1st Scout Ranger Regiment

If the budget ditched the Stage 3 tax cuts, Australia could save every threatened species – and lots more

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, May 10, 2023

Given the parlous state of nature in Australia, these commitments are important.

Key Points: 
  • Given the parlous state of nature in Australia, these commitments are important.
  • The promises include ending new extinctions, fixing national nature laws and protecting 30% of our land and waters.
  • In our view, the budget takes very small steps towards making good on the many government’s promises, but falls well short of what is needed.

A suite of big promises

    • In the words of the government’s own report, “the challenges to the existence of the plants and animals that define Australia are bigger than ever”.
    • It will also strengthen national nature laws, otherwise known as the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act.
    • This includes pledges to create ten new Indigenous Protected Areas and double the number of Indigenous Rangers.

Getting tough on environmental laws

    • And it will only be effective if new environmental laws – currently being negotiated – give it the powers to prevent further biodiversity loss.
    • This body would provide high quality environmental data to support environmental regulation, planning and reporting.
    • There is also growing demand for biodiversity data for environmental accounting, business disclosures and the proposed Nature Repair Market.

What else for nature?

    • Effective protected area management needs stronger investment and active conservation, including management of invasive species and restoring degrading environments.
    • Many of Australia’s existing protected areas are badly damaged by feral pests such as weeds, foxes and feral cats, as well as inappropriate fire regimes and more.
    • Our current Commonwealth reserve system is already under-managed and many species and ecosystems are being neglected.
    • The budget also contains $28 million to develop a much-needed national climate risk assessment, which includes risks to biodiversity.

Getting our priorities straight

    • Research suggests Australia must spend $2 billion a year to save its 1,900 most-imperilled species.
    • And an additional $2 billion a year for 30 years could also restore 13 million hectares of Australia’s degraded land.
    • Meanwhile, the cost of adequately conserving our World Heritage areas and Ramsar wetlands is not yet known.
    • We must seriously examine our national priorities, and demand that Australian governments invest our national wealth in the species and ecosystems we depend on.