Chapter 5 - Other issues
Social and economic effects of Port Hinchinbrook on Cardwell
5.1
Supporters of the Port Hinchinbrook development
hold out various hopes from it - growth of Cardwell ensuring the retention of
essential services, to turn around the decline that followed the end of the
timber industry in the 1980s; jobs for young people as an alternative to
leaving town; perhaps a high school to replace the dangerous hour-long drive to
Tully.[1]
‘The Port Hinchinbrook
development is the first opportunity in this town’s 130-year history to have a
major employer in our district. We are counting on it to reverse the trend of
splitting up our families. We love it up here. We live here by choice and would
love to have the opportunity to keep our family units together.’ (L Hallam,
Cardwell Chamber of Commerce, Evidence 30 July 1998, p 9)
5.2
Others argue that the benefits are uncertain:
‘The people of Cardwell are mostly small shopkeepers and retired
people who enjoyed the quiet style of the little fishing town. They had only to
research the effects of the Port Douglas resort which resulted in an exodus of
many of the original population, hit by high real estate values and loss of
trade to self contained resort shops.’ (M Mackay, Submission 47, p 129)
5.3
Friends of Hinchinbrook listed 26 public
statements about Port Hinchinbrook job creation by Cardwell Properties,
Cardwell Chamber of Commerce and local MPs from 1993 to 1997, to show how
speculative the estimates were (they ranged from 400 to 3,500). ‘We feel it is
cruel to raise hopes so unrealistically.’[2]
The North Queensland Conservation Council (NQCC) asks whether local businesses
will be displaced by new businesses at Oyster Point, and whether ‘the now
heavily residential nature of the development will result in a collapse of land
prices in Cardwell’? The NQCC stresses that there has been no assessment of
these impacts.[3]
The Cairns and Far North Environment Centre argued that ecotourism will be a
better source of local business opportunities and employment than large resorts:
‘Ecotourism will provide, and is now providing, small business
opportunities for residents from the small local populations along the
Hinchinbrook Coast. Large increases in population and large tourist operations
will result in long-term environmental degradation and widespread
unemployment.’ (Cairns and Far North Environmental Centre, Submission 50, p
143)
5.4
The Committee asked the Queensland government,
among other things, whether the State has any statutory responsibility to
assess the social and economic impacts of large development proposals, and
whether in fact the State has considered the likely social and economic effects
of Port Hinchinbrook on the local area. In its answers the State passed over
these questions in silence.[4]
5.5
The underlying issue is, what is the proper
scope of the public interest in the effects of private developments in a free
enterprise society? We have environmental impact assessment laws, but we do not
have ‘social impact assessment’ laws (except indirectly in planning policies).
Developments may have social costs as well as benefits - as, for example, when
the construction of out-of-town shopping malls causes the death of
old-established main streets, to the detriment of people who do not have a car
to drive to the mall. Our planning laws are not good at accounting for these
costs, especially where they are incurred not all at once but through a long
period of gradual reaction (as with the gradual decline of the main street in
the example just given). In this case, we are considering a development that
will more than double the population of a rather isolated small town. On the
face of it this might have significant impacts for better or worse, and some
study of them, as an input to a decision on the development application, would
have been prudent.
Infrastructure needs of the
development
5.6
Environmental groups were concerned that the
infrastructure needs of Port Hinchinbrook have not been properly considered.
They point out that Cardwell’s water supply (from Meunga Creek) is even now
scarcely adequate in dry times, and they fear that increased demand will lead
to pressure for construction of dams in the area, particularly in the ‘scenic
and environmentally valuable upper reaches of the Herbert River.’[5]
5.7
The developer replies:
‘From day one of our application we have offered to supply our
own water from three creeks which run through our own property. At the Cardwell
Shire’s request we have agreed to co-operate with them so that by economy of
scale they will be able to improve water reticulation through the township of
Cardwell.’ (Cardwell Properties P/L, Submission 83, annexure C, p 4)
5.8
Cardwell Shire Council says it is confident that
Meunga Creek can supply Port Hinchinbrook and Cardwell. Installation of water
meters in the last two years has significantly reduced peak demand.[6]
5.9
Environment groups note the developer’s past
proposals for upgrading of Dallachy airstrip north of Cardwell (which is now
suitable only for light aircraft). According to Cardno and Davies (1994), the
project anticipated upgrading of the Dallachy airport ‘to accept regular public
transport aircraft of the Boeing 737 type.’ According to the 1994 Environmental
Review Report, ‘The developer plans a staged development ... that will, within 7
to 10 years, incorporate an upgrade of the Dallachy Airport to accept
commercial jet aircraft (with further possible upgrading depending on the
international visitor component)’.[7]
5.10
The Cardwell Shire Council Corporate Plan
1995-99 says, ‘the construction of a regional airport at Dallachy is seen as
important in the long term ...’[8]
5.11
In his submission to this inquiry, the developer
said:
‘The Cardwell Shire Council has questioned upgrading of their
airstrip to accept commuter traffic but they have allocated land for this
purpose. It will not require clearing in the Edmund Kennedy National Park.’
(Cardwell Properties P/L, submission 83, annexure C, p 4)
5.12
On the other hand, the Wildlife Preservation
Society claimed that upgrading Dallachy ‘will require major clearing in both
State Forest and Edmund Kennedy National Park (included in the Wet Tropics
World Heritage Area), and will result in infrastructure and noise and air
pollution inappropriate to the two World Heritage Areas ... Clearing of native
vegetation to accommodate the airport will result in further displacement of
mahogany glider habitat.’[9]
5.13
The key point of concern is that the more
distant, longer term, incremental impacts of the development seem not to have
been considered in the development approval process.
Economic viability of the development
5.14
The Committee notes submissions arguing that the
viability of Port Hinchinbrook as a business is dubious. The North Queensland
Conservation Council said:
‘Virtually all coastal resorts are losing money. Laguna Quays
recently sold at approximately 1/10th of construction costs. There is ample
evidence that the days of integrated resorts are over ...’ (North Queensland
Conservation Council, Submission 112, p 451)
5.15
The Wilderness Society submitted a 1996
affidavit by Mr Dean Dransfield, an accountant specialising in the tourism
industry.[10]
Mr Dransfield said:
‘... resort development in the Whitsundays and Far North
Queensland has an unusually high development risk profile. This perceived risk
is caused by the numerous economic failures of both island and mainland resorts
and the subsequent resale of those facilities at substantial discounts to
development costs ... resort development is considered high risk and in general
terms not presently economically viable.’ (‘Dransfield affidavit’, p 9-10,
tabled at hearing 10 August 1998; ref: Evidence p 216)
5.16
On the other hand it was argued that if a
developer wants to risk his money, that is nobody else’s business:
Senator Ian Macdonald: ‘I would have thought that the
economics of the development are a matter for the developer and no-one else. If
he goes broke, if he wants to risk his money, surely that is his role and not
anyone else’s.’ (Evidence 30 July 1998, p 45)
5.17
As well, it should be noted that the failure of
a resort owner does not necessarily imply the failure - closure - of the
resort. The viability of a business depends not only on cash flow but also
on its ability to service capital debt (or yield an acceptable rate of return
on equity, as the case may be). An operation may turn out non-viable for the
entrepreneur, who has funded the entire development cost; but it may be
perfectly viable for the lucky buyer who gets it for only a fraction as much
and so does not need as much income to service their debt.
‘They spoke about failed resorts. Let us look at those failed
resorts. Hamilton Island: is that a failed resort? It is now owned by one of
the wealthiest companies in Australia, and going quite well ... All these things
have had hiccups, but it has not cost the taxpayers a cent. They have gone on
from strength to strength.’ (K Williams, Cardwell Properties P/L, Evidence 10
August 1998, p 309)
5.18
The Committee comments: it is true that public
authorities have no business to be concerned on behalf of the developers
about the risks that developers take. On the other hand, they have every right
to be concerned on behalf of the public about the risk that a failed
development will leave the public to pick up the tab for environmental
remediation. We have the example of the failed Tekin development at Oyster
Point. The failed Magnetic Quays development on Magnetic Island near Townsville
was also mentioned:
Senator Reynolds: ‘I do not want to see the environment
violated and left - for how many years now ? - for five years as an absolute
disgrace and eyesore - as happened on Magnetic Island.’ (Evidence 10 August
1998, p 217)
5.19
This raises the question of bonds for
environmental remediation:
Senator Hogg: ‘... should there be some sort of trust
account that developers must pay into such that, should they suffer a financial
crisis and go bankrupt, then it is not the public purse that is going to pay
for the remediation of the site[?]’ (Evidence 24 August 1998, p 342)
5.20
The Committee affirms the correctness of
demanding environmental bonds from proponents of major developments that might
have significant environmental effects. If private development activities
damage the public realm, it is only fair that the developer, not the public,
should pay. We acknowledge the difficulties of estimating the risk of failure,
the risk of damage and costs of remediation, and deciding how big bonds should
be and how long they should be held for.
‘I think it is a case of horses for course, Senator, with due
respect ... It is a very difficult question and, as I said, you have to find a
line of balance between the imposition you put on the developer and whether or
not that will discourage development entirely.’ (K Williams, Cardwell
Properties P/L, Evidence 24 August 1998, p 342-3)
5.21
Arguably, the more difficult it is to estimate
these things, the more strongly should the precautionary principle apply in
considering the application in the first place. Prevention is better than cure.
The fact that an authority holds a bond (or may demand one) should not be an
excuse to allow less rigorous environmental management - especially when, as
may often happen, the costs of remediation are large and uncertain.
5.22
The Committee notes that Mr Dransfield’s
evidence and similar submissions referred to the risks of North Queensland
resort development in general. We presume that the circumstances of different
developments may differ greatly. We have no basis for drawing any conclusion
about the viability of Port Hinchinbrook in particular.
Other environmental issues for the Hinchinbrook Region
Aquaculture
5.23
There are several prawn and fish farms in the
Hinchinbrook Channel, and several more under construction or approved. One
prawn farm covers 127 hectares - about three times the size of the Port
Hinchinbrook ‘Development Site’.[11]
Effluent from farms can be extremely polluting: the Committee heard that ‘a
single one hectare [prawn] pond ... could have a nutrient loading roughly
equivalent to a resident population of 300-500 people, based on typical
nutrient concentrations in secondary treated sewage.’ This is a particular
concern in the slow-flushing Hinchinbrook Channel: ‘a flushing period of 50
days may be needed to eliminate wastewater from a single source discharging
into the channel ...’[12]
5.24
Hinchinbrook Shire Council supports aquaculture
for its job creation:
‘... the only labour intensive
industry in our shire is tourism or aquaculture ... We have had about three
aquaculture projects in the Hinchinbrook area knocked on the head, mainly
because of environmental concerns ... I have always said that you must have
respect for the environment and where at all possible avoid any degrading
effects. But at the end of the day jobs have to be created.’ (G Giandomenico,
Hinchinbrook Shire Council, Evidence 30 July 1998, p 72)
5.25
The National Parks Association of Queensland
sees possible benefits from prawn farming in taking pressure off the
‘destructive effects’ of trawling, gill-netting and line fishing in the Great
Barrier Reef Marine Park - providing effluent is treated before
disposal.[13]
5.26
On the other hand, environment groups have
serious concerns about whether the environmental impacts of aquaculture in the
Hinchinbrook Channel are being controlled adequately. The North Queensland
Conservation Council quoted a 1994 Department of Environment briefing paper:
‘The establishment of the leases for the purpose of aquaculture
did not consider the possible effects of the discharges, either individually or
combined. The views of the Department of Environment and Heritage and Water
Quality Council of Queensland were not considered prior to the granting of
leases ... The Department of Primary Industries is encouraging the establishment
of prawn farms ... In the Northern Region, the licensed discharge of wastewaters
from prawn farms is about equal of greater than the licensed volume of all
other industries combined ... The risk to the Hinchinbrook Channel is that the
constant input of nutrients, algae and bacteria will upset the ecology of the
area. The volumes proposed for discharge from existing and potential prawn
farms are very large - in the order of 20,000+ cubic metres per day. This is
the equivalent in volume to the wastewater generated by a population of over 1
million people. Discharges of this magnitude are normally the subject of major
impact assessment processes ...’ (North Queensland Conservation Council,
further information 17 March 1999, p 362-3, quoting a Department of Environment
(Northern Region) briefing paper, 25 March 1994)
5.27
On this 1994 information there is fair cause for
concern. The Committee has little information on the Queensland government’s
actions since then or the present position. According to the Department of
Primary Industries (DPI), ‘this [further aquaculture development in the
Hinchinbrook Channel] would be subject to very tight scrutiny by DPI and DEH.’
The Department of Primary Industries submitted its recent discussion paper on
‘Sustainable Growth of Coastal Aquaculture Policy.’ The paper proposes a risk
assessment procedure for aquaculture proposals that ‘have potential to cause an
environmental or disease impact on existing aquaculture facilities.’[14]
5.28
The Committee notes with some concern that this
paper, although it makes a few token references to avoiding environmental harm
from aquaculture developments, is actually firmly focussed on avoiding risk of
disease to existing nearby aquaculture developments. It does not propose a risk
assessment process relating to possible environmental harm in general.
5.29
As to the actual environmental impacts from
aquaculture effluent in the Hinchinbrook Channel: apart from the reasonable
fear that ‘the constant input of nutrients, algae and bacteria will upset the
ecology of the area’, the Committee heard no evidence on what the impacts are,
or who is researching them. It seems that the impacts are unknown:
Senator HOGG—... who should be monitoring the impact of the aquaculture[?]
Mr Veitch—The Department of Primary Industries.
Senator HOGG—Do they?
Mr Veitch—No. They are not resourced to do so. (V Veitch, Sunfish, Evidence 30
July 1998, p 27)
5.30
According to the North Queensland Conservation
Council (NQCC), the size of Seafarm [a 127 hectare prawn farm at Pig Creek,
about 8km south of Cardwell] has doubled since 1994. The NQCC submitted a video
and photos showing ‘the dirty, green, foaming waste stream coming out of the
Seafarm discharge point and hence into the Hinchinbrook Passage ... The photos
show discharges that should be unacceptable anywhere in Australia, and clearly
contravene the provisions of the Environment Protection Act (Qld).’ The
NQCC claims that ‘leases are readily freeholded according to DNR [Department of
Natural Resources] land-use criteria, not QDEH [Queensland Department of
Environment and Heritage] criteria ... Land-use decisions are made by DNR whose
philosophy and culture are not environment-protection-based.’[15]
5.31
The Department of Environment and Heritage
requires aquaculture license holders to monitor the water quality of their
discharges.[16]
The North Queensland Conservation Council lists ‘self-monitoring of wastes’ as
a cause of environmental problems.[17]
According to Sunfish NQ:
‘DoE [Department of Environment] ... are scared to prosecute big
companies like CSR or big aquaculture companies. I will not say who told me,
but I know that in Burdekin there were reports of about 10 aquaculture plots
putting in more effluent and causing problems. A spokesman for DoE said, “We
can’t touch them, they’re too big.” (V Vitale, Sunfish NQ, Evidence 30 July
1998, p 27)
5.32
In evidence the Queensland government said:
‘Please be assured that any future proposals to establish aquaculture or
agricultural activities on State land in the vicinity of the Hinchinbrook
Channel will be subject to rigorous suitability assessment, particularly in
respect of environmental issues.’[18]
In a general comment to the Committee, the State said:
‘The Department [of Environment and Heritage] is actively
working in conjunction with the aquaculture industry, other Government
agencies, in particular the Department of Primary Industries, and interested
members of the community to develop new technologies to improve the quality of
aquaculture discharges and to manage any environmental impacts on the receiving
environment and waterways such as the Hinchinbrook Channel.’ (Qld Department of
Premier and Cabinet, further information 21 April 1999, p 712)
5.33
In the absence of evidence from the Queensland
government specifically answering the claims of environmental groups, the
Committee hesitates to draw strong conclusions. However, the evidence above is
no cause for complacency. It seems that the authorities do not know the impacts
of aquaculture effluent on the admittedly slow-flushing Hinchinbrook Channel,
and are not researching them.[19]
The discussion paper on ‘Sustainable Growth of Coastal Aquaculture Policy’ does
not consider environmental impacts. This does not seem to be best practice
management of a World Heritage Area. As we have stressed throughout this
report, ‘managing any environmental impacts’, worthy though it is, is no
substitute for upfront environmental impact assessment to inform decisions on
development applications.
Recommendation 8
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth and the Queensland
governments should research the environmental effects of aquaculture on the
Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area.
The Committee recommends further that pending improved knowledge
of the environmental effects of aquaculture on the Great Barrier Reef World
Heritage Area, discharge of effluent to the World Heritage Area should not be
permitted and no new aquaculture permits in the area should be issued.
Cane farming
5.34
Much of the Herbert River delta at the south end
of the Hinchinbrook Channel is under sugar cane. Development of land for cane
usually involves drainage schemes that can affect estuarine and coastal water
quality. Runoff may contain chemicals from fertilisers, and drainage schemes
may expose acid sulfate soils. Proposals in the Herbert River catchment next to
the Hinchinbrook Channel also involve works in mangrove areas. Nitrogen and
phosphorus are two main chemicals used in sugar cane fertilisers. It is
estimated that these chemicals now flow off the east Queensland coast in
quantities between three and five times greater than before European
settlement.[20]
5.35
Acid sulfate expert Dr Bowman described problems
arising from expansion of caneland:
‘My personal opinion is that
excavations and developments such as the Port Hinchinbrook site are fairly
minor in terms of their impact on acid sulfate soils and the consequent
environmental effects compared with the more extensive impacts that result from
industries such as drainage for sugar cane. We have a site at the southern end
of the Hinchinbrook Channel that we monitored for about nine months—the project
is now finished—showing production of very large quantities of acid ... it is
being produced by lowering of the watertable due to drainage for sugar cane production,
and it is also producing acid, iron, aluminium and other metals that are going
straight into Hinchinbrook Channel ... It is not all cane land, it is only on
acid sulfate, and we do not really know how extensive that is, but we think it
is fairly extensive. Where areas are being drained and we have looked at it, it
is definitely producing toxic leachate.’ (Dr G Bowman, CSIRO, Evidence 10
August 1998, p 276-7)
5.36
Prof. Melville described Tweed Shire Council’s
1990 initiative in drawing up Australia’s first government guidelines for
dealing with acid sulfate soils. He thinks that in Queensland there is less
acceptance of the potential problems:
‘Within New South Wales, I
believe that the industry generally accepts that acid sulfate soils are an
issue that they are addressing successfully in many cases ... I think there is a
contrast between New South Wales and Queensland in this respect. I do not
believe that the Queensland sugar industry does broadly accept that acid
sulfate soils are an issue or a problem. That is part of the problem of
education, I suppose.’ (Prof. M Melville, Evidence 10 August 1998, p 226)
5.37
The North Queensland Conservation Council
claimed that ‘There is now massive sugarcane expansion east of the Bruce
Highway into areas below three metres AHD [Australian Height Datum] into
intertidal areas and areas that are really marginal land.’[21] Mr Sheedy of Herbert River
Canegrowers denied this:
‘One of the criteria that we
have with assigning new land is that it should be above three metres AHD. There
are some lands which are presently under sugarcane cultivation which were
developed years ago and which would be probably not quite three metres AHD ... When three metres AHD was decided as a benchmark
that was thought to be a good measure by our technical advisers from the
Department of Natural Resources and the old DPI in Queensland in regard to acid
sulfate soil disturbance—that you could cultivate the soils above that level
without too much risk at all of disturbing acid sulfates that may be deeper down
in the soil profile.’ (P Sheedy, Canegrowers Herbert River District, Evidence
30 July 1998, p 70)
5.38
Herbert River Canegrowers generally stressed
that they are ‘going through a very detailed planning study for any expansion
of canegrowing in our district’, and ‘the industry in the Herbert has both a
planning process and a condition on the development of new assignment that will
ensure that no new development will create an acid sulfate problem.’[22]
5.39
Sunfish NQ claimed that the Sugar Industry
Infrastructure Package for the Murray-Riversdale area has allowed the
development of 11,000 hectares of ground that was previously wetland.[23] Mr Giandomenico of
Hinchinbrook Shire Council said that the land was ‘nowhere near wetlands or
anything’:
‘All the wetlands at the moment
have been mapped, and we as a council, in conjunction with the canegrowers, are
working vigorously to stop any expansion anywhere near wetlands.’ (G
Giandomenico, Hinchinbrook Shire Council, Evidence 30 July 1998, p 76)
5.40
Sunfish NQ had concerns about pollution from
canegrowing:
‘There are significant point source pollution problems ...
Victoria Mill was partially blamed for the fish kill at Victoria Creek when it
released low quality effluent into the top of the catchment during an
unscheduled shutdown after heavy rain...Macknade Mill ... has received criticism
from local residents and anglers for a number of years due to apparently
careless release of toxic effluent. Much of this is released into the top of
Macknade Creek catchment which flows north towards Hinchinbrook Island ... It is
unable to sustain native populations of fish and is badly affected by invasive
pasture grasses due to the removal of the riparian vegetation along its banks.
Other pollution concerns include the past practice of dumping sump oil, and
this still continues on some properties, as does the uncontrolled dumping of
old pesticide and herbicide containers.’[24]
5.41
Sunfish argues that ‘since land clearing began
in the region there has been a significant build up of sediment at the mouths
of most of our rivers and estuaries ...’
‘The key to controlling sediments is in development and
maintenance of riparian strips ... Although this has been law in some other
states since the early part of the century, there are no such mechanisms to
protect these critical areas in Queensland.’ (Sunfish NQ, Submission 122, p
526)
5.42
Sunfish NQ also claimed that fish kills and red
spot disease have been caused by acid runoff.[25]
Sunfish submitted several diseased fish caught in creeks of the Herbert delta
at the southern end of the Hinchinbrook channel.[26]
‘What we have offshore is the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage
Area. We have to stop using it as a big blue wheelie bin.’ (V Veitch, Sunfish
NQ, Evidence 30 July 1998, p 26)
5.43
Herbert River Canegrowers denied claims that fish
kills and red spot disease in the Herbert region are caused by acid runoff or
other pollution from canegrowing. They provided research showing that red spot
disease may occur naturally and has complex causes.[27]
‘There is sometimes that
association of acid sulfate with red spot disease in fish, but the veterinary
biologists tell us that the problem occurs in a lot of cases where there are
otherwise healthy streams simply through desalination with a major flush,
changes in temperatures and things of that kind.’ (P Sheedy, Canegrowers
Herbert River, Evidence 24 August 1998, p 360)
5.44
Herbert River Canegrowers described its code of
practice for sustainable canegrowing, and generally argued:
- ‘At the most, there are 898 hectares of shallow cane cultivation
[in the Herbert region] overlaying an area that could have potential acid
sulfate soils beneath the surface ... We
are very confident that, in all of those areas that are under existing
production, there is not going to be any further disturbance. They are developed
to the extent that they are ever going to be developed. Where those drainage
projects are proposed, there may be some disturbance. That is the disturbance
that is going to be managed and mitigated through the management plan ...’
-
‘The positive side of those
water management projects is that they also include the enhancement of wetlands
in those areas.’
- ‘What I cannot emphasise
enough is what the stream monitoring, which we have done under our water watch
program, has come up with ... There is not a low pH amongst the lot.’
-
‘[In the Tully-Murray and
Herbert regions] We are 100 per cent trash blanketing [an environmentally
preferable alternative to burning off] ... so there certainly are not many
sediments running off from the cane lands in the Herbert. We use relatively low
levels of nitrogenous and other fertilisers compared with other industries.’
- ‘The emphasis now, as we
develop sugar cane, is still on trying to preserve the riparian areas along
flow paths and wetlands, things like that. They are certainly being identified.
A lot of priority is now given to holding onto those.’
-
‘Canegrowers has plans for a
very ambitious tree planting initiative ...’[28]
5.45
The above evidence is not completely consistent.
The Committee did not try to go into the matter in any more detail and has no
basis for drawing any conclusion, except to say on the one hand, canegrowing
obviously has potential environmental impacts; on the other hand, it seems that
Herbert River Canegrowers are aware of this and say they are working to control
them. We note that the code of practice on sustainable canegrowing is advisory
rather than mandatory, and that scientists who have examined the issue have
several outstanding concerns.
Dungeness marina proposal
5.46
The North Queensland Conservation Council (NQCC)
described the ‘Club Hinchinbrook’ 50 berth marina and resort development, which
is proposed at Dungeness near Lucinda at the south end of the Hinchinbrook
Channel. The NQCC has similar concerns about environmental impacts at Dungeness
as at Port Hinchinbrook, and believes that the Environmental Impact
Statement and Planning Report produced for Hinchinbrook Shire Council in
1997 was inadequate. The NQCC submitted to the inquiry a permit assessment
record obtained by Freedom of Information, in which a Department of Environment
professional officer listed concerns about the development. The NQCC said: ‘The
Department of Environment itself, the only department charged with the
protection of the natural environment, does not stand up for its portfolio as do
other departments. Instead, it conspires with local government and development
interests to undermine its own legislation and its own charter.’[29]
5.47
The Environmental Defender’s Office of North
Queensland had a particular concern that in this case Hinchinbrook Shire
Council owns the site and assumed the role of development proponent, intending
to hand over the site to the actual developer once approvals are in place. Thus
Council was in the position of applying to itself for the necessary approval.
In the EDO’s view this creates an obvious conflict of interest:
‘The site of the development is freehold land owned by the
Hinchinbrook Shire Council (HSC). The HSC apparently called for expressions of
interest in developing the site and chose as its preferred developer, Bursill
Enterprises Pty Ltd ... the HSC has retained ownership of the site and applied to
itself for development approval ... it is difficult to understand how the Council
could avoid, let alone be seen to avoid, a conflict of interest between its
financial interest in the land and investment in the expressions of interest
process and its duty to fairly and objectively assess the merits of the
application in accordance with sound planning principles ...’ (Environmental
Defender’s Office of North Queensland Inc., Submission 90, p 3)
5.48
The EDO accepted that there are sometimes good
reasons for Councils to apply to themselves for planning consent (for example,
where the development is a public facility), but argued that this was not the
case here: Dungeness was always intended as a private recreational development.
The EDO argued that to avoid the perception of conflict of interest the Council
should have sold the land first and let the buyer apply for development
approval in the normal way.[30]
5.49
The Committee invited Hinchinbrook Shire Council
to answer these claims. The Shire said:
‘Council maintains that its role in the planning process for
Dungeness was in accord with State legislation and its planning scheme. The
Council has completed, at great expense, its Environmental Impact Study (EIS)
and further, has provided environmental management plans to the relevant
agencies to finalise the process ... [Council] anticipates that all issues will
be satisfactorily resolved ... The Council has at all times acted within and according
to the Laws of this State, and refutes any suggestion to the contrary ...’
(Hinchinbrook Shire Council, further information 22 July 1999, p 796a-b)
5.50
The Committee did not gather enough evidence on
the Dungeness proposal to comment on the environmental impacts.
5.51
On the procedural matter - the Council applying
to itself for approval - the Committee comments:
- There is undoubtedly a potential conflict of interest
between the Council’s duty to protect the public interest in orderly planning
decisions, and its interest in maximising the value of its land by approving
the development.
- This potential conflict of interest is inevitably present where a
council owns land proposed for development. In this regard, whether the council
acts as proponent, or whether the developer (as future buyer of the land) acts
as proponent with the owner’s consent, is not the main issue. In the first
case, the council carries out environmental assessment; in the second, it will
receive an environmental assessment provided by the proponent. The fear of
environment groups is that in the first case a council may short-cut
environmental assessment; in the second, it may assess the proponent’s
environmental assessment leniently, to ensure that the development is approved.
5.52
The Committee suggests that there is a need to
ensure a process of transparent and independent assessment of such
applications. The EDO suggested ‘at minimum, there should be a legislative
obligation to establish strong and effective “Chinese walls” in a local
authority’s handling of such applications’.[31]
The Committee suggests that the signs of probity would include:
- there is a strategic plan that shows that the land is surplus to
community requirements and the development is appropriate to the site;
- the development application is assessed independently - for
example, by external consultants whose role is to put themselves in the shoes
of the council’s planning staff;
- If the application is approved, the site is then sold by open
tender to ensure that the best price is received and to prevent any charge of
favouritism between the council and a particular developer.
5.53
The Committee has no evidence from which to make
any specific comment on the Dungeness proposal.
The role of science in this type of debate
5.54
The role of scientists in the Port Hinchinbrook
debate has been controversial. Several scientists who have been professionally
involved with the development gave evidence to this inquiry, and most of these
were concerned about inadequate environmental impact assessment. As well, on
several occasions concerned scientists in general (not limited to those who
have had direct professional involvement) have lobbied publicly on Port
Hinchinbrook. In late 1994, around the time of Senator Faulkner’s
proclamations halting work, an estimated 200 scientists signed a letter to the
Minister expressing concern about the poor environmental impact assessment and
the lack of baseline data from which to estimate impacts. In December 1995 six
eminent scientists headed by Sir David Attenborough wrote to the Prime Minister
urging him to stop the development. In August 1996 (when the new Commonwealth
government was reconsidering the matter) an estimated 200 scientists wrote to
the Minister for the Environment, Senator Hill, in similar terms.[32] On 14 January 1997 the
Australian Academy of Science wrote to Senator Hill urging the government to
develop better environmental assessment procedures consistent with the status
of a World Heritage Area.[33]
Nine internationally renowned scientists had a letter published in The
Australian (17 April 1998) calling on the Queensland and Commonwealth
governments to stop the development.[34]
5.55
This high profile has attracted criticism.
Supporters of the development claim that scientists are biased:
‘Even scientific research in the area is questionable. Many
studies, often publicly funded, seek to find evidence to support the point of
view of opponents to the development, rather than gathering data and then
drawing unbiased conclusions from it.’ (Cardwell Air Charter, Submission 88, p
341)
5.56
Or they claim that for every study an opposing
study can be found:
‘A particularly contentious issue has been the widely
conflicting and often misleading information provided through the media and the
great variation in the data provided in scientific reports and environmental
impact assessment studies.’ (Cardwell Chamber of Commerce, Submission 123, p
535)
5.57
The fact that scientists have personal as well
as professional opinions arouses suspicion:
‘We have numerous examples
of scientists who are being used, who are absolute opponents of the Port
Hinchinbrook development and are being put forward as experts in certain
fields.’ (L Hallam, Cardwell Chamber of Commerce, Evidence 30 July 1998, p 14)
5.58
The Australian Academy of Science comments
generally:
‘Science has a big stake in the consideration of development
proposals with significant environmental impact. All sides in public debates
use evidence produced by researchers to support their cases, generally
selectively. Governments use the scientific credentials of the impact
assessment process to confirm that they have discharged their public duties in
relation to the proposed development. In the resulting debates many of us feel
that the good name of science is not always enhanced by the causes to which it
is harnessed.’ (G Nossal, Australian Academy of Science, to Senator R Hill,
Minister for the Environment, 14 January 1997; attachment to Submission 128,
Prof. F Talbot)
5.59
The Committee comments: scientists are entitled
to have personal opinions, and to express them. It is quite natural that they
will have personal opinions about matters that they have come into contact with
through their work. They in turn have a responsibility to keep their research
results and their personal opinions clearly separate and, when expressing
themselves as experts, to state clearly the limits of their expertise. In
particular, this means distinguishing statements of scientific results from
opinions on matters of policy drawing on scientific results. For example, to
say ‘On present information, we do not know how serious this impact will be’ is
a scientific statement. To continue, ‘Accordingly, we should refuse the
development application/ approve the application on the following conditions to
minimise risk/ postpone a decision pending further research ...’ is a matter of
opinion, which scientists are as well entitled to express as anyone.
5.60
The Committee notes that in the absence of
perfect information estimating and evaluating risks always has a subjective
element to it. Statements about risk use words that do not have exact meanings
(‘Slight risk’, ‘moderate risk’, ‘severe risk’...). Even when risks can be
quantified by statistics and probabilities, the results are notorious for their
poor correlation with the psychological reality of risk in the mind of the
general public. In this situation the scientist’s professional judgment about
risk (choosing words like ‘slight’, ‘moderate’ or ‘severe’) stands somewhere
between a value-free scientific statement and a personal opinion. Because of
the lack of thorough upfront environmental impact assessment of Port
Hinchinbrook, such statements about risk have been prominent in the scientists’
contribution to the debate.
5.61
The Committee stresses that (setting aside the
unsubstantiated general accusations quoted from paragraph 5.55), we heard
nothing to suggest that any of the scientists concerned have behaved
unethically by biasing their research to support personal opinions, or by
putting forward personal opinions as though they were scientific statements.
All the scientists that gave evidence were very conscious of the distinction
and careful to avoid these traps.
5.62
The Committee suspects that criticism of
scientists also arises from misunderstandings about the nature of science and
the role of scientific statements in political debate. Decision-makers want
clear answers, and may become impatient with scientists whose conclusions are
cautious and hedged about with qualifications about the need for further
information. Non-scientists with a simplistic view of science as ‘fact-finding’
may not understand that two scientists can disagree without it meaning that one
of them is wrong or biased.
‘It’s the social curse of scientific illiteracy ... scientific and
cultural thinking is not like business thinking. The skill with which the
developer has sown the seeds of doubt about the scientific arguments of the
case for a precautionary approach to development within the region exploits the
scientific illiteracy of politicians. When politicians act recklessly instead
of safely, and defend themselves by claiming that you can’t get two scientists
to agree, it reveals a crucial technical incompetence.’ (A Thomas, Submission
131, p 600)
5.63
The Australian Academy of Science points out
that ‘evidence on complex environmental matters is seldom complete and
unambiguous.’[35]
5.64
Furthermore, even when scientific results are
clear, they cannot dictate what in the end are political decisions about the
right balance between conservation and development. ‘If you destroy the
habitat, the species will die’ is a value-free scientific statement. ‘So what
should we do about it?’ is the consequential political question. In answering
such questions the precautionary principle should apply. Decisions should be
made on the best possible information - and deciding how much information is
necessary should draw on the professional consensus of the experts concerned.
Decision-makers must be prepared to acknowledge unwelcome as well as welcome
information. Dr Preen comments:
‘My observation has been that
scientists can put in information, and if it agrees with the people making
decisions then it becomes the best scientific advice available. If it disagrees
with the direction that the people making the decisions want to go, then it is
said that scientists ‘disagree on this matter’. Look at the history of reports
done on Oyster Point. There must have been six or so reports done. They were
all just replaced by another one until a report came up that said that the
project would go ahead without undue harm within 100 or 200 metres of the site.
And all of a sudden that one was the best scientific advice available ...’ (Dr
A Preen, Evidence to Senate ECITA References Committee Commonwealth Environment
Power Inquiry, 24 April 1998, p 213)
5.65
The reference is to Dr Reichelt’s 1996 report
which summarised the comments of six scientists, who in turn were reviewing an
‘Environmental Risk Assessment’ produced by Sinclair Knight Merz (SKM) for the
developer.[36]
The six reviews and Dr Reichelt’s summary of them were part of the advice
gathered by Senator Hill before his August 1996 consent under the World
Heritage Properties Conservation Act 1983 which allowed work to resume (see
paragraph 2.28). Dr Preen:
‘... some of those six broadened it out into the big issues,
because clearly that was what it was all about. But Russell Reichelt, who
summarised it, cut it back down, qualified their comments all the time, came up
with this conclusion that there would be no unacceptable impact within 100 to
200 metres of the dredging area. So I guess he was being directed by his terms
of reference ... Basically, I think the process was cooked to get an outcome.’ (Dr A Preen, Evidence to Senate ECITA References
Committee Commonwealth Environment Power Inquiry, 24 April 1998, p 212-3)
‘Unfortunately the Commonwealth made obviously political
decisions in directing its scientific reports to confine themselves to the
actual site or immediately adjacent area. Such serious limitations fly in the
face of ecological reality ...’ (P Valentine, Submission 136, p 612)
5.66
The Committee stresses that the complaint is not
that Dr Reichelt acted unprofessionally, but rather that the government’s view
of the question was unreasonably narrow. Four of the six reviewers, though not
specifically asked, commented to the effect that ‘... [the SKM report] focuses
almost entirely on the local impacts of the proposed development’ or
‘... decisions on developments such as Port Hinchinbrook [need] to be made
in a more regional context.’[37]
Dr Reichelt reported these views in his summary. The complaint is essentially
that the Minister, in making his decision, seized on the one sentence in Dr
Reichelt’s summary most favourable to the development (‘... could go ahead
without significant impact on the immediate environment around Oyster Point,
that is, within a few hundred metres ...’) and passed over all the cautions.[38]
5.67
The Committee notes that the SKM report
explicitly limited itself to ‘the activities requiring ministerial consent’ -
dredging the access channel and implementing a beach and foreshore management
plan. It considered the matter narrowly, dealing with things like the possible
effects of dredging on seagrass beds.[39]
This raises the question of whether such an assessment should also consider the
broader knock-on ‘effects’ (if we may call them that) of one action (such as
dredging) in enabling a total development that may have other
environmental impacts. In the case of Port Hinchinbrook the question is
sharpened by the arguments about the lack of up-front whole-project
environmental assessment.[40]
5.68
The Committee comments: such problems only
confirm the need for thorough up-front whole project environmental assessment
of significant proposals. If after that the whole project is approved, detailed
consequential applications may reasonably be considered as formalities (subject
of course to satisfying relevant detailed conditions). The point is that if
up-front whole-project environmental assessment has been done, proponents and
public authorities should be confident that the possible environmental effects
of the detailed matters are insignificant or have already been allowed for.
5.69
Other relevant comments are at paragraph 3.65ff.
Claimed intimidation of scientists
5.70
The Committee heard various evidence concerning
harassment and intimidation of scientists, presumably either because they had
spoken out as personally opposed to Port Hinchinbrook, or because they gave
professional advice unwelcome to Port Hinchinbrook’s supporters. For example:
‘I have been defamed for expressing my views. I care for my
reputation and I do not expect to be defamed further.’ (J Sammut, Evidence 10
August 1998, p 234)
‘It is our understanding that individuals from CSIRO have been
subject to some harassment in the press and by other individuals.’ (Dr S
Rogers, CSIRO, Evidence 10 August 1998, p 284)
‘I will read the following article from the Courier Mail [13
September 1997]: “Mr Williams also warned James Cook University researcher Tony
Preen that he would be sued unless he withdrew allegations that Port
Hinchinbrook would harm seagrass beds and dugongs. ‘I’ll serve a writ on Monday
if he does not give me an all-out apology for the comments he made in the
Townsville Bulletin,’ Mr Williams said.” There has been a lot more of that.
Several SLAPP [strategic litigation against public participation] writs have
been issued during the progress of this development. That sort of intimidation
is what keeps a lot of people from speaking out.’ (Dr A Preen, Evidence to Senate ECITA References Committee
Commonwealth Environment Powers Inquiry, 24 April 1998, p 210)
‘... Mr Williams has made defamatory comments about me in the
context of the Valentine report and it was discussed (in 1994) at senior levels
of James Cook University whether he should be sued. The University legal
advisers indicated that it would cost a minimum of $30,000 to get into court
with Mr Williams and such funds were not available. I was invited to take up
the action personally but unfortunately I do not have access to that kind of
money either. Such is the nature of injustice in our country.’ (P Valentine,
further information 25 September 1998, p 34)
5.71
Dr Ellison said:
‘This is a highly controversial development. For individual
scientists there is concern about speaking about it at many levels ... This
[James Cook] University is excellent in encouraging scientists to speak within
their scientific expertise. Other state employers would not give that privilege
...’ (Dr J Ellison, Evidence to Senate ECITA
References Committee Commonwealth Environment Powers Inquiry, 24 April
1998, p 210)
5.72
Disagreements among scientists are aired in a
different style from disagreements among businessmen or politicians. Wealthy
developers are more used to resorting to the law than private individuals. The
developer commented:
‘The only people or scientists
who have cause to be concerned about legal action are those who use their
supposed scientific credentials to make defamatory or damaging statements and
then cannot back up those statements. That is normal commercial practice.’ (K
Williams, Cardwell Properties P/L, Evidence 10 August 1998, p 311)
CHAIR—At the end of last year you wrote to the Queensland Department of
Natural Resources. I think you were complaining about a report that month which
you regarded as ‘unnecessarily alarming’, your words... You said: “If you will
not agree to amend this report and remove the reference to low risk or
comparatively quantify such risk then I shall have no alternative but to take
this matter up further with the relevant authorities and my legal advisors.” Is
that not intimidatory and threatening?
Mr Williams—I do not think so. I am taking the risk. I can only win a case if they
are wrong and I am right. (K Williams, Cardwell Properties P/L, Evidence 10
August 1998, p 320)
5.73
On the weight of
evidence the Committee concludes that some scientists have been threatened and
intimidated during the Port Hinchinbrook debate. The Committee thinks that this
type of behaviour is unacceptable. It is acceptable to criticise scientific
research on its scientific merits - that is, to test it against scientific
standards of accuracy, objectivity and logic. Scientists do this to each other
all the time through the conventions of peer review and debate on published
work. It is not acceptable to threaten scientists or to denigrate their professional
ethics or professional competence generally, simply because their findings are
unwelcome or because one disagrees with their personal opinions on matters of
public interest. There are public policy reasons for saying this: if people are
afraid to speak out, public authorities do not get the expert advice that they
ought to be getting, and are more likely to make bad decisions.
Some general questions
How to ensure independent
environmental assessment
5.74
A common complaint is that environmental studies
produced by proponents (in practice, consultants paid by proponents) are likely
to be biased in favour of the development - since a consultant who produces the
desired conclusion is more likely to get the next job. This has been a debating
point (without any fruitful outcome) for as long as Australia has had
environmental impact assessment laws. The Committee comments briefly:
- The means of ensuring more independent assessments are not hard
to find, if the political will is present. For example, instead of proponents
engaging consultants directly, it would be possible for planning authorities to
choose a consultant by lot from a short list of tenderers with the necessary
expertise (the developer would still pay for the consultancy). Then consultants
would know that they could not be discriminated against in future tenders
(whether by the proponent or by the authority) if they reach unwelcome
conclusions.
- The thoroughness of the authorities in setting the terms of
reference for environmental impact studies is most important.
- As noted in paragraph 5.59, it is important to distinguish
scientific findings from professional advice on questions of policy. Some heat
is taken out of this problem if the objective side of studies is distinct and
recognisable (and therefore, amenable to peer review), and the more subjective
conclusions are clearly marked off and open to debate in policy terms.
5.75
The Committee notes with approval that under the
Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (Cth) it
is an offence to provide information in an environmental impact statement under
the Act with reckless disregard as to whether the information is false or
misleading.[41]
Recommendation 9
The Committee recommends that in order to achieve more independent
environmental assessments of proposed developments, planning authorities rather
than the developer should be responsible for selecting consultants by lot from
a short list of tenderers.
The right balance between
environment and development
5.76
The Committee has discussed the concerns of
environment groups about the poor environmental impact assessment and
development approval process used at Port Hinchinbrook. Aside from this, it is
obvious that the main substantive cause of the Port Hinchinbrook dispute (and
many similar disputes) is disagreement over the right balance between
environmental conservation and economic development.
5.77
To speak of ‘balance’ in this way implies that
environment and development must conflict. We digress to emphasise that this is
not necessarily so. Intelligent environmental management and intelligent
development may be beneficial to both the environment and the economy (‘no
regrets’ greenhouse reduction policies, for example). Many things beneficial to
both the environment and the economy are not done not only because of
ignorance, inertia or vested interests. The benefits of conservation may seem
less than the benefits of development only because the value of environmental
capital is not put into the equation. Or costs of conservation may fall in one
place and benefits in another, and although the benefits may outweigh the
costs, this will not mollify those who bear the costs. Or costs of development
may fall on future generations (through degradation of environmental capital)
and benefits in the present - and persuading people to forgo present gain for
the sake of future generations will always be a political challenge.
5.78
With those provisos, it is true that in the
realm of practical politics conservation and development often conflict. How
should we handle such conflict better than was done at Port Hinchinbrook?
5.79
On the need for a balance between conservation
and development, it was striking how similar was the rhetoric of both
supporters and opponents of Port Hinchinbrook - at a general level. Supporters
said, ‘Of course we support the environment, but we need development too.’
Opponents said, ‘Of course we support development - providing it is
environmentally responsible.’
‘We must have a balance between economic growth and protection
of the environment... We cannot allow developers to do as they please. They must
be responsible for protecting our environment. The same must go for
environmentalists: they must allow responsible development.’ (F Smith,
Submission 20, p 51)
‘It is inferred that if you
are not a supporter [of Port Hinchinbrook] you are therefore anti-progress or
anti-jobs, which is of course not the case. We also have families and wish to
see the area prosper, but development must be appropriate and sustainable.’ (D
Anderson, Concerned Residents of Cardwell Association Inc., Evidence 30 July
1998, p 81)
5.80
In detail, of course, the two sides mean very
different things by such statements. For example, different people give
different value to environmental goods such as an ‘unspoilt’ natural landscape.
Environment groups deplored the aesthetic impact of Port Hinchinbrook on the
landscape of the Hinchinbrook Channel; but someone with different views can
say:
‘Port Hinchinbrook is not a uranium mine or some smoke belching
factory. This is a project that all Australians can enjoy.’ (G Smith,
Submission 21, p 53)
5.81
Environment groups were concerned about the
possible effect of Port Hinchinbrook on the endangered mahogany glider; but
someone with different views can say:
‘The Department of Primary Industry’s expansion programme,
planting pine trees to the south of Cardwell, was stopped when the Mahogany
Glider was discovered in the path of the pine forests. The fact that the
‘bloody squirrel’ was deemed more important than the jobs of the workers
infuriated the community.’ (Mr & Mrs C Ollerman, Submission 72, p 244)
5.82
Different people give different weight to
‘conservation’ versus ‘presentation’ (both of which are envisaged by the World
Heritage Convention) and the wilderness experience. From this flows the debate
about controls on visitation to the island national parks, and the accusation
that environment groups or park managers have a ‘lock-up mentality’:[42]
‘This area is amongst the most beautiful in the world and we
must look after it to ensure it continues to be beautiful. There is, however,
no point in maintaining anything if people are not able to see and appreciate
it ... the type of operations which have little or no impact on the environment
should have almost no restrictions placed on them. Obviously scenic flights fit
this bill as do cruises on comfortable vessels which have no need of a shore
visit.’ (Cardwell Air Charter, Submission 88, p 338-9)
‘An aircraft flying overhead
is really quite intrusive when you have been sitting there and the only noise
you have made during the day is pushing through the bush yourself, occasionally
meeting someone else, listening to some birds.’ (P Sutton, Wildlife
Preservation Society of Qld (Hinchinbrook Branch), Evidence 30 July 1998, p
114)
5.83
This suggests the need for more information and
education about why the environment of the island national parks is fragile and
why visitation needs to be controlled, both for the sake of the natural
environment and for the experience of the visitors themselves. On some criteria
very specific controls may be indicated (for example, to prevent campers
damaging bird nesting sites); on other criteria the appropriate level of
control will remain a matter of debate (for example, what limits are desirable
to preserve ‘the wilderness experience’).
5.84
Different people have different ideas about what
the precautionary principle should mean in practice, and how much information
is enough in environmental impact assessment having regard to the significance
of the proposal. Environment groups deplored what they called the lack of
sufficient research into the potential impacts of Port Hinchinbrook; by
contrast Hinchinbrook Shire Council (speaking of the Dungeness marina proposal)
said:
‘... our experience has been that generally they [State government
departments] require environmental studies that are unrealistic, irrelevant and
designed to frustrate, delay and hopefully result in Council or the developer
abandoning the proposal. Council does however fully support the carrying out of
Environmental Impact Assessment studies that are relevant to a development ...’
(Hinchinbrook Shire Council, Submission 59, p 196)
5.85
Of course, what is ‘relevant’ may be disputed.
The precautionary principle,[43]
though it aims to entrench in decision-makers’ minds an attitude favourable to
the environment; cannot objectively decide what type of information and what
level of detail is enough in the individual case. This will remain a matter of
judgment, which should take account of professional advice and community norms.[44] Some think that in assessing
Port Hinchinbrook the authorities have not been cautious enough;[45] others, too cautious.[46] Prof. Saenger commented:
‘In areas where further scientific research or information
gathering is required about a likely adverse impact, no decision should be
finalised until that research or information gathering has been undertaken.
Unfortunately, in practice, the precautionary principle is often invoked in
relation to fanciful (possible but not likely) impacts to stop a project rather
than initiate appropriate research. In my view, the latter is a misuse of this
important principle.’ (Prof. P Saenger, further information March 1999, p 297)
5.86
Words like ‘possible’ and ‘likely’ are
themselves largely subjective (with provisos mentioned in paragraph 5.60). How
much effort is warranted to pre-empt a ‘possible but not likely’ impact should
have regard to the significance of the site, the likelihood of the impact and
the likely severity of the impact if it does occur; but in the end it is a
matter of opinion. On matters of detailed scientific research, the Committee
suggests that the advice of the relevant expert group should have considerable
weight - as, for example, in evidence to this inquiry about what constitutes a
‘good’ acid sulfate management plan.
5.87
Finally, different people give different value
to the trade-off between acknowledged environmental costs and benefits of other
sorts:
‘Cardwell have never had a
safe anchorage point; now they have. Those are issues that you have to take
into account. If they are detrimental to the environment in a minute way—that
is my personal belief—then you have to accept it. If you are going to build a
road you are going to have to clear land. Anything you do is going to have an
impact somewhere along the line. At the end of the day you have to minimise
those impacts, assess them and try to improve things somewhere else. It can be
done.’ (G Giandomenico, Hinchinbrook Shire Council, Evidence 30 July 1998, p
73)
‘Of course, jobs are
important. People want economic security and jobs, but there are surely gentler
ways of achieving these than by the destruction of wilderness, tranquillity,
wildlife and a way of life that this inappropriate development inevitably would
bring.’ (M Thorsborne, Friends of Hinchinbrook, Evidence 30 July 1998, p 38)
5.88
The Committee suggests that these different
views about the value of environmental costs and the right balance between
conservation and development arise partly, sometimes, from lack of information,
which environmental impact assessment can remedy:
‘A public assessment process
often goes a long way towards reducing the level of dispute, because at least
you have a more agreed foundation of scientific fact upon which to base debate
and to move on from.’ (J Johnson, Environmental Defender’s Office Ltd, Evidence
10 August 1998, p 289)
5.89
However, the Committee suggests that primarily,
and most often, different views reflect the different value systems of
different people, and their different subjective evaluations of the natural
environment versus human activities. Environmental impact assessments, though
essential to allow debates to proceed with full information, will not change
these underlying views. Deciding between these conflicting values, case by
case, is a matter for the political process, hopefully reflecting broad
community values. The Committee stresses again that-
- decisions need to incorporate an orderly, transparent process of
environmental assessment and public consultation, so that all interest groups
may be confident they will be heard, and may respect the outcome even if they
do not agree with it;
- decisions need to be consistent with an overarching regional plan
that looks to the long term, to avoid the tyranny of small decisions whose
cumulative effect may degrade the environment even though none of them seems
objectionable taken individually (this is discussed further from paragraph
5.103).
5.90
The parties to these disputes should remember
that, although they disagree on details, they do agree on many fundamentals.
‘The interesting thing about
it is that the consensus for what we would like the place to look like in 20
years time is very strong. There have been some public meetings held where
people were asked what their vision was for this area in 20 years time. There
was very little disagreement about what we would like it to be in 20 years
time. The major area of disagreement is how we get there in small steps. That
is the process that is going to be time consuming and will take a long time to
get through.’ (P Sutton, Wildlife Preservation Society of Queensland
(Hinchinbrook Branch), Evidence 30 July 1998, p 116)
Local interests versus national
interests
5.91
Under this heading two questions arise: who
should decide major development applications; and in that decision, whose
interests should prevail? The questions are related since most people would
probably give the same answer to both, on the grounds that the easiest way of
serving one group’s interests is to give the decision to them.
5.92
Opinions on this varied. On the first question,
the Shire Councils and Cardwell interest groups naturally thought that power
should be local. Throughout their evidence ran a strong undercurrent of local
resentment against outside interference, whether by ‘Townsville academics’, the
Queensland government or the Commonwealth:
‘I believe that matters of
planning and permits to develop or operate should be the province of the local
councils. GBRMPA and DoE being government agencies and therefore not subject to
private sector economic realities should be the collators of research and
advisers to the Councils on matters concerning crown lands, but with all
decision-making in the hands of the democratically elected Local Councils.’
(Cardwell Air Charter, Submission 88, p 340)
‘At the end of the day in
the local area, we should have regard to people who want to use the area; but
it is the local people who should be in control of their own destiny. I can
guarantee you that it gets up my nose when people from Canberra, South
Australia or Melbourne tell me what we should do with our district.’ (G
Giandomenico, Hinchinbrook Shire Council, Evidence 30 July 1998, p 74)
5.93
Others thought that local Councils are
ill-suited to making major land-use planning decisions with environmental
implications:
‘Local councils, whether
they be in the Hinchinbrook region or whether they be in Nowra in New South
Wales or Broome in Western Australia, are unable to manage natural resources
from a holistic perspective for the benefit of all Australians. The only body
that can do that is the federal government.’ (V Veitch, Sunfish NQ, Evidence 30
July 1998, p 22)
5.94
Most environmental groups clearly mistrust local
control, since the burden of their submissions was that the State and
Commonwealth governments should have but did not protect the World Heritage
Area from the local Council’s original decision approving the Oyster Point
development. Some said explicitly that the Commonwealth should take greater
control of environmental management.[47]
More evidence on this is in this Committee’s report on Commonwealth
Environment Powers, May 1999.
5.95
Mr Valentine said, ‘Recent changes in State laws
[the Integrated Planning Act 1997 (Qld)] are placing more and more
responsibilities on poorly resourced Local Government with a history of
environmental ignorance and abuse ...’
‘... It is difficult to expect good environmental outcomes when
Local Governments are staffed by engineers but not environmental officers and
scientists; where the concept of community participation remains novel and
where large developments are automatically welcomed in a time of perceived
economic need. These are the more typical conditions in local governments
adjacent to our World Heritage sites.’ (P Valentine, Submission 136, p 613-614)
5.96
Mr Valentine recommended that the Commonwealth
should fund employment of environmental officers in local government areas
including or abutting a World Heritage property.[48] The Committee agrees. See
paragraph 5.150 and following.
5.97
Townsville Enterprise thought that in the
approval process for ‘major projects’ (which would be defined by clear
criteria), while all levels of government might be involved, there should be
one ‘overriding body’ - probably the State government - which, by agreement,
would have control of the process.[49]
5.98
As for whose
interests should prevail, there was more consensus that both local and broader
interests need to be considered. But how these interests should weigh in the
balance, where they conflict, is a matter of opinion:
‘I certainly want to see the
aspirations, the hopes and the dreams of the local people respected, but not at
the expense of those who are further away who have an equally passionate
interest. Similarly, I do not want the far ones to dominate the locals ... the
Hinchinbrook Channel is not any one person’s body. It belongs to the future as
much as the present. So some wise decisions, recognising long-term
consequences, have to be taken. I do not believe that we can consider only the
locals, and I do not believe I could generate a mathematical formula which
would give you the right balance, because in the end what we are looking at
here are value judgments, not adding up and taking away.’ (P Sutton, Wildlife
Preservation Society (Hinchinbrook Branch), Evidence 30 July 1998, p 117-118)
5.99
Whenever the costs of some government policy or
decision fall more hardly on some than on others, there will be objections.
This is particularly the case in land-use planning. Many government decisions
create winners and losers who are widely scattered among the whole population,
and so less likely to unite in objection; but land-use controls, though they
may be national in importance (as in the case of World Heritage protection) are
also inherently local in effect, and so very likely to be controversial.
5.100
It is beyond the scope of this report to
consider the general question of the right roles of the three levels of
government in environment protection and development control (this is discussed
in this Committee’s recent report Commonwealth Environment Powers[50]). In the Committee’s view both
local interests and broader interests must be considered in decisions on
development applications. Where World Heritage is involved it seems reasonable
that broader interests should have relatively greater weight - though this does
not mean that local input may be omitted from decision-making
procedures. Where local interests and broader interests conflict, deciding the
balance between them is fundamentally a matter for political debate.
5.101
The Committee notes Mr Valentine’s concern about
the trend to delegate more matters to relatively ill resourced local councils.
This is a matter of concern. Wherever decision-making power lies, adequate
resources should be allocated so the decision-making authority can make
responsible, fully informed decisions. It is not good enough to delegate the
power out of a general philosophy of devolution, without ensuring the necessary
resources.
The Regional Coastal Management
Plan
5.102
Many witnesses on both sides of the Port
Hinchinbrook debate stressed the need for better regional planning policies so
that developers know in good time what sort of developments will or will not be
acceptable in certain locations.
‘Oyster Point has been polarised into a conflict situation
because the rules haven’t been clear to anyone. That’s obviously been a problem
for the developer, it’s been a problem for the conservation lobby, it’s been a
problem for the local council.’ (Prof. H Marsh, Four Corners, 23
September 1996)
‘The lack of clear, unambiguous guidelines and planning
continues to foster an atmosphere of uncertainty, increased risk, and is
considered detrimental to the long-term development of jobs in this region ...
Virtually all current problems stem from one simple fact: there is no coherent
regional planning mechanism that enables all stakeholders to understand what is
and is not likely to constitute acceptable development.’ (Townsville
Enterprise, Submission 78, p 266,268)
5.103
As well, a key purpose of regional planning is
to set out a long-term vision, so that the environment is not unintentionally
degraded by the accumulation of small changes. It is easy to say, ‘The cove is
beautiful and unspoilt, but surely a little campsite would do no harm?’
What happens when, ten years later, people have forgotten how the cove used to
be, and someone says, ‘The cove is no longer unspoilt, the campsite is there -
surely it would do no harm to enlarge it?’ One purpose of regional planning
should be to foresee these situations and to set rules that can be followed
from the start.
‘I do not think the issue of
incremental change on coastlines has been solved by any government ...
Incremental change is the big problem for managing coastal habitats, and
site-specific focused inquiries and evaluations contribute to the problem ... I
do not think you need a scientific evaluation to know that putting a resort on
top of a coastal habitat will alter that bit of coastal habitat. How much of
that coastal habitat do you want to retain? Are you happy to see that little
bit changed? Those are the sorts of questions that could be addressed by a regional
approach.’ (Dr R Reichelt, Australian Institute of Marine Science, Evidence 31
July 1998, p 135)
5.104
The Memorandum of Understanding which the
Commonwealth and Queensland signed in 1996, at the time when the Commonwealth
gave consents under the World Heritage Properties Conservation Act 1983 necessary
for the Port Hinchinbrook development to resume, aimed to expedite a ‘Cardwell/
Hinchinbrook Regional Coastal Management Plan.’ The plan is the first to be
made under the Queensland Coastal Protection and Management Act 1995.
The effect of a plan is (in brief) to give the State government a development
control power over declared coastal waters and land up to 400m inland from the
high water mark. The Minister must appoint a regional consultative group to
help prepare a plan, including representatives of local government, tourism,
conservation, industry and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander interests. The
consultative group must seek community involvement during the preparation of
the plan.[51]
5.105
A general criticism of this scheme is that the
Act, although it contains a suitable purpose clause referring to biological
diversity and ecologically sustainable development, creates no explicit
obligation to protect the coastal environment:
‘The lack of substantive obligations imposed on the Minister or
other responsible authority means that the actual taking of conservation
initiatives under the Coastal Protection and Management Act 1995, in
common with all other [Queensland] statutes dealing with environmental matters,
is entirely up to the discretion of the responsible authority. Past experience
has proven that this is not adequate to ensure that ESD and the preservation of
biodiversity will be achieved.’ (M Peterson, Environmental Law Reform in
Queensland, 1996, p 55)
5.106
Many submissions were concerned about the delays
in making the Cardwell/ Hinchinbrook Regional Coastal Management Plan. For
example:
‘Unfortunately, state
governments do not like taking orders from Canberra and National Party
governments like doing so even less. Consequently, the Borbidge government
dragged its feet deliberately over the implementation, or at least the
preparation, of a coastal management plan. It should have been in place by May
1998, but the current state of affairs is that it will not even be published in
draft form until early 1999.’ (D Kimble, Community for Coastal and Cassowary
Conservation, Evidence 30 July 1998, p 115)[52]
5.107
On the other hand,
it was argued that local ownership of the plan is important, and working
through controversial issues inevitably takes time:
‘It would be very nice to
get such a plan in place quickly but if you do that you do not have local
ownership of it. I think you will have heard enough today to realise that local
ownership of a planning process like this is very important. It is not
effective to simply impose a plan on a group of people if they are not
comfortable with it. The really time consuming process is that public
consultation process that allows the local people to see the sense of the plan
and feel a sense of ownership of it. In the end they will be the ones who
police it and drive it.’ (P Sutton, Wildlife Preservation Society of Qld,
Hinchinbrook Branch, Evidence 30 July 1998, p 116)
5.108
Some thought that the consultation process was
‘unnecessarily politicised’[53],
or would be captured by development interests:
‘The Queensland Government is also likely to favour short term
economic gain over long term environmental protection in the preparation of its
Regional Management Plan. Queensland legislation requires the advice of the
Regional Consultative Group, which includes representatives of local
government, tourism and industry and consequently has a strong interest in
advancing the economic aspects of the development, to be taken into account.’
(The Hon. R Jones, Submission 156, p 723)
5.109
Others seemed to fear it being captured by
environmental interests:
‘The people whom I come in
contact with in the shire—just the average person in the street—have had it up
to their back teeth with inquiries... Basically, they have lost faith in the
system to protect the majority rights. (A Harvey, Hinchinbrook Shire Council,
Evidence 30 July 1998, p 70)
5.110
Some criticised what they see as the
Commonwealth opting out of the process, in spite of the Commonwealth’s duty to
protect the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area:
‘The Regional Plan on which the [Commonwealth] Minister relied
legally for his [1996] consent decision has simply not eventuated. What’s left
of it, according to Marc Rowell (Member for Hinchinbrook and Minister for Primary
Industries (Qld)), is “in the hands of the Hinchinbrook and Cardwell Shire
Councils” (Herbert River Express, 30/5/98). So much for Commonwealth protection
of World Heritage.’ (Cairns and Far North Environment Centre, Submission 50, p
149)
‘There is no expertise in World Heritage management on any
Queensland Government agency involved in the plan. There is no direction or
overt recognition of the high standard of management required of a World
Heritage area. World Heritage is merely a consideration among the social,
economic and political issues when in fact it should be the dominant issue
driving the determination of the final plan.’ (D Haigh, Submission 57, p 185)
5.111
On the other hand, Environment Australia said:
‘The agreement on the development of a regional plan for the
Hinchinbrook area is a significant achievement. Commonwealth involvement in the
regional planning process will give it the capacity to address in an integrated
manner the full range of developments that could impact on World Heritage and
National Estate values.’ (Environment Australia, Submission 157, p 754)
5.112
The above comments date from mid-1998. The
Committee has no details of the present situation. We note the recent comment
of Cardwell Shire Council that, from its point of view, the situation has
improved:
‘The Draft Regional Coastal Management Plan had a very turbulent
start especially as in the early stage of the draft plan the consultative
committee had no ownership of the plan. The original draft did not represent
the views and desires of the populace. With the withdrawal of the original
draft, the engagement of an independent consultant and the rewriting of the
draft in a systematic manner the wheels have definitely not fallen off the
Regional Coastal Management Plan.’ (Cardwell Shire Council, further
information, 4 March 1999, p 117)
5.113
The Queensland government described the change
of direction:
‘In April 1998 the then Minister for Environment (Brian
Littleproud) directed that the planning process for the draft
Cardwell/Hinchinbrook Regional Coastal Management Plan (originally proposed to
be completed by 30 June 1998) be amended, following community concern in
relation to the level of consultation for the Plan. The new planning process
commenced on 30 April 1998.... The content [of the plan] has been thoroughly
evaluated in order to achieve the highest possible level of consensus for the
document. A strong majority of Regional Consultative Group members support the
document.’ (Qld Dept of Premier and Cabinet, further information, 21 April
1999, p 710)
5.114
The Committee
understands that the draft Cardwell/Hinchinbrook Regional Coastal Management
Plan is now in the hands of the State Minister and has not yet been advertised
for public comment under section 34 of the Coastal Protection and Management
Act 1995. The Queensland government advised that it is planned for release
for public comment by August 1999 with the final plan gazetted by January 2000.[54] The
State said that the vision for the plan is to achieve:
‘... an ecologically sustainable managed region
where World Heritage values are protected with:
- large areas of linked natural vegetation, clean
rivers and coastal areas supporting biodiversity;
- compact and contained towns;
- a viable tourism industry with emphasis on
ecotourism;
- a sustainable fishery;
- efficient use of suitable land for agriculture,
horticulture, timber production and aquaculture, with value-added industries;
and
- strong community involvement in management and
development, particularly from Aboriginal people;
- all contributing with equal importance to
social, cultural, ecological and economic security.’ (Qld Dept of Premier and
Cabinet, further information, 21 April 1999, p 709)
5.115
The Committee
affirms the importance of regional planning to prevent future Port Hinchinbrook
style disputes, by giving more certainty to developers about what types of
development will or will not be acceptable in what locations, and giving more
confidence to the community that regional environmental issues have been
adequately considered. As the Queensland government put it:
‘The “ground rules” for a
wide range of developments will be addressed in the Cardwell/Hinchinbrook
Regional Coastal Management Plan through the Plan providing comprehensive
criteria for the assessment of proposed developments in the planning area.’
(Qld Dept of Premier & Cabinet, further information 21 April 1999, p 709)
5.116
As well, as noted
in paragraph 5.103, a regional planning approach is necessary to prevent the
unintended degradation of the environment by gradual attrition.
‘Having a clear vision for the longer term makes short term
decisions very easy.’ (T Tootell, Submission 15, p 42)
5.117
A plan cannot
always prevent case by case dispute, but at least, when dispute happens, one
side or the other should be able to point clearly to the plan as supporting
their position, which should allow the question to be decided more quickly and
with less acrimony than we saw at Port Hinchinbrook. But it will only work if
the plan represents not just the right rhetoric, but also a real commitment by
all concerned, flowing through to individual development control decisions:
‘How did the two local
authorities (Hinchinbrook and Cardwell) decide to support this mega-scale
project [Port Hinchinbrook] in the light of their respective draft regional
strategies (in 1994) which indicated their goal was for low-key environmental
friendly developments? ... The implications here are that formal plans are of so
little meaning that they may as well not exist. But such an outcome will ensure
hundreds more development conflicts. The solution must come from more
meaningful plans and greater commitment to their outcomes ...’ (P Valentine,
Submission 136, p 612)
5.118
Long-term goals
are always at risk from the temptations of short-term expediency. The prospect
of more Port Hinchinbrook-style disputes up and down the coast should be enough
motive for decision-makers to resist the temptation.
The
Hinchinbrook Island National Park Management Plan
5.119
Similar concerns
to those relating to the Regional Coastal Management Plan were also expressed,
both by environment groups and development interests, in relation to the Draft
Management Plan for Hinchinbrook Island National Park.[55]
Environment groups (as far as they mentioned it) generally approved the draft
plan as it stands, and feared that the current delay in finalising it
foreshadows a weakening:
‘The most recent proposed
plan for these islands was, on the whole, a document which took into account
the sensitivities of these wilderness areas and which we supported with a few
exceptions ... Where is this plan now? Has it been declared or has it been put
under hold so that the visitor numbers and usage may be altered and increased
to suit new proposals in the area?’ (Wildlife Preservation Society of Qld
(Tully & District Branch), Submission 49, p 141)
5.120
Development
interests resented the delay as creating lack of security for tourist
operators:
‘After nine years the
Hinchinbrook Island draft management plan is still not a legislative document.
For tourism to grow in this area there has to be some certainty for the future
... In the absence of management plans there is no security of tenure for anyone
involved in tourist operations in this area.’ (W Whiteman, Cardwell Chamber of
Commerce, Evidence 30 July 1998, p 4)
5.121
There is dispute
on the direction of the national park management plan concerning the need to
control visitation. The Wildlife Preservation Society, for example, thought
that the most recent version ‘takes into account the sensitivities of these
wilderness areas’ adequately.[56]
By contrast, Hinchinbrook Shire Council thought that the Hinchinbrook Island
plan ‘puts a stranglehold on any possibility of reasonable [commercial]
activities being introduced ... It’s the same lock up/no go mentality which
prevails throughout.’[57]
‘... unless the community is
vigilant against these attempts to “lock up” the island we will be denied
access to our own backyard.’[58]
5.122
The Shires do not
think that present levels of use cause a problem.[59] They
also resent the imposition of the plan by ‘Bureaucratic State Government
Department Officers’ without (as they see it) enough consideration of local
views:
‘The remoteness of the
architects of these plans has also contributed to the lack of suitability of
the plans to gain widespread public support.’[60]
5.123
As noted in paragraph
5.83, where controls on use are based primarily on considerations of ‘the
wilderness experience’ (as opposed to more clearly visible environmental harm)
they are bound to be controversial, since the value different people attach to
the wilderness experience is a very subjective matter.
5.124
In the Committee’
view, the purpose of management plans is to look to the long term, to pre-empt
the cumulative impact of incremental changes which might seem innocuous when
viewed from day to day, but which over time add up to a situation which no-one
has planned or wanted and which might be very hard to undo later. It is not
hard to think of places around the world where incremental tourist developments
over many years have spoilt the thing that the tourists came to see. No one
would want that fate to befall the Hinchinbrook region. So when the Shire
Councils say ‘the developments which have taken place within the Hinchinbrook
Island/Channel area ... have not in Council’s opinion caused any
detrimental effects to the environment’,[61] or ‘it is absolute nonsense to suggest that
the channel and island is under threat from development pressure’[62]
[emphasis added], the comments are not quite to the point, because they speak
only of the present, not the future. A plan is made not only in response to a
present situation, but also to prevent the unwanted results foreseen from an
unplanned future. A threat may seem far-off now; but by the time it seems
close, it may already be too late to act. The purpose of strategic planning is
to prevent the threat getting that close.
Ecotourism
5.125
The meaning of ‘ecotourism’ is not very exact,
but the key elements seem to be:
- the natural environment is the attraction, with a component of
education in the tourist experience;
- the tourist operation does not itself degrade the environment,
and preferably contributes to protecting the environment - for example, by the
financial contributions of visitors or the involvement of operators in
conservation projects;
- there are benefits for local host communities.[63]
5.126
For example:
‘Ecotourism is nature based tourism that is ecologically
sustainable and is based on relatively undisturbed natural areas; is
non-damaging and non-degrading; provides a direct contribution to the continued
protection and management of protected areas used; and is subject to an
adequate and appropriate management regime.’[64]
5.127
The Hinchinbrook region, with its national parks
and World Heritage Areas, is fertile ground for ecotourism:
‘A large proportion of the land area of the Cardwell and Hinchinbrook
Shires (68 per cent in Cardwell Shire) is now National Park, World Heritage Wet
Tropics, State Forest or other environmentally protected land ... The Cardwell
and Hinchinbrook Shires do have enormous eco-tourism potential.’ (Cardwell
Chamber of Commerce, Submission 123, p 534)
‘Living in North Queensland I come in contact with overseas
tourists on a daily basis. These people visit this region specifically to enjoy
the natural environment and not to stay at large resort style accommodation
that is duplicated elsewhere in the world. It is the uniqueness of the North
Queensland environment that attracts foreign spending. Visitors come here to
have a wilderness experience not a five star experience.’ (K Rickart,
Submission 13, p 27)
5.128
There was general support for an emphasis on
ecotourism in the future development of the region:
‘We do not want development to the extent of other areas such at
Whitsunday, Gold Coast or Cairns, but we do want to be able to establish small
eco-tourism ventures that will provide employment opportunities for our young
people ...’ (Hinchinbrook Shire Council, Submission 59, p 196)
‘The people of Cardwell have a valid desire for employment
opportunities, as do most Australians. Appropriate development, on a smaller
and more local scale, has limitless possibilities. Conservationists endeavour
to protect the most beautiful, the most valuable, and the unique places. They
know that these special places will automatically increase in value as the rest
of the world is altered by humans. We can all support the Cardwell area in
sustainable development.’ (R Street, Submission 43, p 114)
5.129
As noted in paragraph 5.114, the vision of the
Cardwell/Hinchinbrook Regional Coastal Management Plan is for ‘a viable tourism industry with emphasis on
ecotourism.’
5.130
This raises the obvious question of whether the
Port Hinchinbrook development is consistent with that vision. Cardwell Shire
Council seems to think so:
‘Ecotourism does not prohibit large resorts ... The Port
Hinchinbrook project is an integral part of the future economic development of
the region. The population residing or visiting the development will ensure the
viability of existing and future ecotourism ventures in the region.’ (Cardwell
Shire Council, further information 4 March 1999, p 118)
5.131
Environment groups obviously do not agree.
Ecotourism is not only nature-orientated but is also itself sympathetic to the
environment. On this score we recall the Committee’s mixed verdict on actual
environmental impacts of Port Hinchinbrook - particularly the threat to dugongs
from increased boat traffic; the aesthetic impacts; the likely pressure of
increased tourism on the islands (see chapter 4). To be most charitable, Port
Hinchinbrook does not pass with flying colours. But that is history: we cannot
blame Port Hinchinbrook for being inconsistent with a policy decided years
later. A commitment to ecotourism in the region does suggest that the
authorities should hesitate before approving any more Port Hinchinbrooks.
World Heritage management of the
Great Barrier Reef
5.132
The Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area
extends from Bundaberg to Cape York. It is by far the biggest World Heritage
Area in the world. As Prof. Marsh pointed out, this creates special problems
for managing development in the region consistent with world heritage values:
‘The massive size of the GBR WH ... creates specific problems. In
particular, determining the level of activity that should be allowed to occur
in or adjacent to the WHA. This is the nub of the Port Hinchinbrook dispute.’
(Prof. H Marsh, Submission 125, p 554)
5.133
Cardwell Shire Council described the early
hostility to World Heritage in the area:
‘In 1986, world heritage was
thrust upon the residents of North Queensland by the rest of Australia. Most
North Queenslanders agreed with the concept of world heritage but vehemently
disagreed with the way it was implemented.’ (R Hunt, Cardwell Shire Council,
Evidence 30 July 1998, p 91)
5.134
Mr Valentine thought this resulted, at least in
part, from lack of community consultation and information:
‘We have also failed to properly inform our communities about
the meaning and nature of World Heritage (required by the [World Heritage]
Convention) and this has led to very significant misinformation being accepted
and dispersed in many communities.’ (P Valentine, Submission 136a, p 780)
5.135
Environment Australia believes that the
situation has improved:
‘We have advanced
considerably since the early, sometimes conflictual, listing of World Heritage
areas. As a result of patient, cooperative work with the States and with
stakeholders, there is now substantially greater local community acceptance of
the value of World Heritage listing. With this in mind, the government has put
considerable effort into community consultation, particularly in the case of
prospective new nominations such as the Greater Blue Mountains Area and Convict
Sites.’ (Environment Australia, further information 25 March 1999, p 416)
5.136
The 25 year strategic plan for the Great Barrier
Reef World Heritage Area asserts the principle of ‘multiple use’ of the area:
‘Sustainable multiple use: non-destructive activities which can
continue forever, that is, in such a way that maintains the widest range of
opportunities for appropriate sustainable use, and does not adversely affect
the ecological integrity of its natural systems.’ (GBRMPA, The Great Barrier
Reef: Keeping it Great: a 25 year strategic plan for the Great Barrier Reef
World Heritage Area, 1994-2019, p 13)
5.137
The concept of multiple used has evolved over
time. The equivalent concept in the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Act 1975
is ‘reasonable use’: in making zoning plans for the reef the Great Barrier Reef
Marine Park Authority must have regard to (among other things) ‘regulation of
the use of the Marine Park so as to protect the Great Barrier Reef while
allowing the reasonable use of the Great Barrier Reef Region.’[65] Dr Cass, introducing the bill
for the GBRMP Act in 1975, commented:
‘Undoubtedly the future declaration of marine parks and reserves
will be difficult for most countries. Those with highly developed technologies
will be torn between the desire physically to exploit the sea’s resources and
the demands of conservationists and recreationists for areas to be reserved ...
However, conservation and protection of the Great Barrier Reef will be the
paramount aim of the [Great Barrier Reef Marine Park] Authority in all zones of
the Marine Park.’ (the Hon. M Cass, Minister for Environment, House of
Representatives Hansard, 22 May 1975, p 2680)
5.138
Some submissions were unhappy with the concept
of ‘multiple use’, regarding it as compromising ‘the high purpose of World
Heritage listing’.[66]
On the other hand, Prof. Marsh regards a national park level of conservation as
impractical for such a huge area:
‘It is relatively easy and uncontroversial to develop guidelines
for protecting the World Heritage values of a small World Heritage site - it
can be ‘locked up’ and given a level of protection equal to a national park.
Affording this level of protection to the GBR WHA is impossible, as it would
block coastal development from Cape York to Bundaberg.’ (Prof. H Marsh,
Submission 125, p 554)
5.139
According to GBRMPA, ‘We will never totally win the ultimate conservation goals of locking a
place up, nor will we fully satisfy a pro-development ethos ...’
‘We are in the middle trying
to manage a balanced reasonable use. The words ‘reasonable use’ are subjective
ones. We have heard in a number of other inquiries and estimates hearings that
some people think it is reasonable and some people do not. Unfortunately for
us, we are in the middle trying to balance that with the best available advice
...’ (C Cook, Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, Evidence 31 July 1998, p
143)
5.140
Prof. Marsh regretted that, as she put it, ‘the
[1994] 25 year plan for the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area has never
been implemented.’[67]
Environment Australia commented on the difficulty of obtaining commitment from
diverse stakeholders:
‘To claim that it has never been implemented is to imply that
the only party is GBRMPA. Other parties have readily abandoned commitment when
faced with perceived threats by government to their economic circumstances or
rights of access. The State of the Reef Report which was released by GBRMPA
last November recognises that many of the management issues on the Reef are complex
and their resolution involves consultation with a diverse range of
stakeholders.’ (Environment Australia, further information 25 March 1999, p
422)
5.141
Several submissions regretted the lack of a
timely management plan for the Hinchinbrook area before approval of such a
major development as Port Hinchinbrook. For example:
‘When an area is nominated
for world heritage, that nomination ought to be accompanied by a plan of
management so that it is clear, ahead of time, what the nomination and
acceptance of an area of land of world heritage will mean.’ (J Johnson,
Environmental Defender’s Office Ltd, Evidence 10 August 1998, p 288)
5.142
Environment Australia pointed out the logistical
problems of making management plans for such a huge area as the Great Barrier
Reef:
‘Management plans for the GBR have been developed and revised
progressively. This is necessarily a time consuming process due to the
complexities of the issues involved. Nevertheless, zoning plans and highly
detailed management plans have been completed for 348,000 square kilometres of
the GBR Marine Park. They have involved extended consultation with clients,
required the resolution (where possible) of often strongly put and conflicting
industry and conservation group positions, and have demanded pioneering
planning approaches that were novel on a world scale. The two latest Plans of
Management cover only 5 per cent of the GBR Marine Park (Cairns and
Whitsundays), but these areas comprise over 95 per cent of the tourism use of
the GBR World Heritage Area.’ (Environment Australia, further information, 25
March 1999, p 415)
5.143
Several submissions argued that management plans
for the reef should include buffer zones - areas outside the World Heritage
Area where developments may affect World Heritage values. The point was made
specifically in relation to Port Hinchinbrook (which is separated from the
Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area only by the intertidal mudflat), but it
also applies more generally, since activities like land clearance and
agricultural development may cause runoff that affects the reef. According to
Environment Australia, ‘Many of the issues affecting the GBRWHA occur outside
the area over which GBRMPA has direct jurisdiction. As such GBRMPA and the
Commonwealth more broadly, has no capacity to control landuse policies which
ultimately affect the GBRWHA.’[68]
5.144
Of course, in theory the powers of the World
Heritage Properties Conservation Act 1983 could be invoked to prohibit any
act on Queensland soil that ‘is likely to damage or destroy’ the World Heritage
Area, however distantly or indirectly.[69]
This would have huge practical and political difficulties. Environment
Australia claimed that the veto power under the Act is ‘designed as a means of
last resort’. It said that ‘despite the absence of regulatory powers, the
[Great Barrier Reef Marine Park] Authority generally acts as an ‘advisory body’
to Queensland during the assessment process for proposals which may have
downstream impacts on the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park.’ Environment
Australia said that ‘the proposed Environment Protection and Biodiversity Bill
would, were it passed, provide incentives for the State government, local
authorities and the proponents of major land based developments to pay more
careful regard to the protection of World Heritage values.’[70]
5.145
The Environment Protection and Biodiversity
Conservation Act 1999 was assented to on 19 July 1999. The Act prohibits a
person from taking an action that will have or is likely to have a significant
impact on the World Heritage values of a World Heritage property without the
approval of the Commonwealth Minister for the Environment and Heritage. An
action does not need Commonwealth approval if it is of a type covered by a
bilateral agreement between the Commonwealth and the relevant State. Management
plans made pursuant to bilateral agreements may be disallowed by either House
of the Commonwealth Parliament.[71]
5.146
This Committee, in its recent report on
Commonwealth Environment Powers, recommended that the World Heritage
Properties Conservation Act 1983 should be amended to apply to a defined
and adequate buffer zone around World Heritage properties which takes into
account the natural ecosystem to which the property belongs.[72]
5.147
Because Queensland land management decisions may
affect the World Heritage Area, there is clearly a need for co-operative
regional plans that take into account World Heritage values:
‘... we have to devise means of maintaining those values, [means]
which are compatible with the reasonable use of the GBR WHA and adjacent coast.
This will require integrated regional-scale planning and coastal zone
management and education of local Councils and the general public about World
Heritage and what it means to the Region ... Integrated planning guidelines that
are understood and accepted by all stakeholders need to be developed for the
region.’ (Prof. H Marsh, Submission 125, p 554-5)
5.148
Prof. Marsh described the example of the city of
Bath (UK), where world heritage considerations are explicitly incorporated into
the planning scheme, to achieve a balance between world heritage protection and
continuing economic activity.[73]
Environment Australia agrees that incorporating world heritage as a ‘key
material consideration’ in planning schemes is desirable:
‘As well, World Heritage cities are living areas where changes
and growth can occur. I would contend that this analogy is appropriate to the
GBR and is more relevant than the ‘National Park’ model.’ (R Beale, Environment
Australia, further information, 25 March 1999, p 414)
5.149
Environment Australia strongly supports a
regional planning approach:
‘A similar approach is under consideration for the Daintree
Region of the Wet Tropics World Heritage property. Strategic plans which
incorporate broader regional considerations have already been developed for a
number of other World Heritage Properties.’ (Environment Australia, further
information, 25 March 1999, p 417)
5.150
It is vital that the principles of the strategic
plan flow through to individual development control decisions. As noted in
paragraph 5.95, some think that local Councils tend to be poorly resourced for
considering developments with regional implications. Mr Valentine suggested
that the Commonwealth should fund a program of specialist environmental
officers in local government areas in or abutting World Heritage Areas, to help
improve standards of environmental management. He also recommended that the
Commonwealth fund a program of regional planning for areas abutting World
Heritage properties, conditional on using best practice planning processes.[74] Environment Australia
supported the concept of appointing specialised environmental officers to work
with local councils, and commented that it has certain relevant activities
already:
‘An Environmental Resource Officer has been funded by the Commonwealth
to work with Queensland agencies on environmental issues, including matters
relating to World Heritage. The Commonwealth also provides funding to various
state government agencies to employ specialist officers who provide liaison and
management coordination across the various levels of government in a number of
World Heritage properties. A key role for these officers is to coordinate the
development and implementation of strategic planning and community consultation
processes.’ (Environment Australia, further information, 25 March 1999, p 417)
5.151
Mr Valentine’s recommendations are rather more
ambitious than the activities Environment Australia described. The Committee
agrees with Mr Valentine’s recommendations.
Recommendation 10
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth should work with
the Queensland Government and local councils whose decisions may affect the
World Heritage values of the Great Barrier Reef, to expedite making regional
plans that explicitly take into account world heritage conservation as a key
material consideration in land-use planning and development control decisions.
Recommendation 11
The Commonwealth should fund a
program of regional planning in local government areas where planning decisions
may affect World Heritage values of World Heritage areas. Funding should be
conditional on using best practice planning processes.
The Commonwealth should also
fund a program of information and education about World Heritage conservation
in those local government areas.
5.152
Of course, measures to protect World Heritage
significance cannot be made without adequate statements of significance. This
suggests the need for comprehensive and up-to-date assessment of world heritage
values, and risks to them, to inform strategic planning.
Recommendation 12
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth, in co-operation
with the State, should expedite studies to identify Australia’s World Heritage
properties or potential World Heritage properties and to update as necessary
their statements of World Heritage significance.
Recommendation 13
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth, in co-operation
with the States, should expedite research into risks to the World Heritage
values of Australia’s World Heritage properties.
5.153
Australia was one of the earliest parties to the
World Heritage Convention and has played a significant role in supporting the
Convention and supporting World Heritage globally. Australia has acknowledged a
duty to ‘identify, protect, conserve, present and transmit to future generations’
its World Heritage sites.[75]
Australia is the leading nation in the world in natural World Heritage sites,
having 13 sites listed. Australia is a relatively wealthy party, particularly
among those responsible for tropical ecosystems. This suggests that Australia
should feel a special responsibility:
‘The experts[76] regarded that [in the
Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area] there was a real chance of effective
conservation management in Australia which did not exist in many other tropical
ecosystems ... for most tropical developing countries the challenge of looking
after the natural environment is very great and very hard to achieve. So I
would contend that Australia has a special responsibility.’ (Prof. H Marsh,
Evidence 31 July 1998, p 162-3)
5.154
Australia should feel an opportunity and a
responsibility to set an example in best practice World Heritage management.
The Australian Democrats do not believe that this has been done in the
Hinchinbrook Channel.
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