Chapter 2
Overview of native vegetation, land use and regulatory frameworks in
Australia
2.1
This chapter considers the current state of Australia's native
vegetation, land clearing and respective legislative and regulatory frameworks.
Native vegetation
2.2
According to the consultation draft of Australia's Native Vegetation
Framework, native vegetation is defined as all vegetation that is local to a
particular site or landscape, including all terrestrial and aquatic plants both
living and dead.[1]
However, across states and territories, the definition of what constitutes
native vegetation differs. The NSW Native Vegetation Act 2003, for
example, defines native vegetation as 'remnant vegetation, protected regrowth
or non protected regrowth'.[2]
The Queensland Vegetation Management Act 1999 defines 'Vegetation' as a 'native
tree; or a native plant, other than a grass or mangrove'.[3]
2.3
It is stated in the consultation draft that 'native vegetation sustains
Australia's biodiversity'.[4]
The Commonwealth Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF) provided
the following comments on the importance of native vegetation:
Native vegetation is an important primary production asset
providing a range of economic benefits, such as fodder for stock and
sustainable forest operations. It also provides other benefits such as clean
water, habitat for maintaining beneficial insects for integrated pest
management, stock shade and shelter and prevention of soil and water
degradation.[5]
2.4
The NSW Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water noted,
moreover, that:
Effective retention and management of native vegetation is
also critical in the control of erosion, land degradation, water quality and
impact of salinity on agricultural urban and aquatic environments. Retention of
existing native vegetation is the most cost effective way to protect these
critical environmental assets.[6]
2.5
Some witnesses commented on the extent of the loss of native vegetation
in Australia. DAFF stated that approximately thirteen per cent of native vegetation
has been cleared since 1750 (the internationally recognised benchmark for
pre-European native vegetation in Australia), of which eight per cent has been
replaced with non-native vegetation.[7]
While some 87 per cent of the pre-European native vegetation cover has been
retained, its condition is variable, fragmented and often degraded. The
consultation draft noted that some vegetation types are reported as having less
than 10 per cent of their original cover with some of those down to less than
one per cent.[8]
2.6
The wide-scale clearing of native vegetation was recognised as
contributing to the decrease in the number of native species, land degradation
and the disruption of many ecosystems. The 2006 Australian State of Environment
Committee commented on the impact of native vegetation clearing and stated
that:
The most visible indicator of land condition is the extent
and quality of vegetation cover. Nationally the picture is deceptive – about 87
per cent of Australia's original native vegetation cover remains, but its
condition is variable and masks an underlying issue of the decline of many
ecological communities. Some ecological communities occupy less than 1 per cent
of their original extent as a result of clearing for agriculture, and many
others are highly fragmented. In addition, the components of many ecosystems,
especially the understorey in forests and woodlands, have been severely
disrupted.[9]
2.7
The Nature Conservation Council of NSW also commented on clearing of
native vegetation:
Loss of native vegetation impacts land values in many ways.
Subsequent hydrology and salinity changes impact the productivity of the soil,
micro climate changes can affect rainfall, loss of scenic amenity can impact
non-agricultural and values, loss of fauna that depend on the vegetation for
habitat can impact nutrient cycles and pollination. Often the impact is felt
away from the area that is cleared. The unmanaged action of one landholder may
have significant flow on affects for other land areas. Many land managers understand
this and manage the land with conservation practices in mid, however this is
not always the case.[10]
Land use in Australia
2.8
Sixty per cent of Australia's land is privately owned and/or managed by
different types of landholders including farmers engaged in agricultural
production.[11]
According to the Commonwealth government, 70 per cent of Australia's land is
managed by farmers.[12]
2.9
For the purposes of this inquiry, the term landholder is used
generically to describe both freehold owners and leasehold owners of land.
2.10
In 2006–07, approximately 55.3 per cent of Australia was managed by
agricultural businesses with the majority of them (67.9 per cent) engaged in
grazing on land other than improved pasture. Of the land managed by
agricultural businesses:
- 6.2 per cent was used for grazing on improved pasture;
- 8.9 per cent for crops;
- 3.4 per cent was used for conservation; and
- 3.2 per cent for other uses including forestry.[13]
2.11
The committee received evidence of the importance of the agricultural
sector not only nationally but as an export industry. According to the NSW
Farmers' Association, Australian farmers produce 93 per cent of the food
eaten in Australia whilst also exporting 61 per cent of the total agricultural
production overseas.[14]
The President of the NSW Farmers' Association, Mr Charles Armstrong, commented
on the level of agricultural productivity in Australia and its importance to
security:
The Australian Farm Institute has done some work in relation
to the importance of Australian farmers in terms of feeding. We feed 150
Australians per farmer and, right now, 650 people overseas – projected to go to
850. The important thing about security is really not about supply of food
within Australia; it is really about the security of the global picture in
terms of people who may not get access to the food that we can supply. With our
highly efficient agricultural systems, Australia has a vital role to play. In
short, the world needs Australia to keep producing food.[15]
Land clearing
2.12
Between 2000 and 2004, 1.5 million hectares of forest (including both
native and non-native vegetation) was cleared across the continent. The 2006
State of the Environment Committee noted that after forest regrowth, the net
change was a loss of 287 000 hectares.[16]
2.13
Whilst agriculture has a long history of land clearing in Australia, in
recent decades, clearing has declined and farming communities have contributed
to revegetation for environmental reasons.[17]
According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, approximately 1.4 million
hectares of vegetation activities on private land was undertaken in 2005–06
including 101 hectares of new plantings and 1.3 million hectares of
regeneration or enhancement vis-à-vis fencing to prevent grazing.[18]
Reductions in land clearing rates since the early 1990s have, according to the Commonwealth
Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency (DCCEE), resulted from
factors including:
...commodity price fluctuations, climatic events and the
introduction of new land clearing regulations as awareness of environmental
degradation resulting from inappropriate clearing increases.[19]
2.14
According to the DCCEE, land clearing rates in Australia are influenced
by factors including market forces, technology change, climatic events
including drought as well as government policy.[20]
2.15
There has been much comment on the impact of land clearing of native
vegetation. The Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists, for example, stated:
The clearing of native vegetation is one of the primary
causes of land and water degradation and loss of biodiversity in Australia.
Broadscale land clearing has led to extensive erosion and salinisation of
soils. Erosion and the removal of the vegetation in riparian zones has also
reduced the quality of water that runs off the landscape and this in turn has
damaged the health of our rivers, wetlands and estuaries. The clearing of
native vegetation is also a prime cause of the loss of Australia's unique
biodiversity.[21]
Regulatory framework
2.16
State and territory governments have responded to the challenge of the
clearing of native vegetation with the establishment of regulatory regimes to
control clearing and manage native vegetation, on both public and private land.
They hold, therefore, primary responsibility for the legislative and
administrative framework within which natural resources including native
vegetation rests.
2.17
Mr Ian Thompson, Executive Manager, DAFF stated of the role of states
and territories:
Each state and territory has its own suite of policies and
legislation for native vegetation, and some of the key similarities include
things like: broadscale land clearing is only allowed with a specific permit or
licence and often the use of voluntary measures and various assistance schemes
to implement that legislation. Some of the key differences relate to the types
of native vegetation that might be covered, whether there are objectives
referring to climate change, and whether the legislation is coordinated by
overarching legislation or incorporated into pre-existing legislation.[22]
2.18
According to the Productivity Commission, the main impetus for the
establishment of clearing restrictions has been land degradation and a concern
in many jurisdictions that 'levels of remnant native vegetation – especially on
private leasehold or freehold land – were approaching critical levels for
habitat and biodiversity maintenance'.[23]
The Productivity Commission also recognised that such regulation is borne out
of a commitment on the part of all Australian governments, through the Natural
Heritage Trust, to reverse the decline in the quality and extent of Australia's
native vegetation cover.[24]
National Framework for the
Management and Monitoring of Australia's Native Vegetation
2.19
In December 1999, the Australia New Zealand Environment and Conservation
Council (ANZECC) released the National Framework for the Management and
Monitoring of Australia's Native Vegetation (the framework) as part
of a commitment on the part of the Commonwealth, state and territory
governments to reverse the long-term decline in quality and extent of
Australia's native vegetation cover. Meeting in December 2001, the National
Resource Management Ministerial Council (NRMMC)[25]
comprising ministers of primary industries, national resources, environment and
water across all jurisdictions, reaffirmed the commitment of all jurisdictions
to the framework.
2.20
The framework is designed to provide a means through which native
vegetation management commitments on the part of Commonwealth, state and
territory governments can be progressed and provides a 'consistent multilateral
or national approach for sharing information and experience (particularly
related to best practice) over the full range of management and monitoring
mechanisms':[26]
The Framework establishes a series of benchmarks for best
practice native vegetation management and monitoring mechanisms...It also
establishes a national monitoring and public reporting mechanism to demonstrate
progress towards reducing the broad-scale clearance of native vegetation, and
increasing revegetation.[27]
2.21
In terms of native vegetation, the stated outcomes of the framework are:
- a reversal in the long-term decline in the extent and quality of
Australia's native vegetation cover by:
- conserving native vegetation, and substantially reducing land
clearing;
- conserving Australia's biodiversity; and
-
restoring, by means of substantially increased revegetation, the
environmental values and productive capacity of Australia's degraded land and
water;
- conservation and, where appropriate, restoration of native
vegetation to maintain and enhance biodiversity, protect water quality and
conserve soil resources, including on private land managed for agriculture,
forestry and urban development;
-
retention and enhancement of biodiversity and native vegetation
at both regional and national levels; and
- an improvement in the condition of existing native vegetation.[28]
2.22
In April 2008, the NRMMC confirmed the importance of the Native
Vegetation Framework as the national policy document for achieving:
-
a reversal in the long-term decline of Australia’s native
vegetation, and
- an improvement in the condition of existing native vegetation.
2.23
The NRMMC directed that a review of the framework be finalised. It endorsed
the draft Australia's Native Vegetation Framework on 5 November
2009. In February 2010, the NRMMC issued a consultation draft for public
comment. The consultation was completed on 7 April 2010. According to the Commonwealth
Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts (DEWHR), the
revised framework will be a guiding national policy document that will:
- guide the ecological sustainable management of Australia's native
vegetation and help align efforts to address the increasing challenges of
climate change and other threats; and
- take into account new approaches to biodiversity conservation,
and align with the revised National Strategy for the Conservation of
Australia's Biological Diversity and Australia's Biodiversity and Climate
Change: A strategic assessment of the vulnerability of Australia's biodiversity
to climate change.[29]
Commonwealth legislation
2.24
The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999
(EPBC Act) specifies the areas of Commonwealth responsibility for protecting
specific matters of 'National Environmental Significance' (NES) across the
country and in the surrounding ocean. Any action that is likely to have a
significant impact on a matter of national environmental significance requires
an assessment and approval under the EPBC Act.
2.25
The 1997 Council of Australian Governments (COAG) Heads of Agreement on
Commonwealth/State Roles and Responsibilities for the Environment identified the
eight NES:
- World Heritage properties;
- Ramsar listed wetlands;
- national heritage places;
- listed threatened species and ecological communities;
-
migratory species;
-
nuclear activities;
- Commonwealth marine environment; and
- Great Barrier Reef Marine Park.[30]
2.26
DEWHR noted that whilst the EPBC Act does not directly regulate native
vegetation or contain greenhouse gas abatement measures, it does 'on occasion
affect native vegetation clearing but only in the context of regulating actions
that are likely to have significant impacts on matters of National
Environmental Significance'. According to DEWHR, to date, these have been small
in number (63 of the 3409 referrals from the agricultural and forestry sector made
under the EPBC Act between July 2000 and March 2010).[31]
2.27
In relation to land clearing, the EPBC Act allows for the lawful
continuation of existing land use if it commenced before the EPBC Act came into
force on 16 July 2000, 'as long as the use has continued uninterrupted or
regularly from before this date and is not an enlargement, expansion of
intensification of use that results in a substantial increase in the impact of
the use on the land'.[32]
2.28
Where the affect of a minister's decision under the EPBC Act, including
those related to native vegetation clearance, constitutes an acquisition of
property, subsection 519(1) provides that:
If, apart from this section, the operation of this Act would
result in an acquisition of property from a person that would be invalid
because of paragraph 51(xxxi) of the Constitution (which deals with acquisition
on just terms) the Commonwealth must pay the person a reasonable amount of
compensation.[33]
2.29
Further, subsection 519(3) states in relation to determining
compensation:
If the Commonwealth and the person do not agree on the amount
of compensation to be paid, the person may apply to the Federal Court for the
recovery from the Commonwealth of a reasonable amount of compensation fixed by
the Court.[34]
2.30
According to DEWHR, no formal claims under section 519 have been made to
date.[35]
2.31
The EPBC Act provides a list of Key Threatening Processes (KTPs) defined
as a process that 'threatens or may threaten, the survival, abundance or
evolutionary development of a native species or ecological community'.[36]
If a KTP has been listed, the minister has to determine whether to develop a
Threat Abatement Plan (TAP) which establish a national framework to guide and
coordinate the Commonwealth's responses to listed KTPs. TAPs are developed
where the minister considers that implementation is an effective means of
abating KTPs. DEWHR noted that in April 2001, 'land clearance' was listed under
the EPBC Act as a KTP. However, the then minister accepted advice from the
Threatened Species Scientific Committee that development of a respective TAP
was not necessary given the number of relevant national and state strategies
and programs that already address the issue.[37]
DAFF continued:
The Threatened Species Scientific Committee recommended that
a threat abatement plan was not considered a feasible, effective or efficient
way to abate the process. Recognising that each state and territory needs an
appropriate response to this key threatening process the Committee further
advised the Minister for the Environment that the Commonwealth should encourage
and support land management quality assurance and planning mechanisms at the
appropriate scales to ensure the conservation of biodiversity, especially
threatened species and ecological communities.[38]
Commonwealth non-regulatory
framework
2.32
The Natural Heritage Trust (the trust) was set up by Australian
Government in 1997 to help restore and conserve Australia's environment and
natural resources. One of the Trust's five specific projects was the Native
Vegetation Initiative. The trust provided funding for projects at the regional
level, as well as at the state and national levels through four programs:
Landcare; Bushcare; Rivercare and Coastcare. The community component was
delivered via the Envirofund. DAFF provided the committee with details of the trust
including the bilateral agreements between the Commonwealth and state and
territory governments and the outcomes of phases 1 and 2 of the trust.[39]
2.33
On 1 July 2008, Caring for our Country was launched as the
Australian Government's new environmental management initiative. It aims to
achieve an environment that is 'healthy, better protected, well-managed,
resilient and provides essential ecosystem services in a changing climate'.[40]
Caring for our Country integrates previous federal natural resource
management initiatives including the Natural Heritage Trust, National Landcare
Program, Environmental Stewardship Program and the Working on Country
Indigenous land and sea ranger programs.[41]
2.34
Caring for our Country establishes national priorities and
outcomes to 'refocus investment on protection of our environment and
sustainable management of our natural resources'.[42]
The six national priority areas for the first five years (2008–2013) include:
- the National Reserve System;
- biodiversity and natural icons;
- coastal environments and critical aquatic habitats;
- sustainable farm practices;
- natural resource management in northern and remote Australia; and
- community skills, knowledge and engagement.[43]
2.35
The Australian government is engaged in a range of other non-regulatory
native vegetation initiatives. In 1992, COAG endorsed the National Strategy
for Ecologically Sustainable Development which recognised conservation and
restoration of native vegetation as one of Australia's key challenges and
established a framework for intergovernmental action on the environment. In
1996, COAG subsequently recognised the importance of native vegetation in other
strategies it endorsed including the National Strategy for the Conservation
of Australia's Biological Diversity.
2.36
In 1997, COAG agreed in principle to the COAG Heads of Agreement on
Commonwealth/State Roles and Responsibilities for the Environment. Designed
to establish a more effective framework for intergovernmental relations, the
agreement applied to matters of National Environmental Significance (NES); the
environmental assessment and approval processes; listing, protection and
management of heritage places; compliance with state and territory
environmental and planning legislation; and better delivery of national
programs.[44]
2.37
The 1997 COAG Heads of Agreement set out 23 additional matters of NES
where the Commonwealth has 'interests or obligations' including the
conservation of native vegetation and fauna, reducing greenhouse gases and
enhancing greenhouse sinks. In 1999, in recognition of the COAG Heads of
Agreement, such matters of NES were excluded from the list of protected matters
that would trigger an assessment and the approval processes of the EPBC Act as 'there
was other legislation and other tools such as the Natural Heritage Trust which
addressed these NES matters'.[45]
2.38
The Australian government participates in additional national agreements
and strategies to improve native vegetation management, many of which are
implemented subject to bilateral or multilateral agreements with other
jurisdictions.[46]
The regulatory framework of the
states and territories
2.39
DCCEE commented on the development of native vegetation regulatory
frameworks across the states and territories:
Land clearing has long been recognised as a cause of
undesirable impacts on natural resources, including biodiversity loss, soil
erosion and dryland salinity. In recent decades state and territory governments
have progressively adopted regulatory frameworks for management of native
vegetation, in accordance with their Constitutional responsibility for land
management. The contribution of land clearing controls to greenhouse gas emissions
mitigation has been recognised relatively recently, and is not a primary
consideration in those regulatory frameworks.[47]
2.40
Most states and territories introduced regulatory controls in relation
to land clearing in the late 1980s and 1990s. All jurisdictions now have
established systems whereby permits or approvals must be obtained by
landholders wanting to clear native vegetation on their properties.
2.41
In its 2004 report on the impact of native vegetation and biodiversity
regulations, the Productivity Commission noted that the 'application and
breadth of controls varies significantly across jurisdictions with different
requirements applicable to leaseholders and owners of freehold title'. It noted
further that:
'Native vegetation' comprises grasses and groundcover as well
as trees in New South Wales, South Australia, Victoria and Western Australia;
native grassland is excluded in Queensland and (currently) in Tasmania from
general permit requirements, although grasses may be protected under threatened
species legislation and the Australian Government's Environment and Protection
and Biodiversity Conservation Act.[48]
2.42
The following provides a brief overview of state and territory native
vegetation regulatory frameworks.
New South Wales
2.43
In New South Wales (NSW), where over 60 per cent of native vegetation
has been cleared, thinned or significantly disturbed since 1788, the regulatory
framework for native vegetation has evolved over a century of legislation:
- 1901: Western Lands Act;
- 1938: Soil Conservation Act;
- 1979: Environmental Planning and Assessment Act;
- 1995: State Environmental Planning Policy No. 46;
- 1998: Native Vegetation Conservation Act;
- 2003: Native Vegetation Act;
- 2005: Native Vegetation Regulation; and
- 2007: Private Native Forestry Regulation.[49]
2.44
In terms of implementation, under the Native Vegetation Act 2003
(the Act), clearing remnant native vegetation or protected regrowth requires
approval unless the clearing is a permitted activity. The minister has
delegated the approval for clearing to the local Catchment Management Authority
(CMA), except for Private Native Forestry, where the relevant department is the
delegated authority. According to the NSW Department of Environment, Climate
Change and Water, CMAs can 'only approval clearing of remnant vegetation or
protected regrowth when the clearing will improve or maintain environmental
outcomes' whereby 'improve or maintain' means that for clearing to be approved,
it cannot result in reduced environmental outcomes.[50]
The impact of clearing is measured against four environmental considerations
including water quality, soils, salinity and biodiversity (including threatened
species).
2.45
The objectives of the Act include that to 'provide for, encourage and
promote the management of native vegetation on a regional basis for the social,
economic and environmental interests of the State'. It also seeks amongst other
things, to 'improve the condition of existing native vegetation, particularly
where it has high conservation value'.[51]
2.46
The Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water noted that since
the implementation of the Act in December 2005, there has been an overall
reduction in the area of land approved for clearing in NSW: in 1999 over 160 000
hectares of land was approved for clearing compared to less than 2000 hectares
in 2008 and 2009 respectively under the Act. 1 677 379 ha have been
approved for invasive native shrub treatment.[52]
2.47
A review of the Act was undertaken in 2009. The review found that major
stakeholders generally agree with the environmental framework set up by the Act
and its general philosophy and concluded:
This report identifies the depth and complexity of issues
faced in the management of native vegetation in NSW. Whilst no fundamental
change in the nature of the Act's framework appears to be needed, this review
identifies areas for change that could enhance the current operation of the
Act.[53]
Queensland
2.48
The Vegetation Management Act 1999 (the Act) was proclaimed in
September 2000 and regulates clearing on freehold and leasehold land in Queensland.
The Act was amended in 2004 and 2008. The aim of the Act is to 'protect
Queensland's rich biodiversity and address economic and environmental problems
like salinity, soil degradation, erosion and declining water quality'.[54]
2.49
The Act makes certain land clearing 'assessable development' under the Integrated
Planning Act 1997, for which a permit must be sought, and phased out of
broadscale clearing of remnant vegetation by December 2006. It gives most protection
to remnant vegetation, that is vegetation which has either never been cleared
or has regrown to a specific canopy and height and density to be considered to
have the same value as if it had never been cleared.
2.50
The vegetation management framework, through the Act, regulates the clearing
of native vegetation mapped as either:
- remnant vegetation on a regional ecosystem map or remnant map; or
- regulated regrowth vegetation identified on a regrowth vegetation
map.
The framework also protects woody vegetation on state lands.[55]
2.51
Clearing of remnant vegetation can only occur under a permit or if an
exemption applies. Clearing of regrowth can only occur if it is for an exempt
activity or the clearing is done in accordance with the regrowth vegetation
code.
2.52
Landholders may negotiate and confirm boundaries of assessable regrowth
through Property Maps of Assessable Vegetation (PMAV).
2.53
Under the 2004 amendments, financial assistance of $150 million over
five years was provided to assist landholders affected by the change to the
tree clearing laws. A ballot for the balance of the 500 000 hectares able
to be cleared was held in September 2004.
2.54
In 2009 the Queensland Government committed to a moratorium on the
clearing of endangered regrowth vegetation while it consulted with stakeholder
groups about ways to improve vegetation clearing laws. The moratorium applied
to all native woody vegetation within 50 metres of a watercourse in priority
reef catchments of Burdekin, Mackay Whitsundays and Wet Tropics and endangered
regrowth vegetation across the state, on both freehold and leasehold land. The
moratorium covers a million hectares of endangered vegetation.[56]
2.55
In 2009 the Act was again amended. In addition to the existing controls
on clearing of native vegetation, controls were introduced for clearing of
'regulated regrowth vegetation'. The new legislative framework requires that
clearing of regulated regrowth vegetation only occur in accordance with the
Regrowth Vegetation Code and where the chief executive of the Department of
Environment and Resource Management that administers the Act has been notified.[57]
Victoria
2.56
The laws for native vegetation conservation and management in Victoria
are contained in the Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988 (the FFG Act),
the Planning and Environment Act 1987 (the PE Act) and the Catchment
and Land Protection Act 1994 (the CLP Act).[58]
2.57
The objectives of the FFG Act are to preserve threatened species and
communities and to identify and control processes that may threaten
biodiversity. Under the Act threatened species or ecological communities of
flora and fauna may be listed with the approval of the minister. Upon listing,
an action statement is prepared to identify actions to be taken to conserve the
species or community or to manage the potentially threatening process. The minister
may also make interim conservation orders to conserve critical habitat of a
taxon of flora or fauna that has been listed or nominated for listing, as
threatened or potentially threatened. Compensation is payable to landholders
for financial loss suffered as a direct and reasonable consequence of the
making of an interim order and of having to comply with that order. The FFG Act
provides for the implementation of a flora and fauna guarantee strategy.
2.58
The purpose of the PE Act is to establish a framework for planning the
use, development and protection of land in Victoria in the present and
long-term interests of all Victorians. The Act allows for the minister to
prepare or approve standard planning provisions (the Victorian Planning
Provisions (VPP)). The VPP require that in planning schemes established under
the PE Act, a planning permit must be obtained from local councils to remove,
destroy or lop native vegetation. Native vegetation includes all plants
indigenous to Victoria, including trees, shrubs, herbs and grasses. Exemptions
are available to the requirement to obtain a permit, many of which facilitate
normal rural management practices including clearing growth less than 10 years
old where the land is being re-established or maintained for the cultivation of
pasture; clearing of fire breaks up to six metres wide; and clearing of dead
vegetation.
2.59
Landholders may enter into a voluntary Property Vegetation Plan (PVP) with
the Department of Sustainability and Environment (DSE) which considers how all
the vegetation on a property will be managed over the next 10 years.[59]
South Australia
2.60
The Native Vegetation Act 1991 (the Act) was proclaimed on 18
April 1991 and controls the clearance of native vegetation in addition to assisting
the conservation, management and research of native vegetation on lands outside
the National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) parks and reserves system. The
major features of the Act are:
- appointment of a Native Vegetation Council (the NVC) which is
responsible for decisions on clearance applications and for providing advice on
matters pertaining to the condition of native vegetation in the State to the
Minister for Environment and Conservation;
- provision of incentives and assistance to landholders in relation
to the preservation, enhancement and management of native vegetation;
- encouragement of research into the management of native
vegetation; and
- encouragement of the re-establishment of native vegetation.
2.61
Under the Act, all property owners, in matters not covered by an
exemption, are required to submit a proposal to the NVC seeking approval to
clear vegetation. In deciding whether to consent to an application to clear
native vegetation, the NVC must refer to the Principles of Clearance which
relate to the biological significance of the vegetation and whether clearance
may cause or contribute to soil or water degradation. In its deliberations on
clearance applications, the NVC also considers practical aspects of farm
management and it may consent to clearance under specified conditions.
2.62
The Act provides for the establishment of Heritage Agreements over areas
of native vegetation on private land. In general Heritage Agreements include
the following provisions:
- the owner maintains the land as an area dedicated to the
conservation of native vegetation and native fauna on the land; and
- the Minister releases the owner from the payment of rates and
taxes on that land and may construct fences to bound that land.
2.63
The landholder retains legal ownership of the land under a Heritage
Agreement. A Heritage Agreement is registered on the title of the land and
passes on to, and is binding on, any subsequent owners for the term of the
agreement. Agreements are generally written in perpetuity.[60]
Western Australia
2.64
In Western Australia (WA), the Environmental Protection Act 1986 (the
Act) directly affect native vegetation management. The Act applies to all land
in WA, including rural land; urban land; Crown land; roadside vegetation;
pastoral leases; land the subject of a mining lease; and land the subject of
public works. Native vegetation means indigenous aquatic or terrestrial
vegetation, and includes dead vegetation.
2.65
Clearing of native vegetation is not permitted unless:
- a permit to clear has been issued; or
- the activity is of a kind that is exempt from the clearing laws.
2.66
Under the Act, ten clearing principles must be observed when deciding to
grant, or refuse, a permit. The principles include that native vegetation should
not be cleared if:
- it comprises a high level of biological diversity;
- it comprises the whole or a part of, or is necessary for the
maintenance of, a significant habitat for fauna indigenous to Western Australia;
- it comprises the whole or a part of, or is necessary for the
maintenance of a threatened ecological community;
- it is significant as a remnant of native vegetation in an area that
has been extensively cleared; and
- the clearing of the vegetation is likely to cause appreciable land
degradation.[61]
2.67
Conditions on permits may be imposed to prevent, control, abate or
mitigate environmental harm or to offset the loss of the cleared vegetation.[62]
Clearing is not generally permitted where the biodiversity values, land
conservation and water protection roles of native vegetation would be significantly
affected.
2.68
Exempt activities include clearing that is caused by the grazing of
stock on land held under a pastoral lease.
Tasmania
2.69
In Tasmania, land clearing controls apply to all land, both public and
private, and to forest vegetation and threatened non-forest vegetation
communities. There are no controls under the Forest Practices Act 1985 (the
Act) on clearing of non-forest vegetation that is not threatened.
2.70
The Act requires of landholders a certified forest practices plan to
authorise land clearing to clear trees or to clear and convert threatened non-forest
native vegetation. However, under the FP Act, clearing and conversion of
threatened native vegetation is not permitted unless under exceptional
circumstances.[63]
2.71
Exemptions from the requirement to have a Forest Practices Plan to
authorise land clearing include small scale clearing of up to one hectare per
property per year provided that the land is not considered 'vulnerable' and
time volumes removed or cleared do not exceed 100 tonnes.
Northern Territory
2.72
In the Northern Territory (NT), the Pastoral Land Act constrains
vegetation clearance for the purpose of agricultural activities other than
those related to the primary purpose of pastoral land, that is, pastoralism.[64]
2.73
The Planning Act 1999 regulates the planning, control and
development of land. Permits may be approved for the clearing of native
vegetation and may include a schedule of conditions. The NT Land Clearing
Guidelines (2010)[65]
establish standards for native vegetation clearing. The guidelines recognise
that decisions to clear native vegetation are significant because clearing will
lead to at least some change in landscape function. The guidelines seek to
manage clearing in a way that promotes the greatest possible net benefit from
use of land cleared of native vegetation. The guidelines are recognised
formally under the Planning Act 1999 and referenced in the Northern Territory
Planning Scheme.
Australian Capital Territory
2.74
Native vegetation in the Australian Capital Territory is controlled by
the Land (Planning and Environment) Act 1991 and the Nature
Conservation Act 1980.[66]
Land clearing and deforestation
2.75
The Kyoto Protocol rules define deforestation as 'the direct
human-induced conversion of forested land to non-forested land' in relation to
land that was forest on 1 January 1990. According to DCCEE, the Australian
definition of a forest for the purposes of Kyoto Protocol accounting specifies
a 'minimum area of 0.2 hectares, with at least twenty per cent tree crown cover
and the potential to reach a height of maturity of at least two metres'.[67]
DCCEE noted that:
Deforestation occurs when forest cover is deliberately
removed and the land use changes to pasture, cropping or other uses.
Deforestation represents a subset of total land clearing activity.[68]
2.76
DCCEE provided the following graphs illustrating the trend in
deforestation activity across Australia. The total area of forest cleared
annually includes first-time transition of forested land to other land use and
clearing of regrowth on land that was previously forested (reclearing). DCCEE
stated that reclearing has increased in proportion to first-time conversion
since 1990.
Source: Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency, Submission
235, p. 3.
2.77
In 1992, the Commonwealth, state and territory governments signed the
National Forest Policy Statement (NFPS) which provides a national policy
framework for forest management and sustainable timber production on public and
private land. The NSW Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water stated
that the NFPS:
...seeks to achieve ecological and sustainable forest
management (ESFM) and promotes the use of codes of practice to ensure a high
standard of forestry operations on private land and to protect the environment.[69]
Private native forest management
2.78
Private native forestry is defined by the NSW Department of Environment,
Climate Change and Water as the 'management of native vegetation on privately
owned land for the purposes of obtaining forest products on a sustainable
basis'.[70]
According to the Australian Forest Growers, approximately 38 million hectares
or almost a quarter of Australia's native forest estate including woodland,
tall eucalypt forests and rainforests is privately owned.[71]
2.79
The harvesting of timber on private land for commercial purposes is
regulated in every state and territory jurisdiction with the exception of South
Australia and the Australian Capital Territory.[72]
2.80
In NSW, where there is an estimated 8.5 million hectares of native
forests in private land, the NSW Department of Environment, Climate Change and
Water held that private native forestry is important to the timber industry and
to maintain environmental values including biodiversity, water and soil
quality, carbon and to prevent land degradation.[73]
Deforestation and greenhouse gas emissions
2.81
In 1990, national emissions from deforestation declined from 132 million
tonnes (Mt) carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2-e) to 77 Mt CO2-e in 2007. DCCEE noted
that much of the reduction in emission from deforestation since 1990 took place
before consideration of greenhouse gas emission targets.[74]
2.82
DCCEE noted that the international greenhouse gas emissions accounting
framework under the Kyoto Protocol specifies which emissions sources and sinks
count toward Australia's target for the first Kyoto commitment period (2008–12).
Once land has been deforested, greenhouse gas emissions and removals on that
land remain in the national deforestation accounts. Emissions from reclearing,
if the land returned to forest following the initial land use change, are
included in emissions estimates. Emissions and removals from forest harvest and
regrowth where no land use change occurred are not included, in accordance with
the Kyoto Protocol rules.[75]
2.83
Emissions over the first Kyoto commitment period are projected to be
49 Mt CO2-e per annum. This represents a 63 per cent decline from the
1990 level. The projections take into account the anticipated effects of recent
Queensland and NSW Government vegetation management legislation reforms.
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