primary national environmental law, the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act;
FURTHER NOTING the interconnections between community well-being, human-health outcomes and a healthy environment; and
ALSO NOTING the obligations of the Australian Government as a State Party to the Convention on Biological Diversity to achieve the objectives of the convention;
CALLS ON the Australian Government to demonstrate national leadership in environmental protection and ensure that reform of its national environmental law:
a. prevents the destruction of primary, remnant, old-growth or high-conservation value forests;
b. prevents the avoidable extinction of native fauna and flora;
c. protects and recovers key biodiversity areas, threatened ecological communities and threatened species, including strict protection for their critical habitats;
d. prevents the introduction of, and reduces the current extent, spread and population size of, invasive species;
e. substantially reduces Australia’s greenhouse gas pollution and increases carbon sequestration in biodiverse landscapes and seascapes;
f. protects World Heritage Areas, National Heritage Places, Wetlands of International Importance and the National Reserve System from unsustainable development and ensures adequate management;
g. protects freshwater supplies and other areas essential for ecosystem services;
h. reduces, to as close to zero as possible, air pollution, plastic pollution and chemical pollution;
i. effectively protects Australia’s wildlife from illegal trade and unsustainable fishing;
j. provides communities with transparent information and access to justice;
k. ensures decisions are made on the best-available science; and
l. creates a positive obligation on governments to develop and adequately resource threat abatement and recovery planning instruments.