CONCLUSION


Senate Environment, Communications, Information Technology and the Arts Committees

Commonwealth Environment Powers
Table of Contents

CHAPTER 7

CONCLUSION

7.1 The Committee notes that as the 20th Century draws to a close, the environmental problems facing Australia continue to mount. The 1996 Australian State of the Environment Report identifies a host of “structural” problems that need to be solved as a matter of priority. It is clear to the Committee, based on the voluminous submissions received in this inquiry, that the public has a very strong interest in effective environmental protection and successful ecologically sustainable development.

7.2 It is also evident to the Committee that the vast majority of submissions believe that the Commonwealth Government must adopt a strong leadership role in solving environmental problems facing Australia within the federal system of Australian governance. This is not to say that environmental management must not be shared by all three levels of government, but that strong uniform national standards set by the Commonwealth should provide the baseline for environmental protection in order to ensure all Australian equal environmental protection under the law.

7.3 The Committee believes that the vast array of indirect constitutional powers available to the Commonwealth provide the necessary and sufficient sources of authority for the Commonwealth to undertake a much more central and comprehensive regulatory approach to environmental protection. The Committee believes that the vigorous exercise of these powers is necessary if the problems identified in the 1996 Australian State of the Environment Report are to be effectively and successfully addressed.

7.4 The Committee considers that voluntary, lowest common denominator approach to national environmental protection, epitomised by the cooperative environmental ministerial councils, such as the AEC, CONCOM, and NEPC provide little, if any, cause for optimism that the Australian environment will be effectively protected. The Committee concludes that after a quarter of a century with little results to show, it is time to abandon such an approach.

7.5 The Committee believes that it is beyond dispute that the Commonwealth Government, like all democractic governments, is bound to act or, at all events, it is constitutionally required to act in matters of public interest. The Committee concludes that the Commonwealth Government should, as a matter of high principle and policy, protect and promote the public good in all way constitutionally permissible.

7.6 The Committee believes that the failure to exercise the extensive existing Commonwealth power to protect the environment is largely the result of the lack of political will and the failure to appreciate the living Constitution set up by the framers in order to meet problems not envisioned when Constitution was settled. The Committee believes that the limited role of the Commonwealth in protecting the Australian environment through uniform national standards is significantly out of step with the expectations of the Australian community, including not only conservation organisations, but also many individuals, public interest organisations and industry groups.

7.7 The Committee also concludes that while the Commonwealth Government currently possesses a very large suite of Constitutional powers in order to legislation, or otherwise regulate for environmental protection, it would nevertheless be desirable to have a general and wide Commonwealth Environment power explicitly provided for in the Constitution possibly under section 51. This would formally recognise and legitimise the authority of the national government in environmental protection and management.

Senator Lyn Allison

Committee Chair