Labors Budget priorities are under fire as conservation groups warn biodiversity funding cuts, weakened protections and fast-tracked approvals could deepen Australias environmental crisis, writesSue Arnold.
THE AUSTRALIAN Land Conservation Alliance (ALCA) doesnt mince words in its description of the Federal Budget words shared by a significant number of Australians:
ALCA details the $2.2 billion cuts to the Department of Climate Change Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW) portfolio over the next 14 years, including cuts of $67 million over seven years from uncommitted funds in theNational Environmental Science Program.
ACLAs Policy LeadMichael Cornishsaid:
Last month, the Australian Government released its secondNational Ecosystem Accounts. These reconfirm just how valuable nature is, showing that healthy ecosystems store billions of dollars worth of carbon and protect hundreds of thousands of homes and people from storms and tidal surges.
Australia's rapidly disappearing biodiversity is still not a priorityAcross party lines, political ambition is outpacing environmental protection andleaving Australias wildlife without a future.
Mr Cornish said:
Scientists, conservation organisations and environmentally aware Australians are now faced with a disastrous political scenario. The May Federal Budget is the stuff of environmental nightmares.
Many Australians voted for Labor in the firm belief that the partys policies would reflect the significant across-the-board concern over the impacts of climate change and the catastrophic loss of biodiversity. Yet the enormous destruction caused by the 2019-2020 bushfires, with an estimated 3 billion animals lost, has drifted into the political dead zone.
Ecosystems were wiped out, flora and fauna, riparian zones and invertebrates were incinerated.WWF estimated60,000 koalas were lost in the fires.
In response to this global catastrophe, the Albanese Government, Coalition Opposition and One Nation continue to ignore the extensive long-term damage and scientific concern. Australias rapidly disappearing biodiversity is, apparently, of no consequence to the powers that be and would be.
The Federal Budget potentially sounds the death knell for wildlife populations struggling to survive as their habitats are increasingly destroyed by climate change impacts, massive urbanisation projects, fossil fuel projects and population growth.
Environment Victoriasums up one of the most alarming policies. Provisions in the Budget will accelerate the handover of federal environmental approval powers to state and territory governments, fast-tracking decision-making and establishing a new pay to destroy offsets scheme.
Australias environmental crisis ignored as political parties drift RightAustralias major parties face mounting criticism for ignoring biodiversity loss and climate risks as political debate shifts further to the Right.
The Federal Budget allocates $153.5 million over four years to progress bilateral agreements with states and territories that would see decision-making under the newly reformedEnvironment Protection Biodiversity and Conservation Act 1999handed to state and territory governments, and enhance the use of AI in environmental approvals (Portfolio Budget Statements, Budget Paper 1.3, page 18).
If bilateral agreements are made, state and territory governments will be able to greenlight mining, energy and land clearing projects under federal laws as they impact nationally significant environmental values like critically endangered species, world heritage areas, andRamsarwetlands.
Given the record of state governments appalling environmental approvals, the bilateral agreements amount to a blank cheque for developers.
Labors record on biodiversity demonstrates a significant change in political direction, favouring growth and greed at any cost over environmental concerns.
In NSW, the Labor Party first promised the creation of theGreat Koala National Parkin January 2010, launched by then Opposition Leader,Luke Foley. Given that one-fifth of the states koalas live within the 175,000 hectares of state forests, which constitute the proposed park, together with 100 forest species, the promise to create the park was met with huge public support, which has continued to grow exponentially.
In 2023, the Labor Party promised to create the park if it won government. In 2025, the Labor Government confirmed the proposed boundary of the Park and an immediate temporary moratorium on timber harvesting within the proposed boundary.
InMay 2026, Minister for the EnvironmentPenny Sharpeaffirmed that the final creation of the park is now dependent on the successful registration of a carbon project under the proposed improved Native Forest Management (NFM) method.
Meantime, large areas of crucial koala habitat in state forests have been excluded from the proposed Park boundaries and remain open to logging.
According to theNative Conservation Council, Forestry Corporation continues to log and process harvest plans within the 175,000-hectare proposed park footprint.
New koala park less about koalas and more about cashing in on carbon creditsAustralian rainforests have become the first in the world to switch from absorbing carbon dioxide to emitting it.
According to the NSW Governments websiteexplanation of the NFM:
The method is to be considered by the Commonwealth Governments Independent Emissions Reduction Assurance Committee (ERAC).
Getting down to any reasonable understanding of the mountain of schemes relevant to forests, carbon credits and greenhouse emissions is not for the faint-hearted. But they provide evidence of the latest Labor ploy to detract any significant public attention from critical environmental issues.
Labor governments are publishing paper after paper, creating themes for discussion, public comments on endless schemes, holding round tables that fail to deal with the substantive issues, and ignoring peer-reviewed scientific research and scientific concern.
Instead of ending native forest logging, now forests will only survive if theres money to be made by valuing the trees for their carbon reduction. At the political level, the only value of forests will be monetary. Theres zero consideration of ending forest logging.
Instead, the long-standing exemptions for the logging industry under federal environmental laws will now apply. Native forest logging will be subject to nationalenvironmental standardsthat set clear goals for environmental protection.
More loosey-goosey language.
Australias wildlife crisis exposes a catastrophic failure of governmentAs bushfires tear through Victoria, confused emergency responses, missing resources and government inaction are leaving Australias wildlife to suffer and die.
Yet scientists have confirmed that protecting native forests from harvesting is the most effective way to bring down Australias carbon emissions.
As ProfessorDavid Lindenmayersays:
According to theBiodiversity Council, investment in on-the-ground biodiversity programs for 2026-27 amounts to just 0.06 per cent of the Federal Budget. Allowing for inflation, this represents a 9 per cent decline in real terms compared to 2025-26.
Investment to speed up development and streamline environmental approvals will be equal to half of all on-ground nature funding over the next two years
Over $500 million was allocated to streamline environmental assessments. Over $100 million was committed to modernise environmental data systems, integrating AI to speed up housing and development approvals.
When governments and political parties ignore science, increasing biodiversity loss, climate impacts and the fundamental combination of globally recognised threats to the planet, our nation is in deep trouble.
The trouble is, governments no longer listen. Nor do opposition parties.
Sue Arnoldis an IA columnist and freelance investigative journalist. You can follow Sue@koalacrisis.
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