Chapter 5
Monitoring and evaluation of environmental offsets
5.1
This chapter considers the adequacy of monitoring and evaluation of environmental
offsets, focussing on offsets issued as conditions of approval under the EPBC
Act.
5.2
Principle 8 of the EPBC Act Offsets Policy states that suitable offsets
must 'have transparent governance arrangements including being able to be
readily measured, monitored, audited and enforced'.[1]
Submitters and witnesses generally endorsed this principle, but many queried
whether this was occurring in practice.
The key issues raised by submitters and witnesses include:
-
inadequate monitoring of compliance;
-
difficulties in evaluating the success of offsets;
-
the need for a public register of offsets;
-
security and enforceability of offsets; and
-
overall accountability and oversight of offsets.
Monitoring and compliance issues
5.3
Many submitters and witnesses were concerned that there is insufficient
monitoring of compliance with offsets conditions.[2]
For example, Friends of Grasslands submitted that the Department of the
Environment's (department) compliance audit process:
...only targets a handful of the several hundred referrals
considered each year. Many of these audits find instances of non-compliance
(although in some cases these are administrative or minor rather than impacting
on conservation values). However, it does indicate that non-compliance with
EPBC approvals is occurring and that perhaps resources need to be made
available for more auditing to occur.[3]
5.4
Ms Beverley Smiles of the Central West Environment Council expressed
concern that there is general lack of oversight of offsets and, in particular,
inadequate on the ground monitoring by the federal government under the EPBC
Act.[4]
5.5
In this context, there was discussion of the need for government
departments to have sufficient staffing and resources for monitoring and
compliance.[5]
As the Environmental Decisions Group submitted:
Monitoring and evaluation of environmental offsetting is
crucial to determine whether the anticipated environmental outcomes from an
offset proposal are actually realised on the ground...It is crucial that the
Department of the Environment has the resources and capacity to evaluate the
effectiveness of environmental offsetting policy.[6]
5.6
Some submitters and witnesses suggested that the costs of monitoring and
reporting should be 'borne by proponents as an integral part of delivering the
offset'.[7]
For example, Friends of Grasslands submitted that:
Offset sites need to be monitored for a long enough period to
ensure compliance and attainment of the required gains. This takes resources,
which should be part of the offset package (and cost of the development).[8]
5.7
Another suggestion was that the reporting requirements for offsets could
be improved.[9]
The EPBC Act Offsets Policy states that:
Proponents, or their contracts, must report on the success of
offsets...Annual reports will be required by the department and, where possible,
will be made publicly available.[10]
5.8
However, Friends of the Earth Australia noted that they had been 'unable
to find any offsets reports, either from the department or proponents, and
suggested that all offsets should be required to 'have standardised reporting
requirements'.[11]
5.9
NELA agreed that 'project approvals must contain mechanisms to support
long term monitoring, administrative and evaluation of offset sites and
activities'. NELA noted that the Curtis LNG project (outlined at Appendix 5)
'contained no conditions relating to offset monitoring requirements'.[12]
5.10
In this context, some submitters and witnesses contrasted the EPBC Act
offsetting system with the carbon offsets system. For example, Dr Su Wild-River
submitted that 'the monitoring and evaluation of EPBC offsets is less stringent
than those applied to NCOS carbon offsets'.[13]
Ms Pethybridge of the Indigenous Land Corporation agreed that the carbon‑farming
initiative is a good example of a 'verified offsetting system that enables
offsets to be clearly quantified and audited'.[14]
5.11
The department advised that their EPBC monitoring and audit program
'aims to measure and improve an approval holder's compliance with the relevant
instrument of decision, and ensure projects and required offsets are
implemented as planned'. The department further advised that this compliance monitoring
is carried out in a number of ways, including:
...through periodic desktop reviews; as a result of receipt of
an allegation of non‑compliance; or prompted by submission of a plan for
approval or an annual compliance report or certificate, which are common
conditional requirements.[15]
5.12
The department also submitted that its compliance audits usually take 'the
form of a desktop document review followed by a site inspection, if necessary'.[16]
A departmental representative acknowledged that 'as with most regulators,
there is room for improvement' in the way in which the department undertakes
compliance activities.[17]
5.13
The department informed the committee that since July 2006, audits have
been undertaken on 33 projects that include environmental offsets. The department's
compliance audit reports are available on the department's website.[18]
In addition, the department advised that:
...other independent audits of projects that may involve
environmental offsets are also commissioned outside of the auditing plan through
the inclusion of a standard condition in the project approval that requires an
independent audit of the conditions of approval to be conducted within a
specified timeframe. This requirement has been included in approximately 60
higher risk projects.[19]
5.14
In response to questioning on this issue, a departmental representative
stated:
If we had more resources, we could undertake more
inspections. That is self-evidently true. In terms of whether that is a
necessary thing in discharging the government's obligations under the EPBC Act:
I do not believe that that is proven, and it would not be my view that it
should occur necessarily.[20]
5.15
The committee notes that a recent independent review found a number of
problems with compliance monitoring with conditions of approval by the department.
In particular, the report noted that 'the large number of approved projects
across Australia (currently around 1200) means that departmental monitoring
officers cannot confirm project compliance on the ground in real time, but
depend on desktop checks'. The report recommended that resource levels within
the department should be sufficient to ensure adequate monitoring capacity. The
report noted that since June 2012, there has been a significant increase in
monitoring capacity (now around 30 staff), which allows greater oversight
of more projects. The report recommended that this increased resourcing should
be maintained as a matter of priority.[21]
5.16
The committee notes that during the recent Budget Estimates hearings,
the department advised, in response to questioning in relation to staffing
levels in the Environment Assessment and Compliance Division, that 'it is not
possible to project precisely what number of staff will be performing exactly
which activities into the future'.[22]
5.17
As noted in Chapter 2 of this report, this committee recommended in its
report relating to threatened species that the Australian National Audit Office
(ANAO) conduct an audit of monitoring of compliance with approval conditions
under the EPBC Act.[23]
The committee notes that the ANAO conducted this audit, and the report was
published in June 2014.[24]
As also noted in Chapter 2, the ANAO's report identified a number of concerns
with the Department of the Environment's compliance monitoring activities and
made a number of recommendations to address these shortcomings.
Evaluating the success of offsets
5.18
Several submitters and witnesses noted the importance of evaluating
whether offsets are working. For example, Dr Saunders from the Wentworth Group
of Scientists (Wentworth Group) told the committee that:
...offsets theoretically are there for perpetuity. That means
there must be some audit process to see whether they are working...we need some
system that goes beyond just the short-term political cycle but to the
long-term generational cycle to make sure that these areas are basically mapped
so we know where they are, we know who is auditing them and we know how we deal
with them if they are not coming up to expectations'.[25]
5.19
However, many submitters and witnesses noted that there is a lack of
evidence that offsets are effective and actually achieving their intended
outcomes.[26]
This concern applied to both the outcomes in relation to individual projects
and more broadly to offsets schemes as a whole. At the broad level, for example,
ANEDO lamented the 'dearth of evidence to show that offset schemes actually
achieve the intended biodiversity outcomes'.[27]
Dr Yung En Chee agreed, noting that 'the small amount of evidence about
outcomes from offsetting policy in Victoria indicates that it has not reduced
biodiversity loss'.[28]
5.20
Mr Boyland of the Wildlife Preservation Society of Queensland told the
committee that:
The case for offsets to achieve a positive conservation
outcome has not been made. 'Build it and they will come' does not necessarily
work in nature. Offset policies have been in place in Queensland since the
1980s and to the best of our knowledge there is no assessment available to the
public on the performance of those offsets. What evidence is there that offsets
have achieved any positive conservation outcome?[29]
5.21
Ms Smiles from the Central West Environment Council agreed that there is
'no real monitoring or measurement in any way' to see the 'actual outcome for
the species we are supposed to be protecting'.[30]
Similarly, the Conservation Council ACT region submitted that they are yet to
see examples of the successful application of offsets 'in achieving key
biodiversity outcomes'.[31]
5.22
However, the department's submission puts forward two examples of
'offsets outcomes delivered' under the EPBC Act, which it suggested
...demonstrate how offsets can operated to provide conservation
outcomes to secure, manage and improve important habitat for threatened species
and ecological communities.[32]
5.23
In one example, they noted that, since 2005, 'approximately 16,200
hectares of Carnaby's Black Cockatoo habitat has been required to be protected,
managed or rehabilitated as offsets'. The department submitted that these
offsets have compensated for 'approximately 2,800 hectares of habitat loss that
has resulted from projects approved under the EPBC Act'.[33]
5.24
Nevertheless, Friends of the Earth were concerned that none of the department's
compliance audits look at 'the extent to which the offsets are successfully (or
not) offsetting the damage that has been permitted'.[34]
Friends of Grasslands agreed that the department's compliance audit process
'does not appear to have any capacity for capturing the effectiveness
of any offset strategy'.[35]
5.25
Some submitters and witnesses acknowledged the difficulties in
evaluating the effectiveness of offsets and the EPBC Act Offsets Policy. In
particular, Dr Philip Gibbons described evaluating the effectiveness of the
federal offset policy as a 'very challenging task'.[36]
Dr Gibbons further noted that:
It is really tough to monitor the environmental outcomes,
especially in an offset scenario, because you need baseline information from
the development site—what is being lost over time; and then you need
information on the offset site—what is being gained.[37]
5.26
Another factor making it difficult to evaluate offsets are the long
time-frames involved in the restoration of ecosystems. As the department noted:
Evaluating the effectiveness of an environmental offset can
involve assessing a variety of different variables, such as tenure security,
ecological improvements of an offset over time and the ability of an offset to
address threats to a protected matter. The effective measurement of
environmental gains from an offset against a specified baseline requires
sufficient time to pass to deliver meaningful results.[38]
5.27
In this context, several submitters and witnesses acknowledged that, it
is too early to evaluate the success or otherwise of many individual offsets,
and in particular, the effectiveness of the EPBC Act Offsets Policy, which has
only been in place for a just over a year.[39]
For example, ANEDO acknowledged that 'in most cases it is too early to say
whether an offset mechanism has been restored to an equivalent of the ecosystem
that was cleared at the development site'.[40]
5.28
The EIANZ agreed that it is 'too early' to assess whether the use of
environmental offsets under the EPBC Act is 'delivering effective outcomes in
terms of the protection and management of biodiversity values'.[41]
5.29
NELA concurred that the short history of offsets in Australia means that
'there is inadequate evidence of the long-term effectiveness of any offsets to
date':
In particular, there is very limited data on the
environmental outcomes of offset projects, nor is there a coordinated program
of evaluation that would inform future offsetting arrangements.[42]
5.30
Dr Gibbons suggested that monitoring and evaluation 'needs to be
undertaken by a qualified, appropriate third party' and requires a
'program-wide monitoring of environmental outcomes'. He proposed that:
...individual proponents should report data related to
compliance at a project level and a dedicated third party should collect
environmental data at a program level. The federal government should make these
data available publicly.[43]
5.31
Some suggested there needs to be an audit or review of 'all offsets to
date, to inform future offset proposals and inform the public of capacity for
offsets to meet their objectives'.[44]
Several submitters and witnesses pointed to the recent Productivity Commission report
(outlined in Chapter 2) which recommended an independent and public national
review of environmental offset policies and practices to report by the end of
2014.[45]
5.32
As noted in Chapter 2 of this report, this committee recommended in its
report relating to threatened species that the department:
...conduct an audit and evaluation of the offsets granted under
the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 to date, and
make the results of this audit publicly available.[46]
5.33
The committee notes that, at the time of writing, there has been no
government response to this report, nor this recommendation.
5.34
In relation to the evaluation of offsets, a representative of the department
advised that 'there is empirical evidence that offsets are successful when they
are implemented correctly'.[47]
However, the department also noted that their focus at this point is on
'ensuring that there is compliance with the conditions'.[48]
The department further advised that:
The policy and offsets assessment guide were scheduled to
undergo a technical review one year from release and a complete review of
effectiveness against the aims of the policy every five years thereafter. The
performance of the offsets policy against the stated objectives will be
evaluated as part of these review processes, this will include evaluations of
the environmental performance of offsets required under the policy.[49]
5.35
At the same time, the department noted that:
The one year technical review has been temporarily delayed to
allow consideration of state and territory processes that may need to be
accredited through the 'one stop shop' policy. The evaluation of offset
effectiveness and performance will also be a feature of the Department's
ongoing assurance and policy role under the Australian Government's 'one stop
shop' policy for environmental approvals.[50]
Monitoring and evaluation: need for a public register of offsets
5.36
Submitters and witnesses suggested that the problems relating to monitoring
and evaluation of offsets are compounded due to lack of transparency and public
information available in relation to offsets. The committee heard that
stakeholders have had difficulty identifying the offsets that have been put in
place in many jurisdictions because there are no publicly available maps or
registers of offsets. For example, Ms Woods of Lock the Gate Alliance told the
committee that:
It is difficult to make rigorous analysis of the offsetting
system, because there is not that much public information available. There is
no register that I am aware of where you can see properties that have been set
aside as offsets and the mechanisms that have been used to protect them.[51]
5.37
WWF Australia agreed that there is little public information to:
...determine if environmental offsets are achieving intended
outcomes, whether development proponents are compliant with their offset
obligations or where offset funds have been invested.[52]
5.38
Dr Gibbons similarly told the committee that 'it is difficult to
evaluate the effectiveness of the federal offset policy to date' because 'we
have a poor evidence base'. In particular, he pointed to the lack of public
register maintained by the department. He concluded that 'in terms of
environmental outcomes, we do not know what is going on because these data are
not adequately collected'.[53]
5.39
Due to the difficulties with monitoring and evaluation, and the need for
greater transparency in offsetting processes (as discussed in Chapter 4), many submitters
and witnesses supported the development of an online public register of
offsets.[54]
For example, Ms Woods from Lock the Gate Alliance observed that:
...the failure here is partly just one of record keeping... there
is simply no public register. The jurisdictional difficulty with that, I think,
is something that certainly needs to be addressed. New South Wales makes
decisions and puts offsets aside, and then the federal government is asked to
consider offsets, and it is simply not aware of decisions the state has made
that one area or another ought to be an offset. So a public register would be
extraordinarily helpful...[55]
5.40
The Wentworth Group submitted that an independently maintained public
register 'is essential to avoid duplication of offsets and for evaluation of
the success or otherwise of offsets in restoring landscape processes'.[56]
5.41
The Interdisciplinary Conservation Science Research Group suggested that
a public register would not only allow the effectiveness of offsets to be
measured and evaluated over time, but would also improve public confidence in
the offsetting process.[57]
5.42
Some noted that Western Australia does have a public register of
offsets.[58]
Dr Gibbons described the Western Australia register as a 'good example of
the type of information that should be contained' in a public register' and as
a 'great step forward in terms of compliance':
...it gives the latitudes and longitudes of all sites and how
much was to be cleared—the Western Australian one also goes through all the
steps and tells you the status of all the steps: when the assessment was
started and finished, when the offset activities began, whether they have
commenced and what offset activities are going on.[59]
5.43
The committee notes that the EPBC Act Offsets Policy commits to a
publicly available register of offsets:
All offsets will be registered and details, such as spatial
information (for example GPS data), information on the relevant protected
matters and the ongoing managed actions required will be recorded. This
information will be made publicly available on the department's website where
it is appropriate to do so.[60]
5.44
However, as submitters and witnesses noted, this register has not been
established nor made publicly available.[61]
This was acknowledged by the department, which submitted that the public
register is:
...currently being considered in the context of improved
management and display of environmental information that will support the
government's 'one stop shop' policy.[62]
5.45
In response to questioning on this issue, a representative of the department
agreed that 'it would be desirable to have an offset register, and it is a
recommendation that we are progressing within the department presently'.[63]
The representative further advised that, in the absence of a register of
offsets, 'we use the knowledge and information available to staff in terms
around species and particular ecosystems' to ensure that sufficient offsets are
available.[64]
Security and enforceability of offsets
5.46
In relation to the enforceability of offsets, submitters and witness
raised two key issues:
-
mechanisms for securing offsets in the long term; and
-
whether offsets conditions are adequately enforced.
Mechanisms for securing offsets
5.47
Many submitters identified the need for offsets to be
'in perpetuity'.[65]
As such, many submitters and witnesses emphasised the need for offsets to have
long-term legal and financial security.[66]
For example, ANEDO submitted that:
An offset area must be legally protected and managed in
perpetuity, as the impact of the development is permanent. Offset areas should
not be amenable to being offset again in the future.[67]
5.48
The EPBC Act Offsets Policy does provide some guidance as to the
appropriate tenure for offsets, where it states that:
...the tenure of the offset should be secured for at least the
same duration as the impact on the protected matter arising from the action,
not necessarily the action itself...the best legal mechanisms for protecting land
are intended to be permanent (lasting forever) and are secure (that is, they
are difficult to change or alter).[68]
5.49
The EPBC Act Offsets Policy then canvasses suitable mechanisms for
offsets depending on tenure.[69]
The department stated that the policy 'explicitly requires that offsets be in
place for the duration of the impact' and that:
For permanent impacts, this would require an offset to
deliver an enduring conservation gain. In many cases for offsets that aim to
avert a future loss, this requires the permanent protection of areas of
habitat.[70]
5.50
The EPBC Act Offsets Policy identifies conservation agreements, under
the EPBC Act, and conservation covenants, in the states and territories, as the
appropriate legal mechanisms. The policy states that these mechanisms 'enable
the protection of land that is set aside for environmental purposes on a
permanent or long‑term basis'.[71]
5.51
However, Mr Sydes of Environmental Justice Australia observed that legal
security for offsets can be difficult, telling the committee that for offsets:
...to be credible, they really need to be long term, secure and
in perpetuity. Designing a regime to ensure that that happens, putting in place
the legal security mechanisms, bonds and all that sort of thing to actually
secure that obligation, is enormously difficult.[72]
5.52
Mr Sydes further observed that 'having good legal security mechanisms in
place would be a very significant advance over the current situation':
...we are sold a pup in many cases. There are offset
commitments made on the basis of promises that are effectively unenforceable
and never followed up or monitored. One thing we could do, if we are insistent
on using offsets, is pay much more attention to how those offsets are actually
secured.[73]
5.53
Ms Doherty from the NSW Minerals Council observed that there has been
some uncertainty about the appropriate legal mechanism to secure offsets.[74]
She noted that 'whole raft of different mechanisms that can be used', but the
most common one used in recent years is a voluntary conservation agreement.[75]
5.54
Indeed, there was considerable discussion during the committee's inquiry
about the various mechanisms for securing offsets, including conservation
agreements and conservation covenants.[76]
However, the committee heard that conservation agreements or conservation
covenants do not necessarily provide sufficient protection as the areas covered
by them can still be subject to mining exploration and extraction activities in
the future.[77]
Indeed, the committee received evidence that, in many jurisdictions, it is
difficult to find a secure mechanism for the 'in perpetuity' protection of
offset areas on private land.[78]
5.55
For example, Ms Sue Higginson from ANEDO told the committee that in NSW
'there is no failsafe measure currently available to permanently and
irrevocably protect an area of land in perpetuity'.[79]
5.56
The North Queensland Conservation Council similarly submitted that:
...there is no guarantee that areas set aside as offsets will not,
themselves, be subject to development. Indeed, we have recently seen that legal
agreements for protection 'in perpetuity' can be ignored in the light of a
development application...[80]
5.57
Dr Yung En Chee agreed:
The mounting evidence for the lack of security in the tenure
of existing offset sites and the poor prospects for improved security of tenure
in future, seriously calls into question the effectiveness and credibility of
offsets as a tool for balancing development and conservation.[81]
5.58
Indeed, the committee heard examples of areas that were protected under
conservation agreements where developments have subsequently been approved. Several
submitters and witnesses highlighted the Waratah Coal Galilee Basin project
which has impacted upon the Bimblebox Nature Refuge, which was, in theory,
protected under a conservation agreement and as part of the Australian National
Reserve system. This case study is outlined further at Appendix 4.[82]
5.59
The committee also received evidence of examples of development in areas
supposed to be set aside under offsets.[83]
Several submitters and witnesses gave the example of the Warkworth Mine
extension in NSW, where a previously offset area is now proposed to be mined as
a result of a change to the conditions of approval. The committee heard that
the Warkworth mine was approved for expansion in 2004, with a condition that
over 700 hectares be set aside as a 'non-disturbance' area, to protect the
Warkworth Sands ecological community. However, that area was made available for
mining due to a variation of the conditions of approval in July 2012 to allow
open-cut mining in the 'non-disturbance' area. The variation contained a
requirement to submit an offset management plan within 12 months. In December
2013, the approval was again varied and an extension was granted for the
submission of the offset management plan to 13 April 2014. At the time of
writing, it was unclear whether this plan had been submitted.[84]
5.60
Indeed, the committee heard that the EPBC Act Offsets Policy explicitly
provides for the possibility of development which impacts on existing offsets. It
states that, in this situation:
...the person proposing to take the action must develop an
offsets package to compensate for both the impact of the proposed action, as
well as the original action for which the offset was a condition of approval.
The subsequent offset conditions would not amount to a variation of the
original conditions of approval or excuse non-compliance with those conditions.[85]
5.61
The Minerals Council of Australia expressly supported the idea of
allowing access to offset sites for future development, submitting that:
...access to offsets areas may be required in the future. Those
areas should remain available provided proponents can demonstrate offsetting
the previous offset is viable.[86]
5.62
The department submitted that:
Given the complex nature of land protection mechanisms and
different legislative provisions governing allowable land use, there are
circumstances where an offset may be subject to developmental impacts. Section
7.2.2 of the policy specifically outlines the requirements that apply where a
development may potentially impact on an established EPBC Act offset. [87]
5.63
In response to further questioning on this issue, the department noted
that 'if a property is already being used as an offset and it is subject to
mining in the future, that substantially increases the offset obligation that
exists for that subsequent activity'.[88]
5.64
Some suggested that the most secure protection would be for offsets to
be placed in national parks.[89]
Ms Woods from Lock the Gate Alliance told the committee that:
...there is not a covenant or a protection mechanism that
secures against future development of that offset. So the purpose of them is
that they are supposed to be set aside in perpetuity—and that is the
terminology that gets used in a lot of the conditions—to replace the area that
gets lost. But I am not aware of a mechanism that has successfully been used in
that way, other than national park listing which is not normally on the table.[90]
5.65
The EIANZ submitted that, 'in Australia, national parks are the only
areas where resource extraction remains prohibited' and that 'any lesser
category of reserve can be relatively easily opened up for resource extraction
activities'. The EIANZ further submitted that:
...for an offset policy to be of real benefit in the protection
and management of biodiversity values, offset areas must be given the highest
level of protection—even if that means a new category of land is created that
is fully protected from resource extraction activities.[91]
5.66
The Minerals Council of Australia noted that the new Queensland offsets
legislation has introduced 'a new mechanism for the legal securing of offsets' which
it suggested 'could be a useful case study to assess the way in which offset
land could be secured in the future'.[92]
5.67
The department's submission acknowledges that:
The capacity of an offset to deliver a conservation gain
through averting a future loss is contingent on the strengths of any legal
protective mechanisms that are applied to an offset. Generally, legal
protective mechanisms, such as conservation covenants, are administered through
state and territory government land, planning and/or environmental legislation.
The interaction between land use legislation is complex. For example certain
types of protective covenants or voluntary conservation agreements in a number
of jurisdictions may be overridden by certain rights, such as resource
exploration and extraction...Where a protective mechanism is insufficient in
treating a risk to an area, this reduces the potential suitability of the
offset.[93]
5.68
The committee also notes that the EPBC Act Offsets Policy states that:
In some situations there may be difficulties in permanently
securing a site for conservation purposes dues to the existing tenure of the
land...where the security of an offset is diminished, the risk to any protected
matters, and subsequently the magnitude of offsets required, will increase.[94]
Security of funding
5.69
Submitters and witnesses emphasised the need for offsets to have both
legal and financial security, including long-term funding for the future
management of offset sites. Dr Anita Foerster and Professor Jan McDonald
explained:
It is critical that offset schemes guarantee legal protection
and management for agreed conservation outcomes in perpetuity. They must also
provide for funding mechanisms to support ongoing management activities.
Funding guarantees to support management of offset sites are particularly
important. Such funding is integral to the establishment of the offset site,
and should not be regarded as an indirect offset in its own right.[95]
5.70
For example, Mr Martin Fallding of Lake Macquarie City Council told the
committee that offsets need both secure tenure and 'active management of land'.[96]
In this context, some submitters and witnesses noted that a bond or similar
financial mechanism, paid for by the proponent, could be used to ensure that
there are funds to maintain the offset into the future.[97]
Advanced offsets and biobanking
5.71
There was also some discussion during the committee's hearings about
'advanced' offsets, whereby offsets are identified and secured in advance. Although,
as noted in chapter 2, the EPBC Act Offsets Policy encourages the use of
advanced offsets,[98]
the committee received little evidence to indicate that this is occurring in
practice.
5.72
Submitters and witnesses expressed support for the use of advanced
offsets. For example, Dr Gibbons
described 'advanced offsets' as the 'gold standard' and suggested that offsets
policy 'should be moving towards advanced offsets'.[99]
Mr McCombe from the Minerals Council noted that advanced offsets have 'a number
of benefits for mining proponents', including 'having ready access to offsets'.[100]
5.73
Several witnesses and submitters also expressed support for biobanking
schemes, such as the NSW Biobanking Scheme. [101]
Ms Walmsley of ANEDO explained that the idea behind this scheme is that it
'creates a pool of ready-made offset credits':
So when a proponent is about to undertake a development, they
can actually look up what offset credits are available...The idea is that that
speeds up the process because you have a centralised offsets pool and
proponents can choose to buy those credits instead of sourcing their own
offsets.[102]
5.74
She suggested that the NSW biobanking scheme has a number of positive
aspects, including that biobanking site agreements are in perpetuity, providing
an income stream to landholders to manage vegetation for biodiversity outcomes
and a rigorous and transparent process involving a register of offsets. Ms
Walmsley further told the committee that a NSW biobanking agreement is
'relatively robust', compared to other conservation agreements.[103]
5.75
It was noted that some recent approval conditions have required offsets
to be secured via biobanking agreements.[104]
Mr Fallding from Lake Macquarie City Council expressed a preference for a
biobanking agreement as 'a very secure mechanism'.[105]
However, Ms Claire Doherty from the NSW Minerals Council cautioned that
requiring biobanking agreements post approval could be problematic 'if they
have not used the biobanking tools to assess the offset'.[106]
5.76
The committee notes that the Hawke review of the EPBC Act, as outlined
in Chapter 2, did recommend a biobanking system be developed and that its use
be promoted as part of project approvals under the EPBC Act.[107]
The government agreed in principle to this recommendation.[108]
Enforcement of offsets
5.77
In terms of non-compliance with conditions of offsets, several
submissions raised concerns that offsets are not actually being adequately enforced.[109]
For example, Mr Sydes of Environmental Justice Australia told the committee
that:
To the extent that there is any enforcement under the EPBC
Act, it tends to be for breaches of the referral provisions and so forth, but
the actual routine and persistent follow-up of conditions including offset
conditions and so forth does not seem to be a feature of the scheme as it
currently stands—and it really needs to be.[110]
5.78
However, a representative of the department advised that there are
penalties under the EPBC Act which apply to the breach of conditions of
approval, including a breach of a condition relating to offsets.[111]
The department submitted that:
When contraventions occur, a range of compliance and
enforcement mechanisms are used. These include education and communication,
investigation of alleged contraventions, and enforcement measures. The
legislation provides enforcement options that include criminal and civil
penalties, and administrative sanctions.[112]
5.79
In response to further questioning on this issue, a representative of
the department explained that offsets are part of the conditions of approval
under the EPBC Act, and as such, there are penalties for non-compliance with
the conditions of approval.[113]
The department also noted that, in responding to a contravention of a condition
of approval, the conditions of approval can be varied, or the approval can be
revoked or suspended.[114]
5.80
However, the variation of conditions of approval relating to offsets was
a key complaint for some submitters. For example, the Lock the Gate Alliance
submitted that, rather than conditions being enforced, they 'are loosened,
weakened and blow out long after the environmental impacts are felt'. They cited
several examples of failure to fulfil offset conditions in relation to
environmental approvals, which had resulted in further negotiation with
proponents:
Our examples demonstrate the Department of Environment
complying repeatedly with requests by coal and gas project proponents to change
the conditions of their approvals multiple times to allow for their repeated
failure to fulfil the offset conditions imposed on their approvals.[115]
5.81
Lock the Gate Alliance suggested that this exposes a 'failure not only
of the offsetting program, but of the EPBC compliance process':
...failure to comply with offsetting commitments is basically
forgiven and erased by the Department of Environment's willingness to rewrite
conditions, rather than enforce them. Indeed, this approach is written into the
Department's offset policy, which states that 'Where a proponent becomes aware
that they may not be able to fulfil a condition of approval, they should
approach the department in the first instance to discuss the matter and see
what options are available to remedy the situation'. [116]
5.82
However, other witnesses expressed support for a flexible approach to
conditions relating to offsets. For example, Ms Stutsel from the Minerals
Council told the committee that:
...the ability to modify offsets is quite important, because
the monitoring and evaluation of offsets may, over time, demonstrate that the
environmental objectives of those offsets are not being achieved to the extent
that they were required as part of the approval.[117]
5.83
In response to questioning in relation to specific projects where
conditions have been varied to extend compliance timeframes, the department
noted that they had been extended to finalise the legal mechanism under which
the offset areas are to be secured. The department advised that although the
relevant conservation covenants had not yet been secured, 'the offset areas are
being managed in accordance with the approved offset management plans'.[118]
5.84
In response to the committee's requests, the department also gave two
examples of where penalties had been applied for the breach of conditions in
relation to offset areas protected as a condition of approval:
In June 2010 a reparations package totalling $658,500 was
agreed and implemented through a variation of conditions attached to EPBC
2002/569 for Anglo Coal (Callide Management) Pty Ltd's coalmine near Gladstone.
A potential breach of EPBC approval conditions was identified after 420m2
of spoil was dumped onto an area of Semi-evergreen vine thicket ecological
community which was protected under the approval.
On 13 September 2011 an infringement notice totalling $6,600
was issued to Quanstruct (Aust) Pty Ltd for contravening conditions relating to
their approval (EPBC 2010/5552). The approval holder was found to be in breach
of their conditions for the disposal of spoil on an area designated as an
offset as part of their approval.[119]
Accountability in offsets decision-making
5.85
Some witnesses and submitters called for stronger accountability
mechanisms in relation to the implementation and delivery of offsets.[120]
In particular, it was suggested that there is a need for stronger and
independent oversight of how offsets are being implemented. For example, Mr
Walters from Greenpeace Australia Pacific argued that:
...the level of oversight even within the existing system is
incredibly low...there is no independent scrutiny of the current policy in that
it is heavily reliant upon consultants' reports, and peer review of that may
involve getting the proponent to get their own work reviewed by a different
consultant. There is no independent oversight of that.[121]
5.86
One suggestion was for merits review of ministerial decisions under the
EPBC Act to be made available.[122]
For example, Mr Sydes of Environmental Justice Australia suggested that
decisions under the EPBC Act should be able to be scrutinised through merits
review of decisions.[123]
Ms Woods from Lock the Gate Alliance argued that there is currently 'no
recourse for the community to argue that the minister had made the wrong
decision...they can essentially make whatever decision they choose and justify
it'.[124]
5.87
The committee notes that decisions made under the EPBC Act are subject
to judicial review by the Federal Court.[125]
That is, a person aggrieved by a decision made by a government official can
have that decision scrutinised by the court. The court is not concerned with
the merits of the decision, but rather with whether there has been an error of
law in the making of the decision. The court can send the decision back to the
original decision-maker to make a new decision. In contrast, under merits
review, the court can substitute its own decision for that of the primary
decision-maker.[126]
5.88
Another suggestion, made by Mr Sydes of Environmental Justice Australia,
was that a 'National Environment Commissioner' could provide that stronger
independent oversight of offsets. In response to questioning as to what the
role and responsibilities of a national environmental commissioner might be, Mr
Sydes explained that:
The responsibilities would stretch across independent
oversight of approvals and decision making generally under the legislation; a
responsibility for developing a policy and program of ongoing monitoring and
evaluation of the success of the implementation of this legislation...It would be
critical, we say, for it to be a body or an organisation that had an
independent statutory foundation and preferably, in fact, a body that reported
directly to parliament rather than being part of the department.[127]
5.89
The committee notes that the Hawke review recommended a National
Environmental Commissioner be established under the EPBC Act.[128]
However, this recommendation was not agreed to by the then government.[129]
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