Chapter 3
The impact of native vegetation laws and legislated greenhouse gas
abatement measures on landholders
Introduction
3.1
This chapter considers the impact of native vegetation laws and
greenhouse gas abatement measures on landholders, in particular, in relation to
any diminution of land asset value and productivity.
3.2
The 2004 Productivity Commission report on the impacts of native
vegetation and biodiversity regulations contains a substantial discussion on
the impacts on landholders. The report noted that landholders receive both
productivity and amenity benefits from selective retention of native vegetation
and biodiversity. It was recognised that in some regions there are benefits to
landholders from reduced soil and water degradation arising from vegetation
retention or planting.[1]
Negative impacts on farming practices were reported as:
- preventing expansion of agricultural activities;
- preventing changes in land use (for example native to cropping)
and adoption of new technologies (such as installation of centre-pivot
irrigation);
- inhibiting routine management of vegetation regrowth and clearing
of woodland thickening to maintain areas in production; and
- inhibiting management of weeds and vermin.[2]
3.3
The committee received evidence during this inquiry which reflected that
received by the Productivity Commission: there are some benefits for landowners
arising from native vegetation and greenhouse gas abatement measures but there
are also a range of negative impacts. However, the majority of submissions received
from those directly involved in agriculture outlined the negative impacts of
laws regarding native vegetation. These negative impacts include restrictions
on agricultural activities which decrease productivity levels and subsequently
the value of land. As a result there are a number of flow-on impacts for
families and rural communities and indeed in terms of the relationships between
landholders and state and territory government officials.
3.4
It must be recognised from the outset that the committee received a
substantial number of submissions from aggrieved landholders, principally
farmers, who reported a diminution of land asset value and saw it as a direct
consequence of native vegetation legislation. Little evidence was received from
landholders whose experience in relation to native vegetation legislation has
been positive or even neutral.
3.5
A further matter noted by the committee is that the laws impact
unevenly. The Western Australian Farmers Federation (WAFarmers), for example,
noted that the laws are more extensively applied in newer farming areas.[3]
Mr Dale Park of WAFarmers further stated:
I think the classic problem is that when you have 'one rule
fits all' you have got different areas that are affected differently. In
Western Australia, for instance, the same laws on land clearing apply for
shires like Merredin or the eastern wheat belt – where we have got one or two
per cent remnant vegetation – and to shires like Ravensthorpe or Badgingarra,
which have got over 50 per cent remnant vegetation.[4]
3.6
Mr Ian Thompson of the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
(DAFF) also commented:
...the assessed economic impacts of these [laws] do vary from
place to place. They do vary depending on the potential for land use or land
practice change that might be envisaged by farmers or might be being forced
upon farmers by climate change or markets. So, in areas where agriculture is
developing, the vegetation legislation would have a bigger impact. Where land
use is not changing, they possibly do not have a major impact. So they are
quite variable in their impact and perception by farmers.[5]
3.7
It is obvious that there is substantial concern at the impact of these
laws by those who have borne the direct and indirect costs and regulatory
burden of their implementation.
Impact on agricultural activity
3.8
The committee received extensive evidence on the impact of native
vegetation laws on the management of agricultural activity and as a
consequence, levels of productivity in the agricultural sector.
Management of agricultural activity
3.9
In his opening statement to the committee, Mr Tom Grosskopf, New South
Wales (NSW) Department of Environment, Climate Change, noted that the
legislative framework for the management of native vegetation in NSW is framed
to deliver three key outcomes:
The first is to protect important vegetation in the
landscape. The second is to let farmers get on with the business of farming.
The third is to work with farmers to achieve balanced outcomes, ensuring that
there are balances between the protection of important environmental and
natural resource management outcomes and economic development and the continued
support for rural and regional communities.[6]
3.10
Mr Grosskopf went on to note that farmers are able to manage the
landscape and their existing business as the NSW Native Vegetation Act 2003
makes it clear that any regrowth younger than 1 January 1990 in the
central and eastern divisions and younger than 1 January 1983 in the western division
can be cleared without reference to the government. That is 'the management of
that younger native vegetation is completely within the control of the
landholder'.[7]
He also added that the legislation provided for a wide range of exemptions to
deal with matters including the management for bushfire, the provision of power
lines and other farm infrastructure. There are also a range of routine agricultural
management activities (RAMAs) that allow farmers to continue to undertake their
activities. RAMAs include gaining construction timber from vegetation on the
property and clearing along fence lines—six metres on either side of a boundary
fence line in the central and eastern divisions and 20 metres on either side of
a fence line in the western division.[8]
3.11
Ms Rachel Walmsley from the Australian Network of Environmental
Defender's Offices (ANEDO) stated that there is a category of routine
agricultural management activities which are listed clearly under the NSW Act
and regulations which are designed 'so that a farmer could undertake routine
activities like noxious weed management and everyday things and not attract
enforcement under the Act'.[9]
Similarly, Mr Peter Cosier, Director of the Wentworth Group of Concerned
Scientists held that in NSW 'in broad principle the existing use rights of
farmers to continue to farm their land has been maintained through these laws'.[10]
3.12
However, many landholders who made submissions to the inquiry saw the
native vegetation laws as taking away their ability to manage their land. The
Tasmanian Farmers and Graziers Association, for example, held the view that
native vegetation regulations impose significant restrictions on landowners'
ability to 'effectively manage their properties in a socially and economically
sustainable manner'.[11]
AgForce articulated common concerns of farmers and other producers:
Each amendment or introduction of new legislation has led to
further removal of agricultural land from production thus generating negative
social, environmental and economic outcomes. Many of these policies are
reminiscent of the 'lock up and leave' stance, and is fraught with questionable
environmental outcomes that often lead to a myriad of land management issues
and impacts. It also leads to the inability for landholders to sustainably
manage their landscape as exemplified by increased issues of pest, weed and
feral animal management as well as possible issues with erosion and sediment
control; positions managed by sustainable land practices.[12]
3.13
Mr Alex Davidson put the case bluntly:
Native vegetation and other similar laws have reduced owners
of freehold land to a type of serfdom–custodians and caretakers, compelled to
follow government-set management plans. While they may be landholders, they are
no longer land owners: no longer free to engage in the vital discovery
process, absolutely crucial for prosperity, of findings new ways to use their
land and its resources more productively.[13]
3.14
Many landholders commented to the committee that they had farmed the
land for many years, even generations, and had done so successfully. They know
their land but are now being told how to manage their farming activities by
bureaucrats. AgForce Queensland continued:
The thing that is always missed in this kind of draconian
legislation is that it is about protecting something that farmers and land
managers have been protecting for 100-plus years and all of a sudden they want
to legislate to protect it.[14]
3.15
Mr Phillip Wilson commented:
In many cases we look after our farms better than many of the
present guidelines dictate as we know where erosion control barriers should be
used on slopes, we even plant our own native animal and bird corridors and
refuges, we know how water is guided in our properties as we are the only ones
there twenty four hours a day when it rains or pours sometimes for twenty four
hours a day.[15]
3.16
Mr Anthony and Mrs Suzanne Kenny added:
Surely after five generations of managing, maintaining and
preserving our land we should be considered good managers and allowed within
reason to fertilize, clear or plough or land to lift production. Otherwise we
should be heavily compensated for it.[16]
3.17
A further point of discontent with many of those who felt that they had
been adversely affected by native vegetation laws, was that the legislation has
significantly fewer negative affects on landholders who have little native
vegetation remaining on their properties. Mr Richard Golden commented:
Careful, generational land owners and managers stewarded
their landscapes, making them targets for restriction because they had the
remaining examples of what the State said they applauded...The perversity of
penalizing these managers by removing their freedom to continue the necessary
hands‐on
management to keep their landscapes in the 'preferred' state became de facto
approval of those who had completely developed their landscapes, in the process
protecting their land value, productivity, profitability and financial future,
and who had no restrictions placed on them.[17]
3.18
Many witnesses commented that because they had in the past cared for
their land and nurtured the vegetation on their land, such action was now to
their detriment as portions of their properties
were now being 'locked up'.[18]
Mr Scott Hamilton commented:
We have left many shadelines and shade clumps on our properties
for aesthetic appeal and for shade benefits for stock. In most cases the timber
costs us significantly in lost income from moisture loss in crops and grass due
to the tree root extractions, and invasion by feral animals that live in the trees.
While some people preach about being environmentalists we have been. It would
seem now that by being responsible in the past we are being punished for
leaving so many shade lines and clumps of trees. A recent valuation of our farm
has revealed this.[19]
3.19
The Pastoralists and Graziers Association of Western Australia concluded
in its submission:
It is a sad irony that changes in land clearing regulations
mostly affect those who have in the past preserved much of the native
vegetation on private land, and who in many cases have also planted tens of
thousands of trees. As such, many of the most environmentally friendly farmers
have been left to bear the heaviest financial implications of the new
regulations.[20]
Property rights
3.20
Many submitters and witnesses argued that the implementation of native
vegetation laws were such that they not only impacted on the management of
agriculture but also on the property rights of owners of agricultural land. The
commonly held view of landholders, is that as landholders, they have property
or ownership rights over the land and therefore a right to determine how to
utilise it. Mr Claude Cassegrain articulated this position:
When we acquired land in the Hastings in the 1960's and
1970's, we knew we did not acquire the mineral rights under the surface. These
rights were retained by the Crown. However as far as we knew, we did acquire
legal and practical ownership control, inter alia, over the flora and fauna
that grew or lived on the land. We understood the Crown relied upon us acting
in our own pecuniary interest not to replace, destroy or alter the flora and
fauna unless it was in our own interest to do so, including improving the
productivity and therefore the value of the land.[21]
3.21
The concept of their land constituting private property in every sense
was highlighted. The NSW Farmers' Association represented this view:
Farmers purchase and hold land so that they can use it to
produce food and fibre. Understandably, they have believed that title to the
land provides the security they need to invest in the farm – as a real estate
holding, in capital improvements and as their home. But each year this
security, the confidence that farmers hold regarding the foundations of their
wellbeing, is being eroded by the action and sometimes inaction of government.[22]
3.22
The ramifications of the commonly held view that farmers were being
stripped of their property rights cut across the socio-economic spectrum and
are varied. It has the potential to seriously impact on:
- the relationship between landholders and the land in terms of
environmental sustainability and the level of investment of resources, time and
energy landholders are willing to put into the land;
- investor confidence, market stability and the ability of
landholders to secure finance to work the land;
- farming legacies and the viability and attractiveness of farming
as a profession for younger generations; and
- Australia's food security as well as environmental biodiversity
and conservation.
3.23
Landholders views on compensation in relation the perceived changes in
property rights are discussed in Chapter 4.
Impact on productivity
3.24
The committee received extensive evidence on the impact of native
vegetation laws on productivity of which most pointed to a negative impact. The
evidence reflects studies of the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource
Economics (ABARE) which have shown that land clearing restrictions in
Queensland, NSW and Southern Australia, applied to improve environmental
outcomes, impose negative impacts on agricultural producers as they forego
potential increases in agricultural production and income. The analysis
suggests that the opportunity costs (foregone agricultural production and income)
of native vegetation laws could be higher for some producers than others.[23]
3.25
DAFF stated that the ABARE reports indicated that native vegetation laws
were identified by farmers in the survey region (rangeland and cropping areas
of southern and western Queensland) as by far the most important constraint to
development. Up to 14 per cent of the survey region was identified by farmers
as being affected by existing nation vegetation regulation. The estimated cost
of foregone agricultural development opportunities in the survey region is
around $520 million in net present value terms. While the median cost of a
foregone rangeland development was estimated at $217 000 per farm, the private
costs of native vegetation regulation varied widely. However, for 90 per cent
of farmers in the survey region, the opportunity cost of foregone development
across farms' operating areas ranged between $26 a hectare and $838 a hectare.[24]
3.26
The Property Rights Reclaimers Moree, put the case bluntly:
The present relationship between
agricultural and environmental interests is one of almost complete dislocation.
That situation has been created fundamentally by the introduction since 1996 of
unreasonably intrusive and restrictive legislation, the effect of which has
been to impede agricultural growth and development in many areas, and
consequentially to reduce both profit and incentive for farmers and related
industries. The process has gradually become more and more oppressive, and more
and more detrimental, to both farmers and the general community.
If this process is not brought to a halt, and in some cases
reversed, the long term effects on Australian agriculture and the community
overall, it will be appalling. The consequences include an unstable food
supply, far greater dependence on foreign food supply, degeneration of food
quality standards accordingly, and a complete loss of enormous export income
potential.[25]
3.27
The negative impacts on productivity may arise in two ways: the
inability to expand productivity into areas not already developed; and, the
removal, or diminution, of previously productive land from cultivation or utilisation.
A third element, which was touched upon in evidence, was that of the over-use
of existing productive land where alternative land is otherwise unavailable due
to the native vegetation laws.
3.28
Under the various native vegetation regimes, landowners may have
restrictions placed on vegetation clearance which prevents the development of
land for production. The Pastoralists and Graziers Association of Western
Australia stated:
In many instances landholders have decided against seeking
permission to develop land, realising that there would be lengthy processes
leading to little or no chance of approval and that the formal application
process could invoke a Vegetation Conservation Notice on their entire property,
adversely impacting on their equity.[26]
3.29
One landholder submitted that he obtained permission from respective
local and state authorities to clear 40 per cent of 1 000 acres to run 50 head
of cattle only to see the law change six months later and the permission
withdrawn. In addition, a Declared Rare Flora (ERF) was identified on his
property. The landholder stated that as a consequence:
Unencumbered, our property, based on comparable market
values, would be worth approximately $2 million at this point in time. Due to
the fact that the property is tied up in native vegetation and DRF rulings, it
is virtually valueless. If we had been able to clear the 400 acres as
originally approved, comparable figures put annual profit at approximately $50
per acre in real terms, or $20,000 per year. Over the 12 year time frame, this
equates to $240,000 in lost income. We have spent over $3,000 on legal fees and
associated costs.[27]
3.30
Another landholder detailed the frustration resulting from the
restrictions imposed by native vegetation legislation:
We are now locked in an agreement we never had any real say
in or wanted. At the stroke of a pen we could no longer develop 50 percent of
our property. Yes we were able to use it, but not develop it. That is like
having a home that I can use the rooms, but not being able to change any part
of half of those rooms.[28]
3.31
Mr Greg Moody stated of the impact of the legislation on land value:
The resulting diminishing land value due to lost production
has seen agricultural land drop by 15% according to local property consultants.
This has eroded equities placing enormous financial pressure on an already cash
strapped community. Properties were purchased on the understanding that debt
serviceability would come from 90 to 100% of the holding. Covenants on some
titles will see 60% of the land being available to service that debt.[29]
3.32
There are also restrictions on clearing the regrowth of previously
cleared land. The legislation varies across jurisdictions as to the types of
vegetation included or the age of the regrowth and the extent of the vegetation
cover which may be cleared. Generally, once regrowth vegetation exceeds certain
limits it is treated as remanent vegetation for the purposes of the legislation
and thereby, to various degrees, acquires a protected status.
3.33
The impact of regrowth was a major concern for many submitters. Many
provided the committee of photographic evidence of growth on their properties.
One set of photographs was provided by Mr Greg Moody a landholder in NSW. Mr
Moody stated that Invasive Native Scrub (INS), if not removed, slowly takes
over, starving the soil of moisture and nutrients. The result is a barren
wasteland devoid of groundcover which is extremely erosion prone. Mr Moody
indicated that 'onerous covenants that are continually placed on our operation...We
are expected to manage INS by HAND METHODS or SPOTSPRAY....on the size of our
holding this is like picking clover out of the MCG with a pair of tweezers!!!'[30]
Photo 1: Before - effect of
Invasive Native Scrub
.
Photo 2: After – positive
results of intervention.
Source: Mr G Moody, Submission 209.
3.34
According to Property Rights Australia (PRA), the most commonly reported
finding in relation to Queensland woodland, following the introduction of
native vegetation regulations, is that there has been an increase in tree
density and a simultaneous decline in grass yields at an increasing rate. PRA
argued that the cessation of clearing comes at a significant economic loss.
Furthermore, the continuation of grazing in Queensland's rangelands will be
dependent on appropriate management of woodland thickening. PRA concluded that
'any regulatory regime which removes the ability to maintain the tree-grass
balance will ultimately result in the eventual loss of all grazing utility and
a reduction in biodiversity through the excessive proliferation of woody
species'.[31]
3.35
AgForce Queensland also argued that restrictions on clearing have
negatively impacted on grazing in Queensland and detailed the potential impact
of thickening and regrowth on the beef industry:
Based on a beef industry worth about $3.7 billion to the
Queensland economy each year, the livestock production from the State's grazed
woodlands would be currently valued at just under $1 billion per year. At the
present rate of tree/shrub thickening and in the absence of intervention to
limit the process, it is estimated that current livestock carrying capacity on
such land (3 M cattle equivalents) would fall to negligible levels in just 50
years.[32]
3.36
Landholder, Mr Ben Nicholls provided the committee with the example of
his negotiations with the local Catchment Management Authority which resulted
in a loss of land for production purposes:
There is an 800 acre paddock with 80 trees. Most of those
trees are small western cedar trees, which are small scrubby little bush. We
left them there for fodder trees years ago when we developed the place. There
are probably about 60 of those and 20 larger trees. To develop this—I should
not use the word 'clear' because it is not; it is all cultivation country that
we have been farming for years—I have to give covenants over the paddocks that
I want to do plus give over a total of about 280 hectares to the government
with full covenants but still pay the rates and still do all of that. I can
gaze it for 30 days a year. I am not allowed to graze it below six inches. I am
not allowed to take any regrowth out of it. Anyone who knows that central
western division where I am knows that it will go back to scrub. It will be
absolutely unproductive country.[33]
3.37
Mr Nicholls went on to comment on the potential consequences of lack of
productivity on land 'locked up' by the native vegetation legislation:
Look, there are about 20,000 hectares locked up in what I am
doing. So in our little area there is a huge amount of productivity being taken
and our towns are shrinking, our towns are dying. That is calamitous.[34]
3.38
Mr Peter Jesser stated that 53 per cent of his 2 237 hectare sheep and
cattle farm was locked up under native vegetation legislation with the result
that:
Our potential carrying capacity has been reduced from around
3000 DSE (Dry Sheep Equivalent) to 2500 DSE because we cannot manage the locked
up vegetation effectively. Our potential earning capacity has been reduced by
about 25 per cent. We estimate the reduction in value of our property to be
about $300,000...[35]
3.39
Mr James Smith, who owns three properties, stated that his ability to
produce grain had been severely hampered by the native vegetation legislation:
I have been restricted in my grain production due to the
native vegetation act. On one of my properties there has been 40 acres locked
up and not to be used...
There is also 600 acres of timber country that can not be
cleared for grain production.[36]
3.40
There is also an impact on productive land abutting native vegetation
through competition for water, encroachment of tree roots, and lack of control
of invasive species and feral pests. Mr Ian Cox commented on his experience:
The trees are so thick that little grows beneath them. Only
the weeds multiply around the perimeters which are then hard to control and the
prickly pear is free to do as it pleases. The trees are very intrusive on the
ground I try to farm as the root uptake competes with the crops and unless we
have an extremely wet season the crop fails for at least a 50metre space along
the trees. Added to this, the scrub makes an excellent refuge for all feral
pests and kangaroos which then feed on any emerging crop thus causing even greater
crop losses.[37]
3.41
Mr Charles Armstrong of the NSW Farmers' Association indicated that
there was an unintended consequence of the regulation which may further impact
on the level of productivity: with otherwise productive land tied up under the
native vegetation legislation, farmers are often reduced to over-developing
land currently in use. Mr Armstrong stated:
To carry on the business of farming without further
developing the farm means that you are going to exploit what you are currently
farming. Let us bring it down to paddocks. You are going to go on farming the
same paddock over and over again because you cannot develop the next paddock
and relieve the pressure on it. It is another of these disconnect features:
people making the legislation or drawing up the rules having no idea of how we
as farmers operate.[38]
3.42
A further impact of the decline in productivity of the agricultural
sector was outlined by Mr Max Rheese of the Australian Environment Foundation.
Mr Rheese argued that food security may be undermined which could then impact
on regional economic security:
There seems to be a disconnect between the intent of native
vegetation laws and the clearly recognised need to assure confidence and
security in food production and the management of private land to produce good
environmental outcomes...The continuing reduction in a landholder's ability to
manage soil, water, native vegetation and weeds on his own property threatens
to undermine productivity, regional economic stability and confidence.[39]
3.43
Similarly, Mr Armstrong, NSW Farmers' Association, noted that each
Australian farmer provides food for 150 Australians and 650 people overseas
(projected to increase to 850 people). Mr Armstrong stated that it was not the
food security of Australia that was so important, rather 'the security of the
global picture in terms of people who may not get access to the food that we
can supply'. He concluded that Australia has a vital role to play in ensuring
food security.[40]
3.44
However, some submitters emphasised positive impacts resulting from
restrictions on native vegetation clearing. Mrs Catherine Herbert, who voiced
support for native vegetation legislation in Queensland, argued that retention
of 30 per cent native vegetation assisted productivity:
I believe that it has been demonstrated that, if you retain
at least 30 per cent of native vegetation on land, it actually assists
productivity in a number of ways, it provides ecosystem services, shelter belts
for stock, frost protection for grass and deep nutrient recycling. So where
landholders are required to maintain vegetation of which there is no more than
30 per cent left on their property then compensation is not the issue because
in fact production is being assisted by maintaining its vegetation.[41]
3.45
Moreover, Mr Ian Herbert of the Capricorn Conservation Council
challenged the position that there had been a decline in productivity and land
value:
The second point is that agricultural employment and the
cattle herd in Queensland have increased since the total ban on clearing came
in in December 2006. So, on a macro scale, you cannot tell me that there is any
diminution of productivity. Thirdly, land values likewise have not reduced on a
macro scale. There might be some individual cases, but on a macro scale there
has been no reduction in land values.[42]
3.46
Mr Grosskopf, of the NSW Department of Environment, Climate Change and
Water, also commented on the control of invasive native species and noted that
in NSW, permits have been issued for over 1.6 million hectares of INS to be
treaded with a range of treatments, including cropping.[43]
3.47
Mr Grosskopf went on to emphasise that in NSW, the decision making
framework changed as new science became available and that 'we have done that
with invasive native scrub in western New South Wales and we are doing it with
biodiversity measures and threatened species measures right now'. The NSW
government has completed a $3.4 million investment in the science of native
scrub.[44]
Ms Walmsley of the ANEDO also stated that the NSW legislation is underpinned by
some 'very good science' which takes into account salinity, water, biodiversity
and impacts. Further 'there is some incredibly good science underpinning what
areas should be conserved and what areas should be used for production for the
overall health of the landscape'.[45]
Restrictions on farming practices
3.48
A further issue raised was the long term consequences of restrictions on
farming practices with the Victorian Farmers Federation stating that
'regulations or planning restrictions that impeded the capacity to adapt are
likely to result in poor environmental outcomes'.[46]
3.49
Individual farmers provided the committee with examples of restrictions
to innovative farming practices. Mr Geoff Patrick commented that the restrictions
on any improvement in grass production either introduced or native can only
have a negative influence on production and soil health. Soil health is mainly dependent
on residual grass being converted to soil carbon which also improves water retention.
He continued:
Those people who think or believe that grass species introduced
to a different area is a negative idea are ill informed. A lot of our native
grasses have developed to adapt to land that has been neglected or in many
cases exposed to regular fire etc and are unsuitable for soil repair and stock
feed. They have evolved into quick germination with rapid maturity species
intent only on survival, providing little litter for soil production or animal
feed over a very short time.[47]
3.50
Mr Ben Nicholls also commented on his attempts to improve his farming
practices through the introduction of tramline farming. He noted that the
introduction of tramline farming would require the clearing of individual trees
and the inability to do so 'is forcing me to stay in old fashioned farming
systems using large gear, which I do not want to continue using on this
country. It is stopping me being viable over the long term.'[48]
Conversion for leasehold to
freehold
3.51
The committee was provided with many examples of caveats imposed on
landholders who have changed their land title from leasehold to freehold. Such
caveats include a limit or ban on certain activities including bans on cutting
dead wood, lighting fires and growing particular grasses. Mr William Newcomen
commented:
The proposed freehold agreement from the NSW Land and
Property Management Authority, places 873 hectares in a covenant which includes
such restrictions as the prohibition of any clearing of native vegetation,
tillage or application of herbicide or establishment of non-native crops or
exotic pasture species or the logging of native vegetation.
Some of the land which has been covered by this proposed
covenant is improved pasture which has some exotic pasture species amongst the
grasses or has saltbush plots on it.[49]
3.52
The NSW Farmers' Association commented that in some cases in NSW, caveats
that chemicals cannot be used to control noxious weeds as they might damage
native plants are being added to freehold titles.[50]
Mr Roger McDowell argued that the caveats entailed in conversion to freehold
not only restrict productivity but also mean that landholders cannot make their
land drought resistant:
The caveats include bans on cutting dead wood, lighting
fires, and the growing particular grasses which are capable of outcompeting
undesirable weeds and other detrimental vegetation. These caveats will place
land holders in a position where they cannot make their land productive and
drought resistant, and therefore they will remain reliant on government
assistance during droughts.[51]
3.53
Some witnesses stated that the caveats were in some instances so onerous
that the viability of properties was placed in jeopardy. Another farmer stated
they had recently purchased a leasehold rural property which was in the process
of conversion to freehold title. As a consequence, 'the application to freehold
contained covenances which restricted the use of certain areas of this
property, making these areas no long viable as a rural
enterprise'.[52]
3.54
Ms Louise Burge described the implications for landholders in NSW who
didn't convert their land to freehold title as well as for those who didn't
want to accept the respective caveats and sought to remain under a leasehold
arrangement:
Although many properties have converted from perpetual to
freehold, example exists of where landholders on the advice of solicitors, did
not convert as their legal advice did not indicate any risk from maintaining
the status quo.
The Government has now substantially increased perpetual
lease rentals in excess of 1000% and much more in many cases. Farmers are left
with the choice of paying exorbitant rental increases and accepting draconian
covenanting arrangements. Those wishing to convert face excessive rental fees
beyond the income capacity of the property in some cases. The alternative is to
buy out the lease, or convert, but the Government is imposing covenant
conditions that remove existing use rights.[53]
3.55
Mr Armstrong of the NSW Farmers' Association also highlighted the
potential increase in the rental for those who don't accept the caveats under
the freehold title:
Why I say it is worse than that is the penalty: if you do not
accept the caveat or the negotiated position that might follow from that, the
potential increase in the rental to maintain it as a perpetual lease is in the
vicinity of about 5,000 per cent in some cases.[54]
3.56
Witnesses commented that there was a disincentive to convert from
leasehold to freehold because of the caveats now being placed on freehold
titles. Mr Viv Forbes also argued that this was short-sighted as leaseholders
placed lesser priority on improving their leased landholdings. He commented
that freehold land is beautifully maintained and that 'private ownership of
land gives people an incentive to maintain and conserve its value'.[55]
Other impacts
3.57
A number of other impacts were identified by submitters including that
of constraints on the ability to access finance and an inability to invest in
new technologies resulting from a lack of financial confidence and certainty.
It was acknowledged, moreover, that some landholders are 'internalising' the
involved costs in managing land restricted under the native vegetation
legislation including the payment of rates.
3.58
Mrs Kerr of the National Farmers' Federation contended that:
...the vast majority of farmers are actually internalising that
cost. Where they do not move off their land or seek to move into other
businesses or other farms or other areas, they are actually internalising that
cost. There is a whole lot of information and data on that—the Productivity
Commission report on regulatory red tape, for example, documents that quite widely.
So it is not just the cost of moving away or doing other things; it is the
internalisation by many farmers of those costs.
3.59
In terms of the rates alone, Mr Robert Zonta stated that for 170
hectares of land held under the native vegetation legislation which is
therefore unproductive, his rates amounted to $4,000 a year.[56]
3.60
In relation to the internalisation of involved costs, a number of
landholders submitted that they were forced to work off-farm to cover losses.[57]
Others contended that they had sold land as a means of covering their ongoing
costs whilst others still were forced to sell.[58]
3.61
Mr Paul and Mrs Gwenda Johnston contended that forced sales are:
...occurring quite often because the property will no longer
service the debt that was originally borrowed to set it up, mainly because the
forecast of the income has not been able to meet the budget because of native
vegetation restrictions applied to them after purchase not allowing for the
development of the property to service the debt.[59]
Impact on land value
3.62
In its 2004 report, the Productivity Commission estimated that the
economic impact of broadscale clearing restrictions could be substantial:
Any reduction in expected net farm returns will roughly
translate into a commensurate decline in current property values. Evidence was
received from a number of participants about the increasing gap between the
values of uncleared and cleared land, where the gap cannot be explained by the
costs of clearing and differences in land quality.
Furthermore, a reduction in anticipated returns – or simply
an increase in the risk premium because of the uncertainty surrounding the
impact of native vegetation regulations – will also affect farm investment and
the willingness of finance providers to lend.[60]
3.63
The evidence the committee received indicates that position has not
changed since the Productivity Commission reported and land values continue to
decline as a result of native vegetation laws.
3.64
Mr John Cotter of AgForce Queensland commented to the committee it is
not only the immediate devaluation of that land to the individual which is of a
concern but also the ongoing productive capacity and the ongoing, growing value.
He went on to state:
If you look at land values in Queensland from 2001 to now,
that land that was locked up in 2001 and 2002 has probably maintained its value
or diminished in value, while the rest of the valuations across the state have
probably gone up by 200, 300 or 400 per cent, and will in the next 25 years.
So, speaking as someone who has had a lifelong involvement with the land, it is
that ongoing, growing value that is being diminished and done away with.[61]
3.65
Whilst the NSW Farmers' Association conceded that there is 'no
comprehensive quantitative data regarding the diminution of land asset value
and productivity on farmers', the committee received numerous submissions from
landholders detailing such losses.[62][63]
A small sample of the evidence provided by individual landholders is as
follows:
Western Australian landholder:
Unencumbered, our property, based on comparable market
values, would be worth approximately $2 million at this point in time. Due to
the fact that the property is tied up in native vegetation and DRF rulings, it
is virtually valueless.
If we had been able to clear the 400 acres as originally
approved, comparable figures put annual profit at approximately $50 per acre in
real terms, or $20,000 per year. Over the 12 year time frame, this equates to
$240,000 in lost income.[64]
New South Wales landholder:
The remnant vegetation area on my farm would be worth $250
per hectare if lucky, compared to cleared grazing land worth $750 per hectare.[65]
Queensland landholder:
We have had approximately 600 acres affected by the
Vegetation Management Act. When we purchased this land under freehold tenure we
believed that meant we had the right to develop this land. Since these laws
have been introduced the value of the affected land is negligible. An identical
neighbouring cleared block recently sold for $24,000 per acre while our land
would be virtually worthless. This would be a net loss of $14.4m. There has
been no compensation paid. We still pay rates on this land which is in a word
'frozen'.[66]
3.66
Property Rights Australia provided the following detailed case:
Case study: Property ‘A’
Property “A” consists predominately of
mulga land types and is located in the Charleville Area within Murweh Shire.
This property has the following attributes:
Average
rainfall:
460mm (18.5”)
Area: 18,989 ha
Tenure: freehold
Country
description:
Land
systems on the property are mulga and poplar box dominant, with areas of
beefwood, ironwood, corkwood, silver leaf ironbark and kurrajong. Soils are
predominantly deep red earths.
Highest
and best use:
cattle grazing
Water: watered by an
equipped bore and a number of earth dams
Improvements
and development: The property is reasonably improved for grazing with fencing,
yards, water facilities and buildings. About 7,846 ha (41%) has been cleared
with the balance of 11,134 ha (59%) comprising remnant regional ecosystems
containing standing timber.
Vegetation
map status:
A
property map of assessable vegetation (PMAV) has been registered over the
property. This indicates 7,846 ha is mapped as category X vegetation.
CALA assessment: In June 2006,
NRMW assessed the area affected to be 11,048 ha or 58% of the property. A later
PMAV over the property increased the area of assessed category X vegetation
(able to be cleared) which effectively reduced the affected area (CALA) to
7,643 ha or 40% of the property. This reduced CALA area of 7,643 ha represents
the development potential of the property that has been lost; this has been
used to assess the diminution in market value.
Carrying
capacity (present development): 1 AE to 20.0 ha (949 AE)
Carrying capacity (potential): 1 AE to 10.0 ha
(1,898 AE)
Assessed diminution in market value:
1. Assessed market value present
development with potential: 18,980ha @ $105 per ha improved ($2100 per Beast
Area Value) – $1,992,900
2. Less assessed present market value
present development without potential 18,980ha @ $65 per ha improved ($1300 per
BAV) – $1,233,700
Reduction in
market value: $759,200
This represents a 38% reduction in market value
Source: Property Rights
Australia, Submission 14, pp 22–23.
3.67
The NSW Regional Community Survival Group detailed the diminution of
land asset value amongst its members. In relation to the findings of a survey
of 103 landholders responsible for 523 834.4 hectares of which 307 137.11
hectares or 59 per cent was affected by invasive native scrub (INS), the group
stated:
At the time of the survey, average land values for improved
country were between Three hundred and seventy dollars ($370) and Four hundred
and eighty five dollars ($485) per hectare. Unimproved country affected by INS
had a commercial value of between Fifty dollars ($50) and One hundred and
twenty five dollars ($125) per hectare.
On today's market improved country in our region is valued at
between Five hundred and fifty dollars ($550) and Seven hundred and fifty
dollars ($750) per hectare. The value of unimproved country that is affected by
INS now has a commercial value of between Twenty dollars ($20) and Ninety
dollars ($90) per hectare. This disparity in value has emerged exclusively due
to the impacts of NSW State legislation and the increasing degradation of those
areas significantly impacted upon by INS.[67]
3.68
Other submitters noted that while their property value may have
increased, it had not reached the full potential.[68]
3.69
Such views were echoed by the Productivity Commission in its 2004
inquiry report on native vegetation and biodiversity regulations:
Native vegetation and biodiversity regulations have reduced
the values of properties on which the income-earning potential has fallen
because permission to clear native vegetation has been refused, or because
there is uncertainty about the future ability to clear.[69]
3.70
However, in a letter to the committee, Mr Paul Henderson, Chief Minister
of the Northern Territory stated that:
...there is no evidence of diminution of land asset values in
the Territory as a result of land clearing laws or proposals for greenhouse gas
abatement measures. Indeed, in the only area of the Territory where close
control of land clearing has been shown to be necessary to protect
non-production values and especially river condition, I am informed that there
have been considerable increases in the market value of land.[70]
3.71
It is clear that the impact of these regulations varies dramatically
across the country and even within states, depending on the location of the
property involved as well as the local impact of the regulations. The lack of
comprehensive data prevents state-wide or national assessments of the impact of
these regulations on land value, but also does not necessarily undermine the
legitimacy of such claims.
Impact of assessment and compliance regimes
3.72
Much of the evidence in relation to the assessment and compliances
regimes centred on their implementation. However, there was also comment
questioning whether the basis of the assessment and compliance regimes actually
reflected the intention of the legislation.
3.73
In relation to the latter issue, Mr Max Rheese of the Australian
Environment Foundation, pointed to the Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists'
comments on the NSW Native Vegetation Act 2003. The Wentworth Group
noted in 2002 that the legislation had failed to achieve its objectives arguing
that:
Clear distinction needs to be made between the need to stop
broadscale clearing of remnant native vegetation and the need to control shrub
invasion in the semi-arid pastoral areas of Australia.[71]
3.74
Mr Rheese commented that such a distinction was largely absent in the
application of native vegetation legislation.[72]
The Australian Environment Foundation also commented on the lack of a national
framework:
Australia does not have a national framework for achieving
conservation outcomes on private land. In general funding programs tend to be
short term or follow electoral cycles. In the absence of a National Stewardship
Program, Australia has relied on laws and regulations to achieve conservation
outcomes.
This simplistic approach has not adequately assessed the
benefits to the environment achieved through collaborative partnership with
private landholders. There are a range of opportunities where working with
private landholders could deliver improved species monitoring and open up
pathways to on-farm education activities. A regulatory focus to achieve
outcomes also limits the potential for private landholder engagement with
threatened species recovery programs.[73]
3.75
Other witnesses commented that the regimes have become 'tree-centric'
rather than looking at the environment as a whole. Mr Nicholls commented:
It is tree-centric. It is not an environmental, holistic
approach to native veg, to the environment; it is just tree-centric. It is
definitely not the way forward.[74]
3.76
This view was supported by the Carbon Sense Coalition:
Trees, like every other species on earth, are continually
giving birth to suckers and seedlings which immediately seek to dominate any
unguarded soil space.
Strangely though, in a very lop-sided vegetation management
policy, most controls are now being directed at allowing still more trees to
invade food producing grasslands and open forest. They do not need help – trees
relentlessly invade most grasslands if not subject to competition, fire or the
axe.[75]
3.77
In regard to tree growth, particular concern was raised about trees as a
threat to grassland and in turn, therefore, food production. For example, Mr
John Stewart held that:
Also, if we are going to have 36 million people in this
country we will need to think about getting some grass growing too. If we have
grass, we can convert that into food. I just think we need to have a balance,
not to blindly say to everyone, 'Go and plant trees.'[76]
3.78
The Carbon Sense Coalition argued along similar lines in relation to the
eucalyptus:
Australia's main tree species, the eucalypts, produce no food
for humans except honey and grubs, and compete strongly for land against all
food producing species, especially native grasslands supporting grazing
animals. Both black and white settlers have seen the danger posed to their food
supply by invasion of eucalypt scrub into productive grasslands.[77]
3.79
The committee was also provided with examples where landholders had
proposed initiatives to conserve native vegetation and manage their land
responsibly but which, because they did not fall within the strict frameworks
of the native vegetation regimes, were not permitted. Mr Nicholls's experience
is one case in point:
I offered, if I could take out these individual trees on this
cultivation country, to plant a corridor to replace that. I was not allowed to
do that. I wanted to connect the river corridor with a large timbered area on
the property. It was another wildlife corridor, which, as I said, we have
80 kilometres of. So I was trying to do the right thing. But that was not
what they want; they want control of those trees and of that land. There are
only 80 trees on 800 acres.[78]
3.80
In relation to the implementation of the assessment and compliance
regimes, concerns about the broad rules, complex application process,
inadequate flexibility to take regional and local conditions into account,
mistakes, the need for reassessment and concerns in relation to mapping and the
expense were raised with the committee.
Assessment and compliance across
states and territories
3.81
In NSW, as noted in Chapter 2, clearing
remnant native vegetation or protected regrowth requires approval under the Native
Vegetation Act 2003 (NV Act) unless clearing is a permitted activity.
Approvals can be sought from the local Catchment Management Authority (CMA)
which applies an Environment Outcomes Assessment Methodology when assessing an
application to clear. Voluntary Property Vegetation Plans (PVPs) are negotiated
between the landholder and CMA. Clearing proposals can form part of a PVP and
incorporate offsets to meet the 'improve or maintain' environmental outcomes
test required under the NV Act.[79]
3.82
In Queensland, clearing remnant vegetation on a regional ecosystem map
or remnant map requires development approval unless it is an exempt activity.
An application has to be made to the respective department for a development
approval. The department then uses regional vegetation management codes to assess
applications for clearing native vegetation.[80]
Similarly, in Western Australia, a permit is required from the respective
department unless the vegetation in question is subject to an exemption.[81]
Implementation of assessment and
compliance regimes
3.83
Whilst the assessment processes and compliance regimes in each state and
territory vary, concerns of a similar nature were raised across the country.
Underlying such concerns was the belief that the local expertise of farmers,
many of whom had farmed their land over decades and had therefore a vested
interest in sustainable farming, as well as the specificity of local conditions
were inadequately considered.
3.84
In relation to Victoria, the Victorian Farmers Federation (VFF)
commented that the regime ignored that the stocks of native vegetation across
the state, and even within regions, are not equal. The VFF stated:
The amount of land clearance that has occurred in the
northern and central parts of Victoria is much greater than in the North East
and East Gippsland. The impact of the removal of a 5 large trees in North
Central, in most cases would be of more significance than the removal of 5
large trees in East Gippsland yet the exemptions treat them as the same.[82]
3.85
Many other witnesses also argued that the assessment regimes were
inflexible and failed to take local conditions into account. Mr Graham Kenny
stated:
In selected circumstances, you can apply to undertake
thinning in certain regional ecosystems. But what invariably happens is that,
when you get down to the nitty-gritty, the code becomes overly restrictive –
you have to jump through all these hoops to access the code and then tick the
boxes – and you just cannot get a permit. They say that you can just apply for
a permit and you can do thinning, but then they just close it off through the
code being overly restrictive. What happens is that the thickening continues
and productivity suffers as a result.[83]
3.86
The Cobar Vegetation Management Committee commented that the laws do not
allow for day to day or season to season land management decisions to be made
in a timely manner.[84]
AgForce Queensland argued:
Our concern is that this forces the retention of vegetation
in an arbitrary manner, and is not based on appropriate scientific assessment.
Intent is a blunt tool which takes no account of condition. For example,
ongoing land management of issues such as fuel loads and fire regimes as well
as pest and weed management on a landscape that could become entirely
unproductive.[85]
3.87
Many landholders indicated that the assessment regimes are a formulaic
assessment which did not take into account all circumstances. Mr Kenny
contended that:
The lesson I can see in this is that, in applying regulation
to the management of landscapes, the simplistic tick-a-box assessment codes do
not provide sufficient flexibility to deal with the infinite degree of
diversity in situations that arise at a property level throughout a state as
big as Queensland.[86]
3.88
This view was shared by Mr Adrian and Mrs Ellen Smith, who argued that
there is a need for some form of native vegetation regulation, but assessment
should be on a 'per holding basis as opposed to a whole catchment based
approach'.[87]
However, other witnesses noted that in some instances assessments per holding
have resulted in perverse outcomes particularly where vegetation types on
properties are captured within the scope of the native vegetation laws are not
rare or endangered. Ms Dixie Nott gave evidence on this point:
The vegetation types on my property are around 97 per cent
intact in the local region. They are hardly rare or endangered. One of the
reasons quoted for the necessity of the regrowth legislation was to protect
endangered regrowth vegetation and landscapes that badly need trees. I do not
think my property badly needs trees.[88]
3.89
The committee was also provided with examples of apparently inconsistent
assessments; where one land owner was assessed differently from a neighbour
with seemingly similar land.[89]
3.90
Other submitters raised concerns regarding the costs involved in trying
to secure a permit to clear native vegetation. Mr Suryan Chandrasegaran noted
that:
Obtaining a permit is a costly and time-consuming process,
and there is no guarantee that the permit will be granted.[90]
3.91
Others detailed the complex and time-consuming negotiations they had
been drawn into to obtain permission to clear land. Mrs Sharmaine Hurford
submitted:
We applied for a permit to clear on the 13th of
September 2002. After several extensions a negative decision was made on the 31st
of March, 2004. We applied for compensation on the 13th of November
2006. We were informed we were not entitled to compensation because we had
applied under the previous legislation which was introduced after we purchased.
An application for a Fodder Permit for the 4,225 Ha was made
on the 13th of February 2007. A decision was made on the 2nd
of May, 2007. We were granted a restricted permit for approximately 1,000Ha.
This permit is complex with the area actually able to be utilized even further
reduced.[91]
3.92
Such views reflected the findings of the Productivity Commission in its
2004 inquiry report which stated that the 'focus of the regimes on preventing
clearing of native vegetation often seems several steps removed from achieving
desired environmental outcomes'. Moreover, the Productivity Commission stated
in recommendation 10.5 that greater flexibility 'should be introduced in
regulatory regimes to allow variation in requirements at the local level'.[92]
3.93
In response to concerns regarding the regulatory framework, in 2005,
COAG encouraged the continued examination on the part of state and territory
governments of appropriate regulations related to native vegetation and
biodiversity. In 2006, COAG agreed to reduce the regulatory burden across all
three levels of government including through measures to ensure 'best practice
regulation making and review' as well as action to address the six specific
regulation 'hotspots' where cross-jurisdictional overlap is impeding economic
activity. The same year, COAG agreed to add environmental assessment and
approval processes as an area for cross-jurisdictional regulatory reform.[93]
However, evidence before this committee suggested that the regulations remain
too rigid and in some instances, counterproductive.
Reassessment and appeal processes
3.94
Concerns raised in relation to mapping focused on inaccuracies and the
onus on landholders to prove such inaccuracies.[94]
Mr John Burnett provided evidence of his experience in relation to mapping:
Mapping inaccuracies are a huge problem with current
legislation: the vegetation in many of the areas has been responsibly
controlled in the last 3 years; some areas are regrowth, which has been
cleared and are in fact now labelled 'remnant vegetation'. All costs associated
with rectifying problems with the government maps are borne entirely by the
landholder.[95]
3.95
Dr Lee McNicholl argued that there were substantial inaccuracies in
mapping and with the process of contesting the inaccuracies:
If you want to contest the maps you have to go to the expense
yourself to get on-ground truthing, with GPS coordinates, and document the
whole thing. The onus is back on you to prove that the maps are wrong, at your
expense.[96]
3.96
Mr Carl Loeskow held that Property Maps of Assessable Vegetation which
landholders have to provide to have their Regional Ecosystem Map reassessed,
have cost landholders between $3,000 and $20,000. He also contended that:
Lost productivity in times delays while incorrect maps are
investigated and ground truthed and then amended. These added costs have been
placed on some producers who have been battling drought.[97]
3.97
Another landholder expressed frustration with the bureaucratic response:
The current Native Vegetation laws seem to be viewed in
isolation of the whole ecological climate of the farm. For example – Government
officials tell farmers they have "Illegally cleared" land when there
has been naturally occurring events such as fire and wind storms which cause
management problems for Workers carrying out the day to day tasks necessary to
the keeping of livestock and managing pastures.
These same officials do not look at the fact that the same
farmer may have already been actively engaged in Landcare and Rivercare and has
fenced off waterways, prevented and controlled erosion of the riverine
environment, undertaken extensive fire reduction measures to prevent those
naturally occurring events wrecking such havoc on his land.[98]
3.98
Others raised concerns regarding the inadequacies of review mechanisms,
highlighting that in Western Australia and at the Commonwealth level, there are
no such review mechanisms. Mr Glen McLeod, Lawyer with the Pastoralists and
Graziers Association of Western Australia continued:
In Western Australia there is a ministerial appeals system. I
think it has no credibility whatsoever because it is the only major
administrative merits appeal in Western Australia that does not go to the state
administrative tribunal...No-one can really have much confidence in an appeals
system which is to the very minister who is responsible for the people who are
making the measures and issuing the various proclamations that affect people's
land. Again, it is question of credibility. As far as the Commonwealth is concerned,
there is not even a ministerial system. The minister makes decisions, and there
is no formal appeals system at all in the Commonwealth system under the EPBC
Act.[99]
Conflict between legislative
regimes
3.99
The further issue of inconsistency in application was also raised by the
President of the NSW Farmers' Association. Mr Armstrong commented that more
than one piece of environmental legislation impacted on property:
Lastly, ensure consistency of legislation. Our farmers are
out there and there are totally conflicting cases of legislation particularly
in relation to the Threatened Species Conservation Act where, on the one hand,
a mining company can clear a threatened species without impunity and knock them
all over in the case of eucalypt trees and, on the other hand, a farmer right
next door cannot clear one. That is inconsistent, it makes it incredibly
frustrating for private enterprise to operate and that is what Australia has
been built on.[100]
Relationships between landholders
and officials
3.100
In evidence, there were many comments concerning the relationship
between landholders and state officials. Many of these comments were positive.
For example, Mr Cotter from AgForce Queensland stated that policy change had
occurred in Queensland and many hectares of land had voluntarily come under the
states Nature Refuge Scheme. Mr Cotter commented:
The reason we achieved the change in that legislation was to
prove to the policymakers that it takes a balance within the vegetation and the
nature regime to achieve a good, sustainable outcome. Over the last three or
four years, landowners in this state have voluntarily put forward 1.7 million
hectares of land, in conjunction with the nature refuge scheme—where they have
had, mind you, very little compensation. They have agreed to preserve those
valued areas in coordination with government to maintain those values. So there
is a huge amount of goodwill within the land manager community to look after
these specific areas.[101]
3.101
Mr Grosskopf from the NSW Department of Environment, Climate Change and
Water also commented on the positive relationships between landholders and the
department:
I would contest that the number of farmers that are actually
working with us is significantly larger than it has been in the past and that
people can get on with the business of farming. Back in 1998, when I first
became involved in this area of work, the level of contest between these ideas
and conflict with the regulation of native was significantly greater.[102]
3.102
Mr Grosskopf went on to state that adjustments are made to address
concerns raised by landholders. However:
...the regulation of native vegetation is a contested area. It
is an area where a number of private landholders are very unhappy with the role
of government in regulating native vegetation, be it in the urban environment
or in the rural environment. But it is an area where there is a legitimate role
for government to continue to put controls in place.[103]
3.103
However, the committee also received extensive evidence that pointed to
a poor relationship between landholders and officials. Drawing on landholder
experiences in relation to the Queensland Vegetation Management Act 1999,
Mr Brett Smith noted the lack of consultation with landholders before the
legislation was enacted and raised concerns that the local and specific
knowledge of landholders in relation to their land was not adequately taken
into account. He argued that this resulted in a lack of recognition of
sustainable land practices employed by landholders including that of leaving
individual trees and conservation clumps.[104]
3.104
Mr Nicholls echoed the frustration of many landholders who felt that
they were dictated to by official measurements and computations rather than
being part of an ongoing dialogue:
What is happening is that everything—the trees et cetera—is
measured so it can go into a computer. It is all very much 'Go out and put the
tape measure around it.' The people who come out are just basically working for
the computer. You do not actually get any option to negotiate anything; the
computer tells you what to do. If the computer is tweaked at all it can have
huge ramifications—just by changing the distance trees are apart. I have been
farming some country with 60-foot implements. That is fairly wide. It is still
considered open forest. There is no way you can grow wheat in open forest. The
computer is saying, ‘You can’t touch that. That’s open forest.’ We have been
farming it for years. So, no, they’ve got no idea.[105]
3.105
The committee also received evidence that the relationship between the
respective bureaucracies and landholders had declined to the point whereby the
climate of engagement was adversarial.[106]
The Pastoralists and Graziers Association of Western Australia stated that the
relevant government agencies:
...tend to regulate with the view that they know what is best,
when in many cases it can be shown that the owner's position is at least
equally valid. It is difficult to have that view considered particularly for
smaller, non corporate owners because the process is convoluted and expensive.[107]
3.106
A number of submitters commented on difficult discussions with
departmental officials and the consequences of what they viewed as an
ever-present threat of a fine.[108]
Following negotiations with local departmental officers and 'several letters
contradicting the last one in relation to what is to be done to my excluded
land', Mr Tudor Ivanoff contended:
I am scared now to even cut down a dead tree that is
dangerous in case I get fined. My day to day activities have been impacted by
the big threat of a big fine.[109]
3.107
Mr Dale Stiller argued that the native vegetation laws had led to a loss
of trust between landholders and officials:
It was a two-way learning street where landholders and agency
staff could work together. If there was a problem out there and there were new
practices that could be brought in, they worked together. That trust has been
lost. Through the years, with this type of approach, much of that trust has
been lost. The way that government has approached drafting the legislation, the
lack of consultation and the imposition of draconian law onto landowners had
destroyed that relationship.[110]
3.108
Mr Stiller also argued that a lack of knowledge on the part of
landholders of their rights had contributed to difficult situations:
In the early days there was a complete lack of knowledge by
landholders of what their rights were. They just took at face value what the
compliance police told them. Situations were allowed to arise that should not
have happened. The compliance officers I believe are allowed to come on your
place if they have the right paperwork—I do not know whether they call it a
warrant or whatever. If they do not have that you are allowed to tell them to
get off the place. Everything that you say is used against you.[111]
3.109
Mr Stiller also raised a point in relation to the onus of proof in
relation to native vegetation laws in Queensland. He commented that he believed
that:
...you basically have to prove your innocence in this case
which is a complete reversal. It is a very disturbing departure from the norms
of law in this country.[112]
3.110
The committee is awaiting as a response to a question regarding this
issue from the Queensland Government.
3.111
The Pastoralists and Graziers Association of Western Australia noted:
Few landowners would argue against the need for measured
policies in respect of native vegetation and land management. Many have
contributed substantially to conservation via tree planting and better farming
techniques.
Instead of being recognised for innovation and climate change
credits which they have generated for the nation, rural landowners are being
increasingly penalised in the name of 'community interest,' through damaging
State actions in collaboration with the Federal Government via COAG and other
avenues.[113]
3.112
AgForce Queensland highlighted in its submission that certainty of
'position in the landscape, and the rights than an industry player has to their
resources – in this case their land' as well as certainty of product, process
and market were critical.[114]
The Tasmanian Farmers and Graziers Association expressed the concern that
native vegetation legislation had 'created confusion, particularly regarding
the referral processes, obligations of the landowner and definitions such as
change in land use'.[115]
3.113
Other submitters including p&e Law noted the need for greater
collaboration and consultation between governments at all levels and
landholders.[116]
This concern was highlighted by the Productivity Commission in its 2004 inquiry
into native vegetation regulations:
A crucial thrust of the Commission's recommendations is that
policies that fail to engage the cooperation of landholders will themselves
ultimately fail. In addition, greater transparency about the cost-benefit
trade-offs involved in providing desired environmental services would
facilitate better policy choices.[117]
Private native forest management
3.114
According to the Australian Forest Growers (AFG), native vegetation
legislation across the country is 'often complex, obstructive to production,
and discourages the acceptance of private native forestry as a viable land
use'. The AFG argued that such legislation has a negative impact on land asset
value:
The imposition of exclusion laws or limited access as a
result in a change of local, State or Federal policy results in a decline in
asset value as land which was once productive is now legislated as land that
must be 'locked up and left' with no commensurate compensation or even
stewardship payment.[118]
3.115
The AFG held that whilst in some timber production regions, more than
half of the processing sector's wood intake is from private native forest
resources, these 'commercial private native forest values are poorly recognised
in public policy, yet make an important contribution to the economic welfare of
landholders, rural communities and regional economies'.[119]
According to the AFG, native forest management legislation should be consistent
across all jurisdictions:
AFG seek that legislation and regulations that govern private
native forest management is streamlined i.e. that compliance with codes of
forest practice constitutes compliance with all Commonwealth, State and local
regulations, along with controls affecting the regeneration, management and
harvest of private native forests.[120]
Impact on families
3.116
Evidence was received of the impact of financial hardship and
uncertainty leading to considerable personal distress in farming communities.
3.117
One farmer who detailed the decline in productivity of his land as a
consequence of clearing restrictions stated:
The stress of dealing with all of the above caused health
issues for both of us. I can't put a dollar figure on that, but the impact was
significant. The people in the Government Departments we were dealing with
didn't even stay in the same office position, but the results of their
decisions stayed with us for always.[121]
3.118
For older farmers, the decrease in land values has had a detrimental
impact on retirement plans. One farmer in his seventies stated:
[we] have looked upon this property as our superannuation. It
seems our super payout could be considerably less than hoped for and that we
could be dependent on the Australian Government Pension for the rest of our
lives.[122]
3.119
Others reflected on the impact on younger generations:
The impact of the Vegetation Management laws on our family
has been profound. I can remember the day I heard the government announcement
as if it was yesterday. I was totally guttered, not only for myself, husband
and parents in law, but for our children. This day would change the future of
our family entity forever. We no longer had the ability to plan for the future,
in our generation or that of our children's. I think I cried for days. It was
like a part of me had died.[123]
3.120
Reflecting on the number of submissions from landholders who are
stressed, Mr Dale Stiller stated before the committee:
In fact, I do some across some people who are traumatised
enough by this whole process to be too afraid to even put in a submission to
this inquiry.[124]
3.121
The underlying theme across all such submissions was that in restricting
farming activity, the regulations erode what landholders believe are their
property rights, and that they are being forced to meet a significant portion
of the cost of public conservation initiatives whilst deriving few, if any,
benefits from such action.[125]
Unintended consequences for the environment
3.122
Of great concern to submitters was the apparent lack of understanding of
the long term environmental consequences of native vegetation laws on the land.
Dr Bill Burrows argued that bans on broadscale tree clearing and control of
designated regrowth affect a substantial part of Queensland's grazing land.[126]
Indeed, AgForce Queensland, Property Rights Australia and Dr Burrows held that
restrictions on thinning or clearing woodland 'thickening' have inadvertently
led to soil erosion and loss of biodiversity on the land whilst negatively
impacted on grazing and therefore productivity.[127]
3.123
Dr Burrows outlined the consequences of woodland thickening:
Tree thickening on grazing land greatly reduces potential
pasture (and hence livestock) production. In turn this lowers carrying capacity
and property viability. Tree thickening also reduces rainfall infiltration,
run-off and stream flows. It markedly changes the flora and fauna composition
(biodiversity) of affected areas. Thickening also increases mustering problems
and adds to difficulties in managing feral animals.[128]
3.124
Ms Carmel Walsh provided the following example:
When the NSW Native Vegetation laws came into effect we had
the management and improvement of 1/3 of our property taken away from us. This
area of land is primarily invasive scrub which we had intended to remove in
order to plant native grasses for ground cover and/or stock feed to be able to
run some livestock.
Since the introduction of these laws the scrubby areas have
increased and any ground cover that was there has been denuded; a major
decrease in native animal population has also been evident due to no natural
grasses and herbages. Erosion is at a peak with the formation of large gullies
resulting in some of the bigger trees (gums etc) that should remain will in
actual fact fall over due to the erosion of the soil from around the base of
them, also large amounts of top soil being washed away resulting in large
amounts of sedimentation being deposited into natural waterways.
If we cannot reverse this process in the very near future
vast tracks of not only our land but land over the whole western area will
further become scrub infested, barren, uninhabitable, and worthless for all
life forms including native animals.[129]
3.125
Prevented from managing invasive species 'woody weed', Ms Louise Burge
contends that many parts of Western NSW have been left a 'barren wasteland of
little value to biodiversity or farm production'. She continued:
Invasive or dominance of particular species types, become
'closed' stands and prevent grasses and other diverse species growth. Bare
grounds results which is then often subject to erosion after large/or flash
flood rain events.
It has been estimated in recent years, that on loamy red
earth soils (eastern section), an area of approximately 6.04 million hectares,
approximately 5,128,000 ha has been infested with invasive wood weeds (timber
and shrub species).[130]
3.126
Mr Viv Forbes of the Carbon Sense Coalition also argued that native
vegetation legislation was destroying native grasslands and stated that: 'We
are destroying one set of native vegetation with another much less useful one'.[131]
3.127
Other witnesses commented that they had observed changes in the flora
and fauna following the introduction of the native vegetation laws, for
example, as trees cannot be thinned, there has been a shift from open woodland
fauna to scrub species.[132]
3.128
Many farmers whose properties abut national parks or other Crown land
commented on the problems of vegetation management of productive land. Mr Geoff
Patrick commented:
We live in an area surrounded by National Park and forest
which has been 'locked up' for the supposed benefit of native animals and
community. Our property is a haven for mammals, reptiles and birds in stark
contrast to the surrounding area which is becoming void of the same. The
restrictions imposed by the native veg act is causing our property to
deteriorate and degenerate and my best guess is that in 25 years about half of
our 4500 acres will become as useless as the surrounding national park.
I am aware that there are many who believe that “locking up “
areas is good for all however I am also aware that most of those never venture
out of the city. I have been living and making a living farming for most of my
life and on a daily basis watch the kangaroos and emus venture out of the parks
to feed. Why, because there is nothing in there for them to eat.[133]
3.129
Submitters commented on the problems of controlling invasive species.
While it is the landholder's responsibility to control weeds etc, the inability
to clear some trees makes it unsafe to use spraying equipment and other means
to control invasive species.[134]
3.130
The Carbon Sense Coalition stated that all native vegetation had become
a liability for landowners with some opting to plant exotic plants which they
have authority to remove, harvest, prune, propagate or poison over native
plants which attract restrictions.[135]
Mr Viv Forbes commented:
Native plants—eucalypt plants specifically—are a liability on
any property now. On my property, if I see a eucalypt a few inches high it does
not get any higher. I can get rid of it when it is that height; you will never
see me. But once it gets bigger I am not allowed to touch it anymore.
Landowners are creating liabilities for themselves. But I can plant an albizia
or a tipuana. Tipuana is the best tree I have ever had on my property. It is a
beautiful, exotic tree. It is shady, it improves the soil, it drops its leaves
in winter and lets the sun through, it grows quickly and I can cut it down
whenever I like.[136]
3.131
A further matter noted by Mr Ron Bahnisch was that when the Queensland
government foreshadowed placing a ban on land clearing, a large amount of
clearing was conducted, some of which may not have been undertaken if the ban
had not been pending:
We purchased heavy machinery and for twelve months cleared
all the country that was feasible.
Given a choice, some of this land probably would never have
been cleared.
It is just an example of how the fear of compulsion will lead
to perverse outcomes.[137]
3.132
A further issue that was canvassed extensively in evidence was the
impact of native vegetation laws on fire management. The Australian Environment
Foundation (AEF), for example, commented that historic practices of low
intensity mosaic cool burning on private land was a dual purpose management
tool. This practice reduced the impacts of high intensity wildfires through
management of highly flammable understorey species. Such practice also enabled
a range of grass species to flourish, enhancing the productive value of the
land to farmers. Mosaic burning practices by farmers prior to 1990s was a
relatively common practice in many landscapes. The AEF concluded:
The introduction of native vegetation laws shifted public
opinion and historic management practises and the use of low intensity fires
became more difficult. Australia's recent bushfire history from 2002 to 2009
should encourage policy makers to revisit options for vegetation management
through the use of prescribed fire across all land tenure.[138]
3.133
However, not all witnesses considered that the native vegetation laws
could lead to adverse outcomes for the environment. Mr Ian Herbert of the
Capricorn Conservation Council, for example, questioned the view that there is
soil erosion where regrowth has taken place and trees have taken over:
I would dispute that there is soil erosion because of the
trees coming up. I contend that the one factor that is not being considered
sufficiently in all of this is stocking rates. Where stocking rates are
sufficiently low to allow ground cover – and I do not mean just grass ground
cover; I mean leaves, twigs, all sorts of vegetation that is on the ground to
break up the rain – that prevents the soil erosion. I would take people back to
pre white man. How much soil erosion was there off brigalow country before it
was cleared in the first place? I do not know if we can say that there was a
lot.[139]
3.134
Mr Herbert also stated:
I will just give you one fact about brigalow because it is
the predominant ecosystem in the Central Queensland region, going right down to
the Darling Downs. Originally there were seven million hectares of brigalow. It
is down to less than 10 per cent at the moment, and that is why it is called
endangered now. I know a lot of rural people say that it comes up and thickens
and everything, but it is very hard. Scientists from DPI have been trying to
re-establish brigalow as an ecosystem—not just the trees but the whole brigalow
ecosystem. It is extremely difficult to re-establish.[140]
Support for reform
3.135
A number of landholders and their representatives argued that the
regulatory approach was ineffective in achieving the desired sustainable
environment outcomes. The Northern Territory Cattlemen's Association commented
that a regulatory approach to vegetation management and biodiversity
conservation is expensive with high transaction costs in terms of
administering, monitoring and enforcing the legislation. These costs are borne
by landholders and by the broader Australian society.[141]
3.136
The need for change in the approach to native vegetation conservation
was supported by witnesses with Mr Kenny of Property Rights Australia stating
for example that:
The regulators appear to have approached the problem from the
point of view, 'What do we have to do to stop land clearing?' rather than,
'What do we have to do to implement a responsible approach to land management
which preserves the productive capacity and at the same time preserves
biodiversity?'[142]
3.137
The preferred alternative was that of environmental stewardship
initiatives. Mrs Deborah Kerr, the National Farmers Federation's Manager of
Natural Resource Management argued that environmental stewardship enabled
active management of environmental outcomes rather than a 'lock up and leave'
approach which much of the current legislation requires farmers to do.[143]
She argued that the National Water Initiative, an intergovernmental agreement
between Commonwealth and states and operational since 2004 made provisions for
compensation to affected entitlement holders for reduced reliability and was a
good model to draw on:
The provisions are called risk assignment. The risk
assignment clauses state that the state and Commonwealth governments and
irrigators agree that, for any change in reliability due to climate variability
or climate change, the entitlement holder, including the Commonwealth, will
bear the risk of that change. If the change is due to government policy,
governments have agreed to fund that 100 per cent. If it is in relation to new
knowledge, irrigators or entitlement holders wear the first three per cent, the
next three per cent is shared—two per cent by the state government and one per
cent by the Commonwealth, and there is a caveat on that with New South
Wales—and thereafter the Commonwealth and the state governments wear that
fifty-fifty. If you are looking for a model for compensation as something
different to market based instruments, then that is a model that is already
agreed, signed and being implemented as we speak.[144]
3.138
The Environment and Property Protection Association (EPPA) also voiced
concern that a sustainable management plan be established:
Land clearing needed to be stopped until a sustainable
management plan could be produced. This plan should have provided compensation
for loss of income and included a management plan so that sustainable
production/grazing could occur while protecting tree species and meeting the
greenhouse gas abatement requirements. Landholders should be employed as
custodians of these areas to control weeds, sucker growth and feral animals.
Regional natural resource management (NRM) groups should be involved in
developing sustainable management plans and independent valuers should be
employed to determine compensation arrangements in conjunction with NRM groups.[145]
3.139
AgForce Queensland promoted a cooperative voluntary national resource
management policy as opposed to regulation, which ensures that clearing does
not cause degradation, maintains or increases biodiversity, maintains
ecological processes, allows for ecological sustainable land use, and ensures
equity and comprehensiveness across all tenures.[146]
AgForce Queensland argued that stewardship programs have proven far more
effective and productive in producing environmental outcomes than regulatory
systems. Drawing on a number of practical examples of successful stewardship
programs, AgForce Queensland stated:
Environmental stewardship programs require some terms for
formal agreement between a landholder and the third party to manage the land.
This agreement usually sets the conservation outcomes by defining management
objectives for the land and is often incorporated in property planning Thus it
can be seen that the benefits of voluntary environmental stewardship
programmes, with proven environmental outcomes, far outweigh the social, economic
and environmental costs of a regulatory approach.[147]
3.140
Highlighting financial and market-based incentives, Growcom suggested
that the industry required the opportunity to apply voluntary industry-led
initiatives where possible to address natural resource management issues and
that:
Financial and other support for industry based programs such
as stewardship and ecosystems services, when the public benefits of natural
resource management outweigh private benefits, and when the community's
expectations of natural resource management or biodiversity conservation
restrict growers' farm management beyond current recommended practices.[148]
3.141
AgForce Queensland argued against a regulatory regime in favour of
stewardship:
...the notion of stewardship, whereby a landholder is rewarded,
either monetarily or in-kind, for additional public good that goes beyond the
'duty of care' has over the last decade been recognised as the suitable
mechanism by which to obtain public good outcomes while providing sufficient
business certainty. It rewards good stewards, providing them with certainty and
unlike the legislative option, does not disenfranchise landholders who were
otherwise doing a good job.[149]
3.142
Other submitters were in favour of greater use of market-based
instruments for vegetation management. Whilst a number of states have
implemented such approaches including Victoria and NSW, which serve as an
alternative to legislation or grants, DAFF noted the complexities involved:
To operate effectively, these programs require good information
and a legislative framework to underpin them. Particular challenges include
estimating the quality and quantity of environmental outcomes that result from
landholder actions, ensuring landholders undertake the agreed land management
actions despite the difficulty in monitoring individual actions and ensuring
any negative environmental impacts of land management are accounted for.[150]
3.143
However, drawing on case studies conducted by Australian Bureau of
Agricultural and Resource Economics (ABARE), DAFF recognised that the costs of
conserving a given level of native vegetation could be lowered if, through
market-based policy instruments, trade-offs between agricultural development in
one area and increased native vegetation conservation in another were allowed:
In other words, the considerable variation in costs of
conserving native vegetation within and across regions suggests that there may
be scope to achieve the desired level of environmental outcomes at lower cost
to the farm sector if more flexible policy instruments were adopted. All of the
ABARE studies suggest that the adoption of a more flexible approach in the way
in which environmental targets are met, may improve environmental outcomes that
are of benefit to society in ways that minimise the costs incurred by private
landholders.[151]
3.144
The committee recognises that such an approach is also consistent with
the Kyoto Protocol given that its mechanisms are:
...based on the principle that the benefit to the climate of
reducing greenhouse gas emissions is the same regardless of where they are
reduced.[152]
3.145
The National Farmers' Federation supported the current environmental
stewardship program under the federal Caring for our Country initiative.
Under the program, direct payments are given to landholders to 'maintain and
improve the quality and extent of high public value environmental assets listed
under the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999'.[153]
However, it also raised concerns regarding the future funding of the program.
Mrs Kerr continued:
The National Farmers Federation are on record as saying that
that program needs to be expanded geographically and to cover more ecological
communities listed under the federal EPBC Act. It is going into its last year
of funding in 2010-11 and we need to look at how we can fund that into the
future. That is a really good example.[154]
3.146
In terms of the comparative size of the Caring for our Country
initiative, the Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists held that the
initiative had a budget of $400 million, the investment amounted to less than
$2 per hectare if spread across the continent. By comparison, it noted that the
estimated cost of repairing the damage to Australia's natural resources is
estimated at over $80 billion.[155]
Conclusion
3.147
The evidence received by the committee points to a number of significant
negative impacts of native vegetation laws on landholders. The negative impacts
relate to diminution of productivity levels and land value. That evidence is
not dissimilar to the findings of the Productivity Commission inquiry and
research conducted by ABARE. As noted in the introduction of this chapter, the
negative impacts vary for individual landholders.
3.148
The committee acknowledges that while there are examples of landholders
and government officials working together to improved environmental outcomes,
the ever-tightening regulations in relation to native vegetation have
contributed, in some instances, to the apparent demise of good relationships
between landholders and government. Examples of inflexible application of
assessment and compliance regimes, lack of consultation with landholders and
unwillingness to take into account local knowledge and conditions have been
provided in evidence. In some cases, the problems are of such significance that
families and whole communities have been affected negatively.
3.149
The committee holds the view that the relationship between landholder
and government is paramount to ensuring positive environmental outcomes and
maximising productivity. As was put to the committee on many occasions, farmers
know their land and wish to ensure that it remains healthy and productive. Many
espoused their support for sustainable environmental outcomes and their
willingness to contribute to achieving that goal within regimes that are flexible
and that recognise the competing priorities of government environmental goals
and landholders' concerns in an equitable way.
3.150
Notwithstanding the outcomes of the current consultation in relation to Australia's
Native Vegetation Framework for the nationwide management and monitoring of
native vegetation, therefore, the committee suggests that steps be taken to
rectify the deteriorating relationship between landholders and respective
bureaucracies.
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