The good remains the residents of Pittwater who work in bushcare, restoring our natural areas, and those who work in wildlife rescue, rehabilitation and release - all volunteers - and those who actively support them in this work.
One of these local organisations celebrated a significant milestone this year; 30 years of looking after the natural heritage of Pittwater.
Federal Member for Mackellar, Dr Sophie Scamps, has stayed true to the promises made when standing for the seat of Mackellar, championing the installation of a community battery at Warriewood, working to see an end of the destruction of forests and the wildlife that lives in these, and seeing her Private Members Bill to strengthen environment legislation and protect our precious water resources from toxic fracking incorporated into its the incumbent government's 'water trigger' legislation.
On Thursday December 12 Dr Scamps welcomed legal action challenging the future of the Beetaloo Basin project in the Northern Territory and is urging the Federal Environment Minister, Tanya Plibersek, to “pull the trigger” and stop the proposal altogether.
Grassroots movement Lock the Gate has commenced proceedings in the Federal Court against Tamboran Resources for failing to refer the Beetaloo project to the Federal Environment Minister for assessment.
This legal challenge is only possible after Dr Scamps successfully helped steer new water protection laws through Parliament.
“This court action is a welcome and important development which only happened after I introduced my Private Members Bill to strengthen environment legislation and protect our precious water resources from toxic fracking,” Dr Scamps said.
“I commended Minister Plibersek for making that change to the water trigger and was hopeful it would stop projects such as the Beetaloo Basin fracking projects.
“Unfortunately, it turns out that this was the Government’s only contribution to fixing our broken environment laws during this term of government.”
Tamboran’s gas fracking projects in the Beetaloo Basin risk destroying the immense artesian water resource that feeds the region’s river system. Traditional Owners told Dr Scamps the aquifer is essential to keep the Roper River flowing year-round to support local communities.
“So while I applaud Lock the Gate for taking this bold and necessary action, really, the Federal Environment Minister should just pull the trigger that I worked so hard to make a reality,” Dr Scamps said.
“The Beetaloo Project should just be called in and assessed. It’s ridiculous that it’s been allowed to get to this stage of proceedings.” Dr Scamps said
The Bad
Environmental Weeds: Spanish Moss killing critically endangered local trees
The spread of environment weeds in Pittwater is becoming of greater concern to residents and the bushcarers who work to remove them. A recent pictorial by Joe Mills showed there is widespread masses of all types of weeds at Warriewood's perimeter and wetlands and this week the spread of Spanish Moss, with quite a bit now growing on trees beside the path into Toongari Reserve off Avalon Parade, next to the kindergarten, is yet another invader.
Spanish Moss has been found to spread over mature trees across the Sydney Basin and in doing so, prevent photosynthesis, killing the trees.
A recent study by STEP, over Cowan to Marrickville, ascertained what tree species it grew on and found the critically endangered Turpentine (Syncarpia glomulifera) is the most severely affected of all the 76+ species of plants STEP recorded Spanish Moss growing in.
Fragments carried by birds to line nests in bushland have spread this weed into more and more areas, but the tips can also be blown by the wind to another plant.
STEP is a community-based environmental organisation with over 500 members from Ku-ring-gai, Hornsby and surrounding suburbs. Our primary aim is to work for the conservation of bushland in northern Sydney.
Many of these are termed 'garden escapees'.
STEP's Recommendations:
Gardeners remove all moss they can reach, put it in their green bin and prevent spread.
Local authorities such as local councils and NPWS remove it from all public places, including trees on nature strips.
Add Spanish Moss to the next iteration of the Greater Sydney Regional Strategic Weed Management Plan and all other relevant regional strategic weed management plans.
Classify Spanish Moss at a level that enables its eradication and containment, prohibition of sale and distribution, e.g. as a regional priority weed.
Undertake research into why Turpentines are a favoured host and the ecological effects of Spanish Moss on bushland.
Undertake research into control methods.
Swaying veils of grey in dead or dying trees and simplified bushland is not something to look forward to. Let’s not risk it.
Spanish Moss infestation killing Australian trees: STEP photo
The great Wall of Collaroy
The approval of the extension of the 'great wall of Collaroy' further north by the council has been greeted by those whose homes it may protect for a few years with gratitude - they may sleep easier when those big storms swells keep rolling further and further in at ever increasing heights. The rest of the community sees only the complete destruction of the beach taking place for the benefit of a few and the exclusion of all others and a route which will exacerbate and even accelerate what it aims to be a buffer against.
Nature Positive aspirations become Nature negatives
As mentioned by the MP for Mackellar, environment laws at local, state and federal level have not progressed towards actually protecting the environment nor restoring it as miners and developers are prioritised before voters, wildlife and the environment which sustains all life itself. Australian environment laws are still being used to destroy the environment.
On the same day Dr. Scamps applauded community standing up to the corporations seemingly running state and federal governments the Woodside liquefied natural gas project was given a 50-year extension by the WA Environment Minister Reece Whitby, and just weeks after that states' EPA was stripped of the power to regulate emissions.
The North West Shelf Plant has been approved for extension to 2070, despite a record 770 appeals and staunch criticism from the Conservation Council WA. If the North West Shelf extension is also approved by the federal government, Woodside’s Burrup Hub, according to the CC of WA and others, would emit more than 6 billion tonnes of CO2 by 2070 and become the largest fossil fuel project in Australia, generating more than 14 times Australia’s total annual emissions over the project’s lifespan.
Approval would risk further major damage to UNESCO World Heritage-nominated rock art on Murujuga from acid gas pollution, after Woodside previously destroyed an estimated 5,000 pieces of rock art during initial construction of the North West Shelf facility in the 1980s.
Research also shows that Woodside’s Burrup Hub will reduce domestic gas supply by increasing export capacity and pressure on governments to open up more gas fields to supply the facility, illustrated by the WA government’s recent approval of onshore domestic gas exports.
The WA premier has been credited with stopping any progress on the 'Nature Positive' reforms the Albanese government had touted as their soon-to-be-realised big first term win, and again at the behest of the fossil fuel corporations.
However, the federal government has been as coal-friendly as the previous 'coal-ition government' (as they are referred to), without any help from the WA premier.
In September the federal government approved three coal mine extensions in the Hunter Valley until 2048: Whitehaven’s Narrabri Stage 3 Expansion, MACH Energy’s Mount Pleasant Optimisation, and Glencore and Yancoal’s Ashton-Ravensworth Extension, and ammounting to a billion tonnes of pollution according to the Clmate Council. Mount Pleasant will become Australia’s largest black coal mine, dwarfing Adani, while Narrabri could add 259 million tonnes of pollution and destroy 500 hectares of critical koala habitat.
On December 4 2024 the federal EPBC portal pages for Idemitsu’s Boggabri, BHP’s Caval Ridge, and Jellinbah Group’s Lake Vermont coal expansion projects were all updated to note the Living Wonders reconsideration request had been rejected. This means the three massive coal projects moved another step through the federal environmental assessment process, indicating that a final decision is imminent.
Lock the Gate states Lake Vermont would clear 100 hectares of endangered koala habitat and drain more than 5 billion litres of groundwater. Caval Ridge would leave unrehabilitated pit voids covering more than 500 hectares and discharge mine wastewater into Cherwell Creek, posing a risk to threatened turtles. Idemitsu was previously penalised for stealing more than 500 Olympic swimming pools’ worth of water at its existing Boggabri coal mine during a drought.
Closer to home the state and federal government continue to ignore the deaths of wildlife caused by developments they approved to go ahead prior to the mitigation proved to work being required to be in place. As the years ends, fauna tunnels and overpasses are still not in place where developers are ripping through habitat, or 'home' as it would be called if they were human beings.
Local communities, and individuals, have stated to the news service they are now traumatised through being daily eye-witnesses to the needless killing of the trees, the doe-eyed, furry, feathered and scaled, those still inside their eggs inside their nests, and even the small insects that make the air and earth thrive, and while 'the spin-doctors keep repeating bald-faced lies' to their faces.
The Ugly
The young man from this area who deliberately drove over kangaroos, even their babies, while visiting a place out west
The continued destruction of local Wildlife Preservation Areas by those who either don't understand the meanings of those three words, or choose to ignore the meaning of what a Wildlife Preservation Area is. These are forwildlife, not you.
Australia making the 'top 10', again, in the wildlife extinctions, the scores of upticks this year to critically endangered, endangered and vulnerable of Australian animals, AND also making the 'top 10' and only western country in the deforestation statistics.
In March 2024 independent research commissioned by Greenpeace revealed a deforestation crisis in Australia, with huge swathes of federally-mapped koala and threatened species habitat bulldozed at a rate of an area the size of the MCG bulldozed every two minutes. Themajority of deforestation is occurring in Queensland, driven primarily by beef production.
The data reveals that 2.2 million hectares of forest and bushland was bulldozed in Queensland in just five years — 2.1 million hectares of which was federally-mapped threatened species habitat. Over 730,000 hectares of this was endangered koala habitat.
In Australia, over 90% of deforestation occurs without Federal environmental assessment due to a legal blindspot in our nature laws, the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act (EPBC), which this year faced a once-in-a-generation reforms but was kicked in the head until silenced at the first hurdle through government capture by developers, miners et al.....
Meghan Halverson, co-founder Queensland Koala Crusaders and conservationist, said that unregulated deforestation is taking a deadly toll on native wildlife, killing and maiming millions of animals every year and placing threatened species like the koala at risk of extinction.
“Around 50 million animals are killed every year in Queensland and NSW alone by deforestation. As a wildlife carer, I see first-hand the horrific injuries inflicted on native animals like koalas and hairy-nosed wombats from deforestation, fires and the effects of habitat loss and fragmentation,” Halverson said.
“Australia holds the unenviable title of world leader in mammal extinctions. It is simply not good enough that we have one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, alongside places like the Congo and Amazon Basin.”
Photo: Ruskin Rowe Tree vigil residents. Photo supplied
Tree stump of one of the Ruskin Rowe trees destroyed by Northern Beaches Council before residents stood guard around two others. Photo supplied.
Image: Ruskin Rowe tree vigil on Thursday June 13. Photo supplied
NSW Forestry Corporation Cost NSW Taxpayers $29 Million in 2023-2024, much more in loss of Habitat and Wildlife - 'State Government can’t see the forest for the trees': Greens
Monday December 16, 2024
The Annual Report of the NSW Forestry Corporation has now been tabled and this year it cost NSW taxpayers $29 million in losses* to log the public native hardwood forest estate, this is almost double the previous year which cost $15 million in losses.
The annual report shows that notwithstanding the massive public subsidies and investment into the NSW Forestry Corporation the hardwood division is in structural decline and is costing NSW over $3,000 for every hectare of forest, including threatened species habitat, that is destroyed.
Sue Higginson, Greens MP and spokesperson for the environment says, “This annual report must be the final wake up call for the Minns Labor Government to put an end to logging across our precious public native forest estate. It is beyond the absurd, that in 2024 our Government, through industrial logging is destroying one of our most valuable public environmental assets, driving our iconic endangered Koalas and Greater Gliders to extinction, diminishing our most effective carbon capture technology and the NSW public are paying millions and millions for them to do it”,
“The annual report is a terribly sober read, it is clear that the hardwood logging section of the Forestry Corporation is in structural freefall, is harming people and is in fact dragging down and holding back the future of forestry, which is in sustainable plantation growth and management. Already 91% of saw logs come from plantations, yet the plantation land base only grew by 6500 hectares in the reporting period”,
“Premier Chris Minns has got to wake up, what more will it take for him to make the call to end native forest logging. It is economically, environmentally and socially reckless and irresponsible to carry on native forest logging. A business-as-usual approach is just not tenable in the face of all of the evidence of harm and cost. The $29 million in losses is a dreadfully bad hit, but the truth is that this cost does not account for the price of the environmental damage that logging is doing to our forests, or the costs of making our forests more susceptible to more intense and frequent wildfire caused by logging or the costs of the carbon emissions and the drawdown and sequestration losses due to logging”,
“The positive story and the future of the timber industry jobs is in sustainably managed plantations and our precious native forests being protected, regenerated and managed for all of their other important environmental, social and economic values”,
“Premier Chris Minns and his Government can’t see the forest for the trees, and it is costing taxpayers millions in losses and creating a nature and carbon deficit that is dangerous and making all of NSW, and future generations poorer and more at risk. The Premier needs to act on the overwhelming amount of evidence on the table, I have no idea what he is waiting for, he has all the support in the Parliament that he needs to do his job to end native forest logging”.
“The positive story and the future of the timber industry jobs is in sustainably managed plantations and our precious native forests should now be protected, regenerated and managed for all of their other environmental, social and economic values”,
“Premier Chris Minns and his Government can’t see the forest for the trees, and it is costing taxpayers millions in losses and creating a nature and carbon deficit that is dangerous and making all of NSW, and future generations poorer and more at risk. The Premier needs to act on the overwhelming amount of evidence on the table, I have no idea what he is waiting for, he has all the support in the Parliament that he needs to do his job to end native forest logging”.
Forestry Corporation Annual Report available to download at:
Developer-State Government Koala slaughter continuing in western Sydney
December 13, 2024
The Sydney Basin Koala Network and Total Environment Centre are calling for independent oversight of Transport NSW after a string of disasters killing Koalas on the roads of Sydney.
Jeff Angel, Director of the Total Environment Centre said: ‘’The Department says it is genuinely concerned about Koalas but it appears to us to be a strategy of tokenism carried out in an incompetent manner. Just today a so-called protection fence along Picton Road was revealed to be falling down. Killing Koalas, for them, is a cost of doing business. They clearly have a conflict of interest and in such a situation, you need external and expert independent oversight that reports publicly.’’
Stephanie Carrick, Project Manager of the Sydney Basin Koala Network said: ‘’Since January 1 2024 50 koalas have been killed on the roads of South West Sydney, with state roads such as Appin Road (21), Heathcote Road (11), Hume Highway (3) and Picton Road (2) responsible for the majority of these deaths, risking sending this vital disease free population into decline (Bionet 2024)."
Key failings of Transport NSW during this time include:
- A cluster of five Koala deaths at Holsworthy on Heathcote Road this year, created by roadworks in the area (there were zero deaths at this spot the year prior).
- Koala road strikes have tripled in the area where the Appin Road upgrade is taking place (1 to 3) with many more reports of Koalas being displaced and trapped on the road by poorly implemented fencing.
- Deadmans Creek project on Heathcote Road falling short with issues including inadequate crossings and open fence ends.
- The Picton Road upgrade has no additional connectivity provisions for Koalas, despite clear evidence of Koalas on either side of the upgrade area.
- Ongoing fence maintenance issues on Picton Road resulting in Koala deaths.
- The lack of provision for an underpass at Mallaty Creek in Campbelltown despite this being identified as the most direct Koala corridor from the Nepean to Georges Rivers and the only corridor with a direct link to the Dharawal National Park.
''The Chris Minns government is notably continuing with the previous Liberal Planning Minister’s (Anthony Roberts) appalling developer plan to cut off Mallaty Creek in Campbelltown (the most direct Koala corridor from the Nepean to Georges Rivers, and Dharawal National Park).'' the two groups have stated
Campbelltown City Council, this week voted unanimously to write to the State Government to reverse this decision, as Mallaty is a key migratory corridor identified in Campbelltown’s Koala Plan of Management, they will also call for lowering the speed limit on Appin Road which has been consistently ignored by Transport for NSW despite calls from advocacy groups across NSW calling for this over a year ago.
On Wednesday December 11 another koala was hit by a truck on the Picton road. The driver just kept going. Witnessed and reported by others, the koala, with a broken pelvis and two broken legs, dragged itself off the road where it was found by a wildlife rescuer. The koala, a boy, had to be euthanised due to the extent of his injuries.
NSW Government should deliver Koala National Park by end of 2024 says New Pittwater MP Jacqui Scruby
Jacqui Scruby, the new independent Pittwater MP, is pushing hard for the NSW Labor Government to declare the long-promised Great Koala National Park and end all logging within the park before the end of the year.
‘The clock is ticking, and the fate of one of Australia’s most iconic species may hinge on swift and bold action from the NSW Government,’ warned Ms Scruby on December 11
In her first week in office, she joined fellow independent MPs in a written demand to Premier Chris Minns to act immediately, with the NSW Forestry Corporation intensifying logging within the proposed boundaries before they lose access.
'This activity is a real threat to the integrity of the park,' says the joint letter.
'The planned Great Koala National Park will significantly expand the protection for high biodiversity value native forests in the Coffs Harbour region, including some of the best koala habitat in the state. It's been an electoral promise from Labor for the past three elections, but after twenty months in power, it has still not been finalised.
'We share many in the community's eagerness to see the park protected before the end of the year.
'Once old trees are gone, these logged forests will take decades to recover, if they ever do. Their ecological integrity is significantly diminished and they become more vulnerable to fire and infestation by invasive weeds.
The letter, which is co-signed by Jacqui Scruby, Alex Greenwich MP, Member for Sydney, Michael Regan MP, Member for Wakehurst, Judy Hannan MP, Member for Wollondilly, and Greg Piper MP, Member for Lake Macquarie. All are independents.
'Native state forests are public assets belonging to everyone in our state', they wrote.
'NSW Forestry Corporation is a public state-owned corporation, which the government controls. There is a clear public interest case to conserve these forests for current and future generations, as well as for carbon storage. We all have a stake in this, but only your government has the power to make it happen.'
In their letter the independent MPs urged Chris Minns to declare the Great Koala National Park as a matter of urgency and 'deliver a legacy all of NSW can be proud of' and committed to work with the government to fulfil its election promise to exit entirely from logging in the NSW public native forest estate.
‘A NSW inquiry warned that Koalas would be extinct by 2050 unless something done, so it is imperative that we act before it is too late. The clock is ticking, and the fate of one of Australia’s most iconic species may hinge on swift and bold action from the NSW Government,’ said Ms Scruby.
‘This sits heavily with people here because it wasn’t so long ago that Pittwater had koalas. And our philosophy is what we love in Pittwater is what we want for broader NSW.
‘We have a large number of constituents, who are strong advocates to end native forest logging and protect koalas. In November, I attended a screening of The Koalas Film: A story about survival and panel discussion with conservation groups at a full Collaroy cinema to discuss what can be done to protect them.
‘I plan to continue to put pressure on the NSW Government at every opportunity, until the park is delivered,’ promised Ms Scruby.
Photo: Koala in Mona Vale in 1958 from Australian Women's Weekly Article - see Bayview Koala Sanctuary
Draft Plan of Management for Dogs offleash On South Mona Vale Beach Open for feedback: remember a PoM is not just about Our dogs
The Northern Beaches Council announced on Wednesday December 11 2024 that it is placing its draft Plan of Management (PoM) for the southern end of Mona Vale Beach on exhibition for feedback.
The adoption of this PoM would amend Pittwater Council’s Ocean Beaches Plan of Management (2005) (Ocean Beaches PoM) as set out in Appendix 9, pursuant to section 41 of the Local Government Act. The effect of the amendment is that the Ocean Beaches PoM would no longer apply to Mona Vale Beach (southern end).
The NSW Government (via Crown Lands, Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure) recently transferred the management of Crown Land at Mona Vale Beach and at Palm Beach to the Northern Beaches Council and gave consent for the draft PoM for South Mona Vale Beach to be publicly exhibited.
The State Government, which requires this document to be made, states, 'Plans of management are legal documents we develop and maintain to guide how Crown land will be sustainably managed. They provide a wealth of information about that site, including social, environmental, and economic values, set objectives and performance targets for community land, and provide for active land management and use, including the issuing of tenures over the land.'
The draft PoM, among other aspects of these standard documents, has ostensibly been prepared to include a proposal for a dog off-leash area.
That does not mean residents of Pittwater should focus solely on that primary reason in any feedback provided. This is an opportunity to scrutinise how the Northern Beaches Council states it will protect coastal vegetation and wildlife habitat, support the ongoing use by the whole of the community of the foreshore (beach) area, and how it will assess whether it is meeting the criteria within its own PoM.
For instance, page 20 of the Draft POM records;
The NSW Biodiversity Values (BV) Map is facilitated by the NSW State Government and identifies land with high biodiversity value, particularly sensitive to impacts from development and clearing. On the 27 October 2023, the BV Map was updated to include the addition of revised habitat mapping for a number of threatened species. As a result, a portion of vegetation within the PoM is now identified on the BV Map (see Figure 7).
A draft PoM for Governor Phillip Park, another public whole of community (and whole of world) public space, which also includes a proposal for a dog off-leash area trial at Palm Beach (north) and has again been drafted primarily for the same reason, is also being developed by the Northern Beaches Council and this draft POM is expected to be prepared by mid-2025.
The Northern Beaches Council has stated it will then seek the Department’s and then the Northern Beaches Council Councillors approval to also publicly exhibit this draft PoM.
Dogs are currently prohibited at the southern end of Mona Vale Beach and on the beach at Palm Beach, however, dogs are seen on both beaches, and every other beach across the LGA, all day every day.
The Northern Beaches Council has stated this restriction will remain in place unless the Northern Beaches Council adopts the draft PoM, amends the existing prohibition, and designates a part of the beach as an area for dogs to be off-leash under section 13(6) of the Companion Animals Act 1998.
Following public exhibition of the draft PoM, feedback will be reviewed, and the outcome of the public exhibition and any final draft POM will be reported to a Council meeting for Northern Beaches Council Councillors to approve.
The land is a combination of escarpment and restored coastal vegetation leading down to partially vegetated foredune and beach and ocean.
The land and beach is used by families with toddlers and young children, for surfing, swimming, and less strenuous activities such as just sitting and enjoying the view.
The area provides feeding and nesting habitat for aquatic and land-based birds and animals, environmental conservation and dune stabilisation within the dune areas.
Those who enjoy strolling, running, passive and active beach and ocean activities and who contribute as volunteer bush revegetation and regeneration workers are the current every day and regular users of South Mona Vale Beach.
The Northern Beaches Council said in a release it is yet to make a decision about proceeding with dog off-leash area trials at both locations as various processes must be completed before the Northern Beaches Council is in a position to do so.
However, as both this and the PoM being drafted for Governor Phillip Park, and the REF that preceded these, were drafted specifically to permit dogs offleash in both these public spaces and wildlife habitat, and the Northern Beaches Council is again topping the state for dog attack statistics that resulted in the deaths of wildlife and hospitalisation of residents and visitors, and residents have reported to the news service again this week being attacked while using the ocean rock pools, beaches and public paths across the Local Government Area, the only fly in that ointment may turn out to be Mr. or Mrs. 'I'll Sue this ******** Council'.
Is this an area where those who have big dogs that need a kilometre or two to run fast in, more space than their backyards provide and as long as the whole of Mona Vale beach, where other users won't mind sitting and swimming in dog urine and faeces?
Having your children run over, mauled and scarred for life or being told 'get out of here if you don't like it, this is a dog beach' looks set to be on its way, and has already been happening, at south Mona Vale beach.
Dog parks that include water features and large areas for furry darlings to romp are a success in Western Sydney areas, and have proved a lot less expensive than all the processes followed here has now accrued, in more than just financial costs, to our community.
''In the meantime, please only exercise your dog at approved locations across the area otherwise you may be subject to a $330 fine for contravening the dog off-leash rule or for being the owner of dog in prohibited public space.'' the Northern Beaches Council release states in closing
The 'you may be fined' under the Northern Beaches Council contrasts in messaging to the 'You Will Definitely Be Fined and/or Prosecuted' that occurs in other LGAs. But as a high amount of community reports on how the Northern Beaches Council is trying to rein in what has become a serious problem across the LGA come in every week, the 'may' has become 'will' again here too. Following advice by others to 'do what you want where you want and when you want' is leading to an insurmountable financial burden and absolute heartbreak for some.
It's heart-breaking hearing their stories of what happens when you ignore the law, NBC signage and rules, and follow that advice. And heart-breaking hearing of the trauma undergone and pain experienced by those who end up in hospital because someone has followed that advice.
For those who wish to address more than the stated main reason for this new PoM; the habitat, other potential uses and other items drafted into the PoM, and use the emailing or writing option and format, rather than the 'yay' or 'nay' 1 minute survey on the NBC webpage,those addresses are:
In writing:marked 'Mona Vale Beach (southern end) Plan of Management', Northern Beaches Council, PO Box 82, Manly NSW 1655.
The Northern Beaches Council also states it is providing:
Come and chat Pop-up event
Sunday 19 January 2025 12:00 pm to 02:00 pm, at Village Park, Mona Vale
Come and chat with the Project Team at our stall at the Australian Made Markets
Book a call
Click the button (here) to book a call to chat with the project team. If none of the times available suit you, call 1300 434 434 to arrange another time.
Mon 13 Jan, 2 - 5pm
Wed 15 Jan, 8.30 - 11.30am
Wed 5 Feb, 11.30 - 2.30pm
Thur 6 Feb, 8.30 - 11.30am.
The whole of the 2023-2024 dog attack statistics for the Northern Beaches Council LGA were released in November 2024, and are available in:
North Palm Beach; dogs are taken into this area despite clear signage this is a no dogs area
Dogs on South Mona Vale Beach, Saturday December 15:image supplied
Dogs on Turimetta Beach, December 2024: Image supplied
Dogs on Narrabeen beach, December 2024: Image supplied
Dog attacking formerly resting seal at Long Reef Aquatic Reserve (a WPA). Photos supplied
Cowal gold mine granted extension-expansion by Minns Labor Government
December 11 2024
The Cowal gold mine in the Central West, owned by Evolution Mining, has been granted an expansion by the Minns Labor Government to 2042.
Under the extension plan, the project will create three new open-cut pits. It is expected to create an additional 64 full-time jobs during construction and contribute an additional $56 million in royalties for the NSW Government.
The approval by the Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure (DPHI) is a significant development for the region which will support local jobs, boost the regional economy and sustain long-term growth for the community.
The economic impact assessment submitted by Evolution Mining during the planning process estimated the expansion would result in an additional $910 million boost to the NSW economy over the life of the project. In that time, it will produce approximately 1.6 million ounces of gold and 1.5 million ounces of silver.
As part of the extension, the government stated 'Cowal has committed to using cutting-edge technology to reduce environmental impacts and enhance its rehabilitation efforts, ensuring a positive legacy for the mine for future generations.'
The Minns Labor Government recently updated the state’s Critical Minerals and High-Tech Metals Strategy. With deposits of 21 of the 31 nationally identified critical minerals, as well as identified resources of priority minerals and metals including scandium, copper, silver and cobalt, he goverment states NSW is well placed to be a global leader in the race for critical minerals.
''The updated strategy sets a vision for NSW to become a global leader in critical minerals, drive the clean energy transition and re-build domestic manufacturing.'' the government stated in a release
The International Energy Agency estimates that over the next 20 years, the world will need six times the amount of critical minerals currently mined to reach global net-zero carbon emissions.
The project will now proceed to the Commonwealth Government for determination.
Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park Closed areas: Barrenjoey Access trail (weekdays) - Towlers Bay fire trail - Salvation Loop and Wallaroo trails
Barrenjoey access trail closed on weekdays
Applies to Mon 16 Dec 2024, 10.00am.
Barrenjoey access road is closed on weekdays until Friday 13 December 2024 due to construction works. Pedestrian access to Barrenjoey Lighthouse will be via Smugglers track.
The Smugglers track is a grade 3 walking track – mostly stairs. It is a steeper and more challenging walk to the top of the headland. Please consider your ability prior to ascent.
For further information please call the local area office.
Closed areas: Towlers Bay fire trail closed for major works
Applies until Fri 20 Dec 2024, 6.00pm.
Towlers Bay Trail is closed until Friday 20 December 2024 while major works are undertaken.
Access to Halls Wharf, Morning Bay remains open.
Penalties apply for non-compliance. For more information, contact the local NPWS office.
Closed areas: Salvation Loop and Wallaroo trails closed for upgrade works
Applies until Mon 02 Dec 2024, 5.00pm.
There will be vegetation and surface works on the Salvation Loop and Wallaroo trails in Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park from Friday 18 October 2024 until Monday 2 December 2024, weather permitting.
Please follow all signage and instruction from NPWS staff and contractors. Penalties apply for non-compliance.
For more information, contact the Sydney North area office on 02 9451 3479.
Other planned events: ‘1080 pest management’
Applies until Sat 01 Feb 2025, 2.04am.
NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service will be conducting a baiting program using manufactured baits, fresh baits and Canid Pest Ejectors (CPEs) containing 1080 poison (sodium fluroacetate) for the control of foxes. The program is continuous and ongoing between 1 August 2024 and 31 January 2025 in Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park. Don’t touch baits or ejector devices. Penalties apply for non-compliance.
All baiting locations are identifiable by signs.
Domestic pets are not permitted in NSW national parks and reserves. Pets and working dogs may be affected (1080 is lethal to cats and dogs). Pets and working dogs must be restrained or muzzled in the vicinity and must not enter the baiting location. In the event of accidental poisoning seek immediate veterinary assistance.
Fox baiting in these reserves is aimed at reducing their impact on threatened species.
For more information, contact the local park office on: Forestville 9451 3479 or Lane Cove 8448 0400 (business hours), NPWS after-hours call centre: 1300 056 294 (after hours).
Garigal National Park: ‘1080 pest management’
Applies until Sat 01 Feb 2025, 2.12am.
NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service will be conducting a baiting program using manufactured baits, fresh baits and Canid Pest Ejectors (CPEs) containing 1080 poison (sodium fluroacetate) for the control of foxes.
The program is continuous and ongoing between 1 August 2024 and 31 January 2025 in Garigal National Park. Don’t touch baits or ejector devices. Penalties apply for non-compliance.
All baiting locations are identifiable by signs.
Domestic pets are not permitted in NSW national parks and reserves. Pets and working dogs may be affected (1080 is lethal to cats and dogs). Pets and working dogs must be restrained or muzzled in the vicinity and must not enter the baiting location. In the event of accidental poisoning seek immediate veterinary assistance.
Fox baiting in these reserves is aimed at reducing their impact on threatened species.
For more information, contact the local park office on: Forestville 9451 3479 (business hours)
Science To Revive Our Oceans: SIM's has a PHD Opportunity - operation Crayweed
The Sydney Institute of Marine Science is a collaborative research and training institute bringing together researchers from four NSW universities plus state and federal marine and environmental agencies.
SIMS conducts multidisciplinary marine research on impacts of climate change and urbanisation, eco-engineering and habitat restoration, ocean resources and technologies, and outcomes of marine management approaches.
By bringing together NSW’s leading marine scientists in a collaborative hub, SIMS ensures the efficient use of resources for research on Australia’s critical coastal environments.
They currently have an opportunity for someone to join the Operation Crayweed team. Pittwater Online News has been running updates on this project since 2014. There are a LOT of local connections here, from Barrenjoey to Manly should you feel inspired to get involved.
Image: A SIMS scientist planting crayweed at Cabbage Tree Bay, Manly. Photo SIMS
Laura Enever, Tom Hobbs and Tom Carroll at the Bondi planting event. Photo by Frame.co
Plastic Bread Ties For Wheelchairs
The Berry Collective at 1691 Pittwater Rd, Mona Vale collects them for Oz Bread Tags for Wheelchairs, who recycle the plastic.
Berry Collective is the practice on the left side of the road as you head north, a few blocks before Mona Vale shops . They have parking. Enter the foyer and there's a small bin on a table where you drop your bread ties - very easy.
A full list of Aussie bread tags for wheelchairs is available at: HERE
NSW Health is reminding people to protect themselves from mosquitoes when they are out and about this summer.
NSW Health’s Acting Director of Environmental Health, Paul Byleveld, said with more people spending time outdoors, it was important to take steps to reduce mosquito bite risk.
“Mosquitoes thrive in wet, warm conditions like those that much of NSW is experiencing,” Byleveld said.
“Mosquitoes in NSW can carry viruses such as Japanese encephalitis (JE), Murray Valley encephalitis (MVE), Kunjin, Ross River and Barmah Forest. The viruses may cause serious diseases with symptoms ranging from tiredness, rash, headache and sore and swollen joints to rare but severe symptoms of seizures and loss of consciousness.
“People should take extra care to protect themselves against mosquito bites and mosquito-borne disease, particularly after the detection of JE in a sentinel chicken in Far Western NSW.
The NSW Health sentinel chicken program provides early warning about the presence of serious mosquito borne diseases, like JE. Routine testing in late December revealed a positive result for JE in a sample from Menindee.
A free vaccine to protect against JE infection is available to those at highest risk in NSW and people can check their eligibility at NSW Health.
People are encouraged to take actions to prevent mosquito bites and reduce the risk of acquiring a mosquito-borne virus by:
Applying repellent to exposed skin. Use repellents that contain DEET, picaridin, or oil of lemon eucalyptus. Check the label for reapplication times.
Re-applying repellent regularly, particularly after swimming. Be sure to apply sunscreen first and then apply repellent.
Wearing light, loose-fitting long-sleeve shirts, long pants and covered footwear and socks.
Avoiding going outdoors during peak mosquito times, especially at dawn and dusk.
Using insecticide sprays, vapour dispensing units and mosquito coils to repel mosquitoes (mosquito coils should only be used outdoors in well-ventilated areas)
Covering windows and doors with insect screens and checking there are no gaps.
Removing items that may collect water such as old tyres and empty pots from around your home to reduce the places where mosquitoes can breed.
Using repellents that are safe for children. Most skin repellents are safe for use on children aged three months and older. Always check the label for instructions. Protecting infants aged less than three months by using an infant carrier draped with mosquito netting, secured along the edges.
While camping, use a tent that has fly screens to prevent mosquitoes entering or sleep under a mosquito net.
Remember, Spray Up – Cover Up – Screen Up to protect from mosquito bite. For more information go to NSW Health.
Fox sightings, signs of fox activity, den locations and attacks on native or domestic animals can be reported into FoxScan. FoxScan is a free resource for residents, community groups, local Councils, and other land managers to record and report fox sightings and control activities.
Our Council's Invasive species Team receives an alert when an entry is made into FoxScan. The information in FoxScan will assist with planning fox control activities and to notify the community when and where foxes are active.
A new wildlife group was launched on the Central Coast on Saturday, December 10, 2022.
Marine Wildlife Rescue Central Coast (MWRCC) had its official launch at The Entrance Boat Shed at 10am.
The group comprises current and former members of ASTR, ORRCA, Sea Shepherd, Greenpeace, WIRES and Wildlife ARC, as well as vets, academics, and people from all walks of life.
Well known marine wildlife advocate and activist Cathy Gilmore is spearheading the organisation.
“We believe that it is time the Central Coast looked after its own marine wildlife, and not be under the control or directed by groups that aren’t based locally,” Gilmore said.
“We have the local knowledge and are set up to respond and help injured animals more quickly.
“This also means that donations and money fundraised will go directly into helping our local marine creatures, and not get tied up elsewhere in the state.”
The organisation plans to have rehabilitation facilities and rescue kits placed in strategic locations around the region.
MWRCC will also be in touch with Indigenous groups to learn the traditional importance of the local marine environment and its inhabitants.
“We want to work with these groups and share knowledge between us,” Gilmore said.
“This is an opportunity to help save and protect our local marine wildlife, so if you have passion and commitment, then you are more than welcome to join us.”
Summer is here so watch your step because beach-nesting and estuary-nesting birds have started setting up home on our shores.
Did you know that Careel Bay and other spots throughout our area are part of the East Asian-Australasian Flyway Partnership (EAAFP)?
This flyway, and all of the stopping points along its way, are vital to ensure the survival of these Spring and Summer visitors. This is where they rest and feed on their journeys. For example, did you know that the bar-tailed godwit flies for 239 hours for 8,108 miles from Alaska to Australia?
Not only that, Shorebirds such as endangered oystercatchers and little terns lay their eggs in shallow scraped-out nests in the sand, NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) Threatened Species officer Ms Katherine Howard has said.
Even our regular residents such as seagulls are currently nesting to bear young.
What can you do to help them?
Known nest sites may be indicated by fencing or signs. The whole community can help protect shorebirds by keeping out of nesting areas marked by signs or fences and only taking your dog to designated dog offleash area.
Just remember WE are visitors to these areas. These birds LIVE there. This is their home.
Four simple steps to help keep beach-nesting birds safe:
1. Look out for bird nesting signs or fenced-off nesting areas on the beach, stay well clear of these areas and give the parent birds plenty of space.
2. Walk your dogs in designated dog-friendly areas only and always keep them on a leash over summer.
3. Stay out of nesting areas and follow all local rules.
4. Chicks are mobile and don't necessarily stay within fenced nesting areas. When you're near a nesting area, stick to the wet sand to avoid accidentally stepping on a chick.
Possums In Your Roof?: do the right thing
Possums in your roof? Please do the right thing
On the weekend, one of our volunteers noticed a driver pull up, get out of their vehicle, open the boot, remove a trap and attempt to dump a possum on a bush track. Fortunately, our member intervened and saved the beautiful female brushtail and the baby in her pouch from certain death.
It is illegal to relocate a trapped possum more than 150 metres from the point of capture and substantial penalties apply. Urbanised possums are highly territorial and do not fare well in unfamiliar bushland. In fact, they may starve to death or be taken by predators.
While Sydney Wildlife Rescue does not provide a service to remove possums from your roof, we do offer this advice:
✅ Call us on (02) 9413 4300 and we will refer you to a reliable and trusted licenced contractor in the Sydney metropolitan area. For a small fee they will remove the possum, seal the entry to your roof and provide a suitable home for the possum - a box for a brushtail or drey for a ringtail.
✅ Do-it-yourself by following this advice from the Department of Planning and Environment:
❌ Do not under any circumstances relocate a possum more than 150 metres from the capture site.
Thank you for caring and doing the right thing.
Sydney Wildlife photos
Aviaries + Possum Release Sites Needed
Pittwater Online News has interviewed Lynette Millett OAM (WIRES Northern Beaches Branch) needs more bird cages of all sizes for keeping the current huge amount of baby wildlife in care safe or 'homed' while they are healed/allowed to grow bigger to the point where they may be released back into their own home.
If you have an aviary or large bird cage you are getting rid of or don't need anymore, please email via the link provided above. There is also a pressing need for release sites for brushtail possums - a species that is very territorial and where release into a site already lived in by one possum can result in serious problems and injury.
If you have a decent backyard and can help out, Lyn and husband Dave can supply you with a simple drey for a nest and food for their first weeks of adjustment.
Bushcare in Pittwater: where + when
For further information or to confirm the meeting details for below groups, please contact Council's Bushcare Officer on 9970 1367 or visit Council's bushcare webpage to find out how you can get involved.
BUSHCARE SCHEDULES Where we work Which day What time
Western Foreshores Coopers Point, Elvina Bay 2nd Sunday 10 - 1pm Rocky Point, Elvina Bay 1st Monday 9 - 12noon
Friends Of Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment Activities
Bush Regeneration - Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment
This is a wonderful way to become connected to nature and contribute to the health of the environment. Over the weeks and months you can see positive changes as you give native species a better chance to thrive. Wildlife appreciate the improvement in their habitat.
Belrose area - Thursday mornings
Belrose area - Weekend mornings by arrangement
Contact: Phone or text Conny Harris on 0432 643 295
Wheeler Creek - Wednesday mornings 9-11am
Contact: Phone or text Judith Bennett on 0402 974 105
More than 95% of Australian animals are invertebrates (animals without backbones – spiders, snails, insects, crabs, worms and others). There are at least 300,000 species of invertebrate in Australia. Of these, two-thirds are unknown to western science.
This means there are huge gaps in our knowledge of Australia’s invertebrates. Our new study, published today in the journal Cambridge Prisms: Extinction, indicates there has been a catastrophic under-recording of Australia’s species extinctions.
Our best estimate is that 9,111 invertebrate species have become extinct in Australia since 1788. This dwarfs the current official estimate of the total number of extinctions across all plant and animal species in Australia: 100.
The extinction of so many invertebrate species is not an arcane concern for those few people who care about bugs. Invertebrates are the building blocks of almost all ecological systems.
Loss of invertebrates will destabilise those systems. It will negatively impact the resources we depend upon, like pollination, cycling of nutrients into the soil, clean air and waterways.
Re-calculating the loss
To date, assessments of historic and ongoing biodiversity loss in Australia have been heavily skewed towards vertebrates, especially mammals and birds. This bias has also driven the efforts to prevent the loss of such species.
These conservation efforts are important. But in having such a focus, we have neglected the invertebrates. We haven’t adequately recognised which invertebrates are at the highest risk of extinction, or which have already been lost.
The most widely used estimate for the total number of extinctions of all Australian plants and animals since 1788 is “just” 100 species.
In our study, we used a range of approaches to estimate a more realistic figure for the number of invertebrate extinctions, and to predict how many will become extinct in 2024.
We took the proportional extinction rates of Australian vertebrates and plants and extrapolated this to the number of Australian invertebrates. Separately, we also extrapolated the proportion of extinctions recognised among all of the world’s invertebrates to the number of Australian ones.
To estimate the current extinction rate – the number of invertebrates that are going extinct as you read this article – we had to make assumptions. One option was that our estimated number of extinctions from 1788 to 2024 fell equally across the years.
However, it’s more likely the annual rate of extinctions of Australian invertebrates has increased over time. This is due to increasing habitat loss and other threats as Australia’s human population has grown.
Any such study will have many unknowns, unavoidable uncertainties and caveats. Because of this, we derived broad bounds to our estimate of Australian invertebrate extinctions. It ranges from about 1,500 species at the lower end to nearly 60,000 at the upper end.
This vast number of extinctions is not simply a historical blemish. Importantly, we estimate that the current rate of extinctions of Australian invertebrates is between one and three species every week.
Most of the Australian invertebrate species that have gone extinct will not yet have been formally described. Many may never be so. We have coined the term “ghost extinctions” for those species that have been lost without a trace – with no evidence they ever existed.
Why so many extinctions?
Many of the factors that have caused extinctions in Australian plants and vertebrates also threaten invertebrates. These include extensive habitat destruction, invasive species, degradation and transformation of aquatic environments, and changed fire regimes.
For invertebrates, added to that cocktail of threats is the widespread use of insecticides, pesticides and herbicides.
Many invertebrates are at high extinction risk because they live in small areas, can’t easily move, and are highly sensitive to change. They also often share habitats, so we get entire groups of highly at-risk invertebrate species hanging on in remnant islands of habitat (known as “centres of endemism”).
Many of these at-risk invertebrates are also members of ancient lineages which stretch back millions of years. They would have survived through a world with dinosaurs and the arrival of mammals. Now, they have met a world with humans.
How can we stop invertebrate extinctions?
Currently, conservation priorities in Australia are informed by formal listings of individual threatened species. It’s an important conservation mechanism, but it fails the vast majority of invertebrate species.
We just don’t have enough data, evidence or resources to list each one. As a result, most imperilled invertebrates are excluded from protection.
Our results are a wake-up call.
Preventing extinctions of invertebrate species is a formidable challenge. A first step is for everyone to be aware of the huge distortion in conservation efforts and awareness, and the likely magnitude of invertebrate extinctions.
We can help lower the rate of invertebrate extinctions, but it will take a shift in thinking.
To provide better protection across all of Australia’s biodiversity, we need to better protect centres of endemism and better control key threats (such as habitat destruction and broad-scale use of insecticides).
Governments and research organisations must give more priority to taxonomic research – the naming and describing of new species. We also need more comprehensive monitoring by government agencies, conservation groups and citizen scientists of invertebrate populations, to identify new threats as they arise and to protect species and places.
If Australia is losing one to three invertebrate species per week, the “zero extinctions” goal is pushed into a whole new realm of accountability. Unless we address this decline, that pledge of zero extinctions is destined to failure.
The authors would like to acknowledge the co-authors of this research: Michael Braby, Australian National University; Heloise Gibb, La Trobe University; Mark Harvey, Western Australian Museum; Sarah Legge, Charles Darwin University; Melinda Moir, Western Australia Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development; Brett Murphy, Charles Darwin University; Tim New, La Trobe University; and Michael Rix, Queensland Museum.
A Dutton government would keep coal working hard for much longer under its nuclear policy, while renewables would provide only a little over half the electricity generated in 2050.
The opposition has finally put in place the last piece of its controversial nuclear policy, with modelling claiming its alternative would come in substantially cheaper than Labor’s transition path to net zero.
The Coalition policy ensures the issues of coal and climate change will be strongly contested at next year’s election.
The key breakdown in the opposition policy is that by 2050, renewables would provide 54% of electricity generation and nuclear 38%, with 8% a combination of storage and gas.
This compares with Labor’s transition plan for renewables to provide nearly all the generation by then (and 82% by 2030).
The modelling, done at no charge by Frontier Economics, costs the Coalition plan for the transition of the National Electricity Market (which covers the east coast and South Australia but excludes Western Australia) at $263 billion (about 44%) cheaper than its estimate for Labor’s transition. It includes nuclear construction costs.
The modelling, including a range of assumptions (the same assumptions as Australian Energy Market Operator except for inclusion of nuclear), puts the cost of Labor’s transition in the National Electricity Market at $594 billion and that of the Coalition’s at $331 billion.
A central feature of the plan is to keep existing coal-fired power stations going for longer. Then the first of them would be replaced by nuclear generation, in the mid-2030s. The Coalition policy is for seven publicly-owned nuclear plants spread around the country although the modelling is on the basis of units in Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria.
The Coalition argues coal-fired power stations do not need to be, and should not be, phased out as soon as is now planned by AEMO. Prolonging their lives as compared to AEMO assumptions would save money, it says.
Another important saving, the Coalition says, is that its plan to have its nuclear plants located at or near existing power plant sites does away with the need for a huge new transmission grid.
Peter Dutton says: “Nuclear energy is at the heart of our plan, providing the ‘always-on’ power needed to back up renewables, stabilise the grid, and keep energy affordable”.
“The Coalition’s approach integrates zero-emissions nuclear energy alongside renewables and gas, delivering a total system cost significantly lower than Labor’s. This means reduced power bills for households, lower operating costs for small businesses, and a stronger, more resilient economy,” Dutton says.
The release of the costings unleashes a tsunami of claims and counterclaims about numbers. That debate will be eye-glazing for many voters.
Not to worry. We are talking the span of a generation. Numbers that stretch out to 2050 don’t mean a great deal. Hundreds of things – in technology and politics, for starters – can and will change as the years pass.
Moreover, numbers from modelling have an extra layer of complexity and uncertainty. They depend heavily on their assumptions that are, in many cases, necessarily arbitrary.
Anyone inclined to take modelling at face value should reflect on the Labor experience. Before the 2022 election it released modelling that gave it the basis to promise a $275 reduction in household power bills by next year. We all know what happened to that.
Regardless of the problems in attempting to be precise, the broad debate about nuclear’s cost will be intense.
The opposition’s plan is up against, for example, the recently released GenCost report, prepared by the CSIRO. This gave a thumbs down to the nuclear option in cost terms. The opposition attempted to cast doubt on the CSIRO’s expertise, but that is unlikely to fly.
The Coalition policy will go down differently according to which constituency is judging it.
Most obviously, given its reliance on extending the life of coal, it will be unpopular with those for whom climate change is a top-line issue. Teal MPs and candidates will hope to get mileage out of that. Under the Coalition plan emissions would remain higher for longer than under Labor’s transition.
On the other hand, in some regional communities where there has been a bad reaction to the planned new power grid and to wind farms, the policy is likely to be well received.
The question is how it will play in the outer suburban electorates that Dutton hopes will help him cut deeply into Labor’s majority.
For these voters, stressed by the cost of living, climate change is probably less of a priority than it once might have been. And nuclear is less scary than in bygone years.
But whether they will see the Coalition policy as more practical than Labor’s, or as a pie-in-the-sky nuclear dream – that’s too early to say.
Climate Change and Energy Minister Chris Bowen was dismissive when the Coalition first promoted nuclear. But Labor would be unwise to be complacent, especially in what’s shaping as a difficult election for the Albanese government.
Labor’s strongest arguments will be on climate change – the evils of the extension of the use of coal – and cost (relying on GenCost findings and the like).
But it is vulnerable in its rejection of calls to lift the ban on nuclear. Bowen argues to do this would be a “distraction”, potentially harming investment in renewables.
That’s a weak argument. To suggest those looking to invest very large sums are likely to be distracted if there wasn’t a ban on the nuclear option is simplistic.
Firstly, this underestimates the financial nous of such investors.
On Labor’s own argument, they wouldn’t want to invest in nuclear because it wouldn’t be profitable to do so. Secondly, investors currently
know if there were a change of government, the Coalition would lift the ban (notwithstanding the present opposition of various states).
The strongest reason Labor won’t contemplate lifting the ban is politics. Any such move would outrage the left of the party, and also risk driving voters to the Greens. It would also require a change in the Labor’s party platform, which says Labor will “prohibit the establishment of nuclear power plants and all other stages of the nuclear fuel cycle in Australia”.
With households highly focused on their immediate power bills, the government has been tipped to extend more relief as it burnishes its cost-of-living credentials for the election. The Coalition would have to decide whether to match this. It would be hard not to do so.
The Coalition’s plan for nuclear power is a big idea, of which we don’t see that many in our current politics. It will test Dutton’s ability to cope with detail under the pressure of a campaign. There will be another test. If the Coalition remains in opposition, will it throw its grand plan into the policy dust bin, so the nuclear debate will be gone for another decade or two?
On Granite Island off South Australia, a colony of little penguins is fighting to survive. About two decades ago, the penguins numbered 1,600 adults – now there are just 30.
It is important for scientists to monitor and study this little penguin colony, to observe their behaviours and stop their numbers from declining.
In our latest research project, my colleagues and I captured footage of the penguins over several breeding seasons, as part of a study into their parenting behaviours. It provides a fascinating behind-the-scenes glimpse into the unseen world of these vulnerable birds.
So let’s take a look at what Granite Island’s little penguins get up to when humans aren’t watching.
The world’s tiniest penguin
Little penguins (Eudyptula novaehollandiae) are the world’s smallest penguin species. They typically grow to about 35 centimetres and weigh an average 1.2 kilograms. They live in coastal waters in Tasmania and southern Australia – including on Granite Island, about 100 kilometres south of Adelaide.
The stark decline in little penguin numbers on Granite Island is due to several factors. They include predators such as fur seals and foxes, changing environmental conditions, declines in fish numbers, and human disturbance.
My colleagues and I have spent years studying the Granite Island penguin colony. Our latest research gathered thousands of hours of footage to determine if a particular personality trait – boldness – affected the penguins’ breeding and parenting.
Home after a day at sea
The footage starts with a stream of little penguins waddling under a boardwalk, returning from sea. They have spent most of the day in the water, hunting for food such as fish and squid. Little penguins forage about their body weight in food every day.
The penguins return to their nests after dark, to rest and feed their chicks. They do this in groups – possibly to avoid predators – before heading to their separate burrows.
They tend to travel quietly, to avoid attracting attention. But out at sea or back in their burrows, little penguins can be quite vocal, making sounds such as short quacks, growls and brays.
The footage shows one penguin bumping into another in the dark – but this doesn’t mean they don’t see well. Little penguins have excellent vision, even at night. Because the birds don’t move well on land, they often feel exposed and in a hurry to get home.
The birds are quite territorial and can get into disputes with others in the colony. The footage shows two males fighting by standing tall and pecking each other. One is probably defending its nest.
Hello, lover
Little penguins are monogamous. The breeding season runs over spring and summer, when there is lots of food around.
Males establish the burrows, which are usually in rock crevices or under thick vegetation. They then try to attract a female by demonstrating their quality – either through vocal displays or defending territory.
The footage shows a male and female penguin greeting each other, before getting down to business. Then we cut away, to give the lovebirds some privacy!
Across a breeding season, little penguin pairs typically rear one or two clutches during autumn and winter. Each clutch consists of one or two eggs. The penguins take turns sitting on the eggs while the other feeds at sea.
Keeping their plumage looking tip-top
In the footage we see two little penguins preening themselves during a quiet moment. This is important to remove parasites and keep their plumage healthy.
Despite their small bodies, little penguins have an estimated 10,000 feathers. The feathers are downy at the base, providing a layer of insulation which helps keep them warm during long days at sea.
The feathers are also waterproof thanks to an oily liquid the penguins secrete from a gland near their tails, which they spread over their body when preening.
Now for some family time
After the eggs hatch, the parents take turns to guard their chicks for three weeks while the partner fishes at sea. When this period ends, the parents leave the chicks alone in the burrow while they fish, returning every one to five days to feed them.
The footage shows the chicks excitedly jumping on a parent in the nest. We also see the chicks practising their vocal calls and stretching their tiny wings by flapping them madly. This is all important practice for being a grown-up penguin.
The parent-offspring relationship was the focus of our new research. When humans are around a lot – as they are at Granite Island – penguins can be bolder and more aggressive. We predicted bold individuals would invest less time in parental care, as has previously been observed in other bird species.
But this was not the case. We found a penguin’s boldness has no bearing on its performance as a parent, such as how often it returned to the nest, fed its chicks, or stayed overnight.
The next phase of our research will examine factors such as the quality of food the parents feed to chicks, or whether personality traits other than boldness might affect their child-rearing.
Protecting our little penguins
Humans are disturbing animal habitats at an alarming rate. We intend to keep studying – and filming – Granite Island’s little penguins to understand how this pressure is affecting them.
If you are ever lucky enough to observe little penguins anywhere in Australia, please take care of them by sticking to a few simple guidelines outlined in full here.
They include:
stay at least five metres away
don’t use camera flashes – it can temporarily blind the penguin
don’t shine a torch directly at the penguin
keep dogs away at all times
don’t get between a penguin and its burrow or chicks.
Giant old trees are survivors. But their size and age do not protect them against everything. They face threats such as logging or intensifying drought and fire as the climate changes.
Tasmania has long been home to plants ancient and giant. One rare shrub, King’s lomatia (Lomatia tasmanica), has been cloning itself for at least 43,000 years.
But in recent years, even some giants have succumbed. The devastating 2019 fires in southern Tasmania killed at least 17 of the largest trees. That included the largest blue gum (Eucalyptus globulus) ever measured, the 82 metre high Strong Girl.
But giants still exist. In southern Tasmania’s Valley of the Giants (Styx Valley), there is a mountain ash (Eucalyptus regnans) named Centurion now over 100m tall. Centurion is a leading candidate for the tallest flowering plant on Earth and the tallest tree in the Southern Hemisphere. (California’s coastal redwood ‘Hyperion’ reaches 116 metres, but is a non-flowering tree).
For years, I have been drawn to Centurion as a botanical science landmark. I have climbed it, measured it, and observed it carefully. But after the 2019 fires, my colleagues and I realised the urgency of preserving physical genetic samples before the chance was lost forever. During the 2019 fires, Centurion itself narrowly escaped death. It was saved only by the efforts of firefighters.
Our recent research sequencing a high-resolution genome of Centurion turned up an intriguing finding – this giant shows greater genetic diversity than we had expected, which may boost the adaptability of the species. Finding and preserving samples of Australia’s other remaining giants will help scientists learn from these remarkable trees.
Where Centurion stands
Giant trees are found only in a few locations in Australia, such as Victoria’s Central Highlands (mountain ash) and Western Australia’s southwest forests (red tingle, Eucalyptus jacksonii). These regions tend to have higher rainfall and less frequent fires.
Centurion is named for its height, at more than 100 metres high. But it is also at least three centuries old.
It has been lucky to survive this far. Centurion stands in a small patch of uncut state forest in a heavily logged area. Logging in the region is continuing, though nearby areas of old growth forest were added to the World Heritage area in 2013.
It was found in 2008, when forestry workers analysing aerial laser scanning data identified the tree as a 99.76 m tall giant.
In 2018, I measured its height using laser ground measurement. The living top of the tree had grown to more than 100m in height.
When I climbed Centurion, I saw the uppermost branches had actually sprouted from the side of a snapped upper stem about 90m tall. This suggests the tree could have once been significantly taller.
Branches resprouting from the lower trunk suggest the tree is taking advantage of a change in light conditions after neighbouring trees died. The resprouting abilities of Eucalyptus species mean these trees can better recover after fire – and outcompete less resilient species such as rainforest plants.
When the fires came
In early 2019, I had planned to collect leaf samples from Centurion for deeper study, alongside geneticists from two universities. But then the fires came. Large tracts of southern Tasmania burned over that summer. Giants turned to charcoal. Centurion was left charred, but with a green, growing top.
After the fires burned out, we were able to collect samples from Centurion and began analysing its genetic code in the lab. My colleagues and I have now posted its genome to an open-access public server for wider use.
We used cutting-edge methods to create one of the best genetic fingerprints of a forest tree so far. It’s the first time we have documented an individual Eucalyptus including genetic contributions from both parent plants across the full length of the chromosomes. This totals nearly a billion DNA base pairs – individual “bits” of genetic information.
Centurion’s genome showed us the tree’s parents had each bequeathed it very different genetic sequences. This combination may have contributed to its extreme growth, though we don’t know for sure.
The genome reveals a surprising amount of genetic variation. In Centurion’s DNA lie new genetic sequences, deleted genes and duplicated genes. These variations suggest mountain ash trees have high adaptability. Not all trees are like this – some have very little genetic variation, or even rely on cloning. Trees bred for agriculture or forestry tend to have low genetic diversity.
Building an archive of giant eucalypts
After the 2019 fires turned some of Australia’s largest trees to ash, my colleagues and I realised the moment was urgent. If we didn’t preserve the genes of these trees, they could be lost forever.
The Tasmanian Herbarium now hosts our project to curate and store samples through the Giant Eucalyptus Specimen Archive project. We have sampled several of the largest remaining giants in the Styx Valley, lodging samples with the Herbarium and genomic researchers at the Australian National University.
Conservation – of specimens?
Mountain ash like cool, wet mountains. But as the world warms, drought and fire become more common. Recent Tasmanian bushfires have burned traditionally cooler, wetter parts of Tasmania, where rare species such as pencil pines and King Billy Pines grow.
Conserving old growth forests and their giants in national parks or World Heritage listing can only go so far in the face of these threats. This year, we have seen widespread browning and dying among eucalypts.
Preserving leaf and flower specimens costs a fraction of what it takes to keep living plants or store frozen seeds.
Future scientists may find these giant trees have some genetic talent for survival, as demonstrated by their longevity. Preserving their genes could help the species survive.
We may well need long-term preservation of specimens in Herbariums, which preserve plant material for decades or even centuries. Museums, botanical gardens, seedbanks and laboratories can also archive specimens from significant individual plants.
If the genetic stories of Earth’s ancient and giant trees are to be read in the future, we must take the time to record them and keep them safe.
Acknowledgements: Thank you to the Borevitz Lab (ANU), the Tasmanian Herbarium, and the Eucalypt Genetics Group (UTAS). This article is in memory of Tasmanian ecologist Dr Jamie Kirkpatrick (1946-2024)
Birds are often colourful and their song provides the soundtrack to our outdoor activities. Listening to a dawn chorus should be like listening to a full orchestra, with strings, woodwind, brass and percussion impressing with their volume and complexity. But if the only ones who turn up are the bass drum and a trumpeter, the music would be underwhelming, if not boring.
Our study explores the link between birdsong and people, specifically on English vineyards, as viticulture is the UK’s fastest growing agricultural industry. It is also strongly embedded in tourism through vineyard tours and wine-tasting events.
We surveyed bird communities on 21 vineyards and measured the characteristics of their soundscapes using acoustic indices, which are metrics that capture complexity and volume of sound. Our results showed that vineyards with more bird species had louder and more complex soundscapes.
This is not surprising: a vineyard with robins, blackbirds, swifts, finches and tits is expected to sound more acoustically diverse and loud than a vineyard with just a few pigeons, crows and pheasants.
But does the silencing of our soundscapes matter to us? The short answer is yes. There is growing evidence about the health benefits of spending time in nature, including reducing risks of heart disease, diabetes and anxiety. Yet while the general benefits of being outside in nature may seem intuitive, the contributions of natural sounds to this are less understood.
So as part of our research, we explored the experience of 186 wine-tour participants across three vineyards with varying soundscapes. We also enhanced some vineyard soundscapes with hidden speakers, which played the songs of five additional bird species. This was designed to see how participants’ engagement with nature would be affected by increasing the diversity of birds and songs, as well as the overall volume.
Surprising soundscapes
The results were fascinating. Paul Harrison, the manager at Saffron Grange, a vineyard in Essex, summarised: “What was surprising was the significant impact that birdsong has on people.”
Visitors who experienced louder and more complex sounds – whether on vineyards with naturally richer soundscapes or on those we had enhanced – reported that they had enjoyed the sounds more. They also felt more connected to nature and more satisfied with their tour. With richer soundscapes, they felt more mindful and positive during the tours, reporting that they felt freer from work, routine and responsibility. They said they felt “engrossed by the sounds” and found them “appealing”.
We harness nature’s benefits subconsciously, which means, as Harrison pointed out, that it’s easy to take them for granted: “We all benefit from the soundscape of the vineyard daily and maybe when it is so frequent we don’t fully realise how that positively impacts wellbeing compared to other work settings.”
Our study is a clear demonstration of the direct effect that birdsong has on our wellbeing. It shows that bird conservation could simultaneously enhance our experience of spending time in nature and elicit positive emotions.
The world we experience today is unlike what our grandparents experienced. We are increasingly disconnected from nature, and nature’s benefits on our wellbeing are lessening as a result. What is most concerning is that these changes are accepted as the new norm, a concept termed “shifting baseline syndrome”.
We hope our findings lead to more people thinking like Harrison, who concluded:
It goes to show how important nature is for humanity on so many levels and hopefully a study like this supports more investment and help in retaining as well as improving our natural soundscapes.
Our study presents a strong, albeit selfish, argument for protecting natural soundscapes. We showed that even an hour’s exposure to diverse and loud birdsong can lead to feelings of optimism and relaxation. So, we hope businesses and people will be inspired to invest in conservation and promote nature engagement in creative settings, such as workplace courtyards or restaurants with outdoor seating.
Surging global tourism emissions are driven almost entirely by 20 countries, and efforts to rein in the trend aren’t working.
That is the main finding of our new research, published in Nature Communications today. It represents the most rigorous and comprehensive analysis of tourism emissions yet conducted.
The study draws together multiple datasets, including those published directly by 175 governments over 11 years (2009-2020). It uses the United Nations-endorsed “measurement of sustainable tourism” framework and draws on tourism expenditure and emissions intensity data from national accounts.
The findings reveal serious challenges ahead, given the wider context. The UN Environment Programme reports a 42% reduction in current global emissions overall is needed by 2030 (and 57% by 2035). If not, the Paris Agreement goal of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees will be lost.
But global tourism emissions have been growing at double the rate of the global economy. Our study reveals that between 2009 and 2019, emissions increased by 40%, from 3.7 gigatonnes (7.3% of global emissions) in 2009 to 5.2 gigatonnes (8.8% of global emissions) in 2019.
While global tourism emissions fell dramatically in 2020-2021 due to COVID-19, the rebound to pre-pandemic levels has been rapid.
Massive growth without a technological fix
Tourism-related emissions increased at a yearly rate of 3.5% from 2009 to 2019. By comparison, global economic growth in general over that period was 1.5% per annum. If this growth rate continues, global tourism emissions will double over the next two decades.
The carbon intensity of every dollar of tourist spending is 30% higher than the average for the global economy, and four times higher than the service sector.
The primary driver of rising emissions is high growth in tourism demand. The rapidly expanding carbon footprint is predominantly from aviation (21%), use of vehicles powered by petrol and diesel (17%), and utilities such as electricity supply (16%).
Slow efficiency gains through technology have been overwhelmed by this growth in demand.
Aviation accounted for half of direct tourism emissions, making it the Achilles heel of global tourism emissions. Despite decades of promises, the global air transport system has proved impossible to decarbonise through new technologies.
20 countries dominate emissions
Our research revealed alarming inequalities in emissions growth between countries. The United States, China and India accounted for 60% of the growth in tourism emissions between 2009 and 2019. By 2019, these three countries alone were responsible for 39% of total global tourism emissions.
Three-quarters of total global tourism emissions are produced by just 20 countries, with the remaining 25% shared between 155. Remarkably, there is now a hundred-fold difference in per-capta tourism footprints between countries which travel most and those which travel least.
Of the top 20, the US (as a foreign destination, as well as its citizens travelling) had the largest tourism carbon footprint in 2019 – nearly 1 gigatonne. It was responsible for 19% of the total global tourism carbon footprint, growing at an annual rate of 3.2%.
In 2019, the US tourism carbon footprint was equivalent to 3 tonnes per resident, ranking 12th globally among countries with the highest per-capita tourism emissions.
As a destination, the United Kingdom ranked 7th globally, at 128 megatonnes (2.5% of the total). In 2019, UK residents produced 2.8 tonnes of emissions per person, ranked 15th globally.
Australia’s tourism carbon footprint ranked 14th globally (82 megatonnes). Its resident per-capita tourism carbon footprint in 2019 was 3.4 tonnes (8th globally). This underscores the high emissions being driven by long-haul air travel for inbound and outbound international trips.
In 2019, New Zealand’s per-capita tourism carbon footprint was 3.1 tonnes per resident (10th globally). Like Australia, dependence on long-haul international travel is a problem that cannot be ignored.
4 pathways to decarbonising tourism
For the first time ever, this year’s UN Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP29) included tourism. UN Tourism endorsed our study and acknowledged tourism now contributes 8.8% of total global emissions.
It reported that COP29 “marks a turning point, when ambition meets action, and vision transforms into commitment […] to positive transformation for a better future for our planet”.
But our research shows the combination of tourism demand growth on one hand, and the failure of technology efficiency gains on the other, present enormous barriers to tourism carbon mitigation.
Despite this, we have identified four pathways towards stabilising and reducing global tourism emissions:
Measure tourism carbon emissions to identify hotspots. Our research provides evidence of the tourism sub-sectors driving high emissions growth, including aviation, energy supply and vehicle use. These hotspots must move onto a 10% annual emissions reduction pathway to 2050.
Avoid excessive tourism development and identify sustainable growth thresholds. National tourism decarbonisation strategies must now define and implement sustainable growth goals, most urgently in the 20 highest-emitting tourism destinations.
Shift focus to domestic and short-range markets, and discourage long-haul markets. Actively managing growth in demand for air travel is the most obvious first step, which might involve regulating long-haul air travel demand.
Address inequality between countries by factoring in the social costs of carbon emissions. Controlling current patterns of relentless growth in long-haul air travel aligns with a more socially equitable approach to tourism, which is needed to address these inequalities.
The fundamental purpose of our research is to give policymakers and industry leaders greater clarity about tourism’s impact on global emissions. The challenge then is to develop evidence-based policy and regulation to achieve urgent tourism decarbonisation.
The authors acknowledge the contributions of Stefan Gössling, Manfred Lenzen and Futu Faturay who were part of the research team on this project, and who coauthored the Nature Communications paper on which this article is based.
We are now in the middle of the sixth mass extinction, caused by our emergence as a planet-shaping force. Species are going extinct far faster than the average natural rate of loss.
In response, conservationists are working to safeguard biodiversity strongholds such as tropical rainforests, famed for their remarkable richness of species. Many of these rainforests are household names, from the Amazon to the Congo to Australia’s Daintree and Wet Tropics.
But these rainforests are being steadily cut down or degraded. It’s entirely possible for rainforests to look good in satellite images even though logging, mining or road-building mean they have become poor homes to species able to thrive only in the absence of major human disturbance, such as West Africa’s iconic Diana monkey (Cercopithecus diana).
How much rainforest is still in good condition and able to sustain the Daintree’s cassowaries and tree kangaroos, the Amazon’s sloths and anacondas and the Congo Basin’s forest elephants, bonobos and okapi? We looked at over 16,000 species of mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians in our new research to answer this question.
At first glance, it seemed like good news – up to 90% of the geographic ranges of these species were still covered in forest. But when we drilled down further, we found the real problem. Barely 25% of the world’s remaining tropical rainforests are still of high quality. For threatened species and those in decline, there’s just 8% of their habitat left in good condition.
What makes a rainforest high quality?
To protect rainforests, conservationists have long focused on a key goal: reduce deforestation. The theory is that by slowing or stopping the rate at which trees are felled, rainforest habitat can be preserved.
We measure deforestation by looking at rates of native forest cover loss and assessing the size of the remaining canopy. But while forest cover is vital for many species, it’s not enough. Maintaining forest cover without considering its quality means ignoring major human sources of damage, such as logging, roadbuilding and mining which make rainforests increasingly degraded.
Degraded rainforests aren’t lifeless. They’re often full of life. But the species you find are usually those that thrive in disturbed, open areas such as the edges of forest, roadsides and agricultural lands. Such species take advantage of human-made disturbance to expand. This comes at the expense of many other forest dependent species, who often decline or disappear.
To be able to distinguish high quality from degraded rainforests, our team used high-resolution imagery of global rainforests from three NASA satellites to calculate the height of trees, canopy cover and how long the rainforest had stood without pressure from human industries.
We combined these three variables into a single measure of forest structural condition and overlaid our results with a map of major industrial human pressures such as expansion of cities, creation of farmland and building roads.
Bringing these data sources together lets us rank the condition of rainforests, which we dub the Forest Structural Integrity Index, first developed in 2020.
High quality rainforests have a multi-layered structure – a lower understorey of shrubs and small trees, a midstorey of medium trees, a canopy of the taller trees and an emergent layer where unusually tall trees poke through the sea of green.
In forests degraded by logging, very tall, tall and medium trees are logged or severely damaged, while the understorey is overtaken by dense brush. We know high quality rainforests are linked to a lower risk of extinction for vertebrates.
High quality rainforest is getting harder to find
In our research, we define high quality rainforest as those left undisturbed since 2000, with little pressure from human industry. These forests have over 75% canopy cover and trees over 15 metres, indicating they are older.
High quality forests are better homes for wildlife than degraded forests, when we look at how many species live there, how plentiful these species are and how broad and functional the ecosystem is. High quality rainforests also provide irreplaceable ecosystem services to the planet and humans, such as stabilising the climate by sequestering large amounts of carbon in their wood.
Unfortunately, our new research shows the extent of the damage we have done. Only a fraction of rainforest cover can now be considered high quality habitat for over 16,000 mammal, bird, reptile and amphibian species – even though 90% of their geographic ranges are still “forested”.
What does this look like? Take the golden bowerbird (Prionodura newtonia), endemic to Queensland’s Wet Tropics. Its habitat appears well preserved, with 84% of its range still forested. But when we drill down, we find only 36% of the rainforest can still be considered high quality.
In West Africa’s rainforests, the Diana monkey still has forests covering 80% of its range – but just 0.7% of high quality.
What should we do?
These findings are a wake-up call. They suggest many seemingly safe species could be at real risk of extinction. Just because a forest is still standing doesn’t mean it’s able to be a home.
This points to the urgency of stopping deforestation as rapidly as possible. Our last tracts of undisturbed tropical rainforest have to be protected.
But it also shows us that ending deforestation isn’t enough by itself. Many of the world’s surviving rainforests are not in great shape. We should let these rainforests recover by banning industrial-scale timber extraction, road building and other major pressures.
In 2022, nations promised to end the routine destruction of tropical rainforests and other highly biodiverse areas within a decade.
It’s becoming increasingly clear that limiting global warming to 1.5°C will require much more than existing efforts to reduce emissions and decarbonise industry. We also need to remove enormous amounts of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, 7-9 billion tonnes a year.
There will be trade-offs, as CO₂-removal can be costly and often uses up energy, water and land. But Earth is hurtling towards a climate catastrophe, with more than 3°C of warming under current global policies. We must do everything we can to avert disaster, which means slashing emissions as much as we possibly can, and removing what’s left.
Within the international scientific community the debate about carbon dioxide removal has moved on from “could we, should we?” to “we must” – recognising the urgency of the situation. So it’s worth coming up to speed on the basics of carbon dioxide removal technology, both old and new, and the role we can expect it to play in Australia’s net-zero future.
Why do we need carbon dioxide removal?
Carbon dioxide removal accelerates natural processes such as storing carbon in trees, rocks, soil and the ocean. It differs from carbon capture and storage, which seeks to remove carbon before it enters the atmosphere.
As Australia’s Climate Change Authority states, reaching the national goal of net-zero emissions by 2050 does not mean all emissions are eliminated across the economy. Some emissions are likely to remain – about 25% of Australia’s 2005 emissions under the current plan – and they need to be dealt with.
So how much carbon dioxide are we talking about? Some 133 million tonnes a year by mid-century, according to the authority. This equates to billions of tonnes of additional carbon dioxide removal over the next 25 years.
Ways to remove and store carbon dioxide from the atmosphere are among the federal government’s national science and research priorities. So let’s take a look at the technologies we are using now and what we might need.
What technologies do we need?
The international scientific community divides carbon dioxide removal technologies into “conventional” (nature-based) and “novel” (new) approaches.
The conventional technologies rely on biological processes, such as planting trees, boosting soil carbon levels and increasing carbon stores in coastal ecosystems such as mangroves. The carbon is typically stored over shorter timescales, from a decade to a century.
Unfortunately, many of these natural carbon stores or “sinks” are already becoming saturated. They will also become increasingly vulnerable in a changing climate. For example, forest fires are releasing billions of tonnes of carbon dioxide back into the atmosphere annually.
To reach net zero emissions, the world will need to find more durable ways to remove CO₂ at scale from the atmosphere. This is where the new technologies come in.
Examples include adding crushed carbonate or silicate rock to the ocean or farmland. Research suggests waste rock from mining could be used for this purpose.
Concerningly, novel approaches currently comprise less than 0.1% of total global carbon dioxide removal.
Carbon dioxide removal can also affect the environment. For instance, some approaches such as tree planting may compete with agriculture or biodiversity conservation for water and land. This challenge is compounded by climate change.
Other approaches, such as direct air capture and storage, currently face technical challenges in extracting CO₂ from air without consuming high amounts of energy.
The interests and rights of Australia’s First Nations communities must also be considered. A global survey of Indigenous people in 30 countries around the world, including Australia, found positive attitudes to climate intervention technologies. However, this is only a starting point. Greater engagement is needed nationally concerning specific carbon dioxide removal approaches.
More work is needed to understand these challenges, including how to manage them and their impacts on Australian communities.
A new industry for Australia?
Australia’s large land mass and vast oceans mean we have far greater physical capacity than other nations to store carbon.
Australia also has access to renewable energy used to power the technologies, and a skilled workforce to develop and run them.
Much like solar and wind energy, tackling carbon dioxide removal in Australia at the scale required will require a new industry with its own infrastructure, institutions and processes.
CSIRO and other organisations are advancing the technology, but more is needed. Australia requires a national dialogue and clear vision around how to deliver carbon dioxide removal responsibly and sustainably.
Of course, prevention is better than cure. It’s always better to cut emissions and stop carbon dioxide entering the atmosphere in the first place, than trying to remove it afterwards. But time is running out, carbon dioxide levels are already too high and we need to reach net zero by 2050.
Carbon dioxide removal is now essential, along with deep and urgent emissions reduction. We must get moving on permanent carbon dioxide removal if we are to preserve the planet for future generations.
Australia is on the cusp of a once-in-a-generation transformation, as our energy systems shift to clean, renewable forms of power. First Nations peoples, the original custodians of this land, must be central to – and benefit from – this transition.
That is the key message of the federal government’s new First Nations Clean Energy Strategy, launched on Friday. The government has committed A$70 million to help realise its aims.
I was part of a committee that helped guide the government on the strategy. It involved more than a year of consultation with First Nations communities across Australia, plus input from industry and state and territory governments.
Australia has pledged to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. Of the renewable energy infrastructure needed to achieve this, about half will be developed on First Nations land.
First Nations peoples have cared for Country for 65,000 years. Australia’s renewable energy transition must be on their terms. The strategy released today will guide this process – so let’s take a look at what it contains.
1. Get clean energy into First Nations communities
The strategy emphasises the need to establish renewable energy in First Nations communities and make homes more energy-efficient. Electricity supply to these communities is often limited, unreliable and more expensive than elsewhere in Australia.
Many remote communities across northern Australia also rely on back-up diesel power for much of the day. This is a highly polluting source of energy and hugely expensive to service.
Some remote communities use pre-paid electricity cards to access energy. This is expensive and those who cannot afford to pay often “self-disconnect” from the supply.
And remote First Nations houses – many of which are poorly built and insulated – can become dangerously hot which causes significant health problems.
2. Enable equitable partnerships
Equitable partnerships between First Nations peoples, industry and governments allow First Nations people to consent to projects on their terms. It also reduces risks, costs and delays for proponents.
The strategy aims to increase the capacity of First Nations peoples to actively take part in decisions about clean energy projects and policies.
First Nations people should have access to culturally appropriate advice and resources. This will arm them to better understand the opportunities and risks of, say, a solar farm proposed near their community.
It also means helping First Nations people participate in and benefit from projects – for example through skills training or help negotiating agreements.
3. Ensure First Nations people benefit economically
In times of significant economic change, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have usually been left behind. This time, history must not repeat.
Acceleration in Australia’s clean energy industry will create major economic and employment opportunities. First Nations peoples must be supported to seize them. For instance, First Nations peoples comprise just 1.9% of Australia’s clean energy workforce, which presents an enormous opportunity for increased participation.
Actions identified in the strategy include supporting First Nations energy businesses, including ensuring access to financial support. Other measures include developing a First Nations workforce by building on success stories such as the Indigenous Ranger program.
Recognition of Aboriginal land rights has led to a vast estate owned or managed by Indigenous people. The majority is in remote areas in northern Australia, far from population centres. But the Indigenous estate in south-eastern Australia is not insignificant and will prove vital in the new clean energy economies.
4. Put Country and culture at the centre
The strategy calls for First Nations peoples’ connection to land and sea Country, and their cultural knowledge and heritage, to be respected during the clean energy transition.
It acknowledges that clean energy harnesses the natural elements – such as sun, wind and water – and First Nations peoples’ knowledge of Country, developed over millennia, can greatly improve the way projects are designed and implemented.
It says governments and the clean energy industry must become more “culturally competent” so they can work collaboratively with First Nations peoples.
Towards autonomy and self-determination
Actions in the strategy are designed to complement the Closing the Gap agreement, which aims to close the health and life expectancy gap between First Nations peoples and non-Indigenous Australians. Closing the Gap targets include:
realising economic participation and development
social and emotional wellbeing
access to information and services so First Nations people can make informed decisions about their lives.
Several priorities identified in the strategy are already in place, to some degree.
For example, the Capacity Investment Scheme – under which the government underwrites the risk of investing in new renewable energy projects – requires proponents to demonstrate First Nations engagement and commitments.
And New South Wales’ Electricity Infrastructure Roadmap requires energy proponents to meet First Nations targets for employment and procurement.
However, much work is needed to translate the new strategy into real benefits on the ground, and to realise the aspirations of First Nations peoples for autonomy and self-determination.
A hopeful initiative
First Nations peoples are already highly vulnerable to the damaging effects of climate change. It threatens to make their Country unlivable, leading to a new wave of dispossession. For that reason and others, we need the clean energy transition to work.
The strategy is an optimistic and hopeful initiative. Done right, it will ensure the continent’s original custodians benefit socially and economically from the enormous changes ahead.
Over the last 60 years, various government policies in Australia have sought to boost First Nations economic development. But the efforts have been stymied by a lack of capacity and resources.
If this new strategy is to succeed, further funding and ongoing monitoring is needed to ensure its aims are achieved.
As Australia bids to host the United Nations climate change conference in 2026, in partnership with Pacific nations, we must show a commitment to elevating the rights and interests of Indigenous peoples around the world – including on home soil.
Heidi Norman, Professor, Faculty of Arts, Design and Architecture, Convenor: Indigenous Land & Justice Research Group, UNSW Sydney
Road transport is responsible for a substantial share of global carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions. So reducing these emissions is a high priority.
In the European Union (EU), CO₂ emissions from new passenger cars have been regulated for more than 15 years. The range of policy measures includes mandatory CO₂ emission targets.
But Australia’s mandatory New Vehicle Efficiency Standard will only come in next year, without other supporting policy measures.
In our new research, my colleagues and I compared the two car fleets and examined their emissions in detail. We found Australian cars are typically larger, heavier and less efficient, producing 43% more emissions than their EU counterparts. The results demonstrate the vital role of well-designed, ambitious policies and regulations in driving down emissions.
What we did
Car emissions by country depends on many factors. These include the level of dependence on cars, travel behaviour, consumer preferences, marketing, car types and sizes, fuel efficiency requirements, purchase price, running costs and, importantly, government policies.
Policy levers range from financial incentives, taxes and regulations through to other measures such as information campaigns.
We obtained region-specific vehicle specifications including vehicle sales, car make and model, weight, size, rated power, battery capacity and certified emissions performance. We extracted this from previous studies, publicly available data sets and information in Europe and Australia.
We then fed this information into detailed simulation models to estimate emissions in a wide range of real-world conditions, for each fleet. This included the effects of different driving conditions and climates.
What we found
Our research revealed Australian cars are larger and heavier than EU cars, which has direct consequences for emissions.
New vehicles in both the EU and Australia must be certified, with their fuel consumption and emissions tested against emission limits, before they can be sold.
But the test procedure differs between the EU and Australia. The EU uses a modern procedure, whereas Australia still uses an outdated and unrealistic test developed in the 1970s – ironically called the New European Drive Cycle test.
In the four years from 2018 to 2021, the difference between certified CO₂ emissions of new cars registered in Australia and the EU increased by 20%. This was mainly due to the more rapid rise of EVs in Europe.
Then there’s the difference between certified emissions and what actually happens on the road, often referred to as the “gap”. We found the gap between certified CO₂ emissions and real-world emissions is larger in Australia. In Europe the average gap for petrol and diesel cars is 15–20%, whereas in Australia it is 30–35%.
Differences in vehicle weight and size, driving style, climate, and the use of air conditioning contribute, but the outdated test protocol is a major factor.
The gap is particularly large for plug-in hybrid electric vehicles. Plug-in hybrid electric vehicle emissions are three to four times higher on the road in both Europe and Australia.
Why? Largely because certified emissions performance assumes these vehicles will drive in electric mode 75–90% of the time, while the reality is more like 25%. So in practice, these vehicles mostly drive around as high-emitting petrol or diesel cars.
Overall, we estimated the real-world CO₂ emissions of the registered on road fleets in 2021 were 143 grams per kilometre for the EU and and 204 grams per kilometre for Australia. This means the average Australian car on the road is producing 43% more greenhouse gas emissions than the average EU car.
Mandatory CO₂ emission targets work
Our research shows mandatory CO₂ emission targets are effective in reducing emissions from both (new) passenger cars and, over time, the fleet as a whole. But this only happens if they are well designed.
With its long-standing regulations, the EU has significantly reduced CO₂ emissions, mainly through increased sales of low- or zero-emission vehicles. Conversely, Australia has relied on ineffective voluntary emission standards so far, with relatively slow uptake of electric vehicles and slow or even no progress in reducing emissions as a result.
We found the shift towards electric vehicles is crucial for achieving carbon neutrality goals. Having a higher proportion of zero- and low-emission cars in new EU car sales was the main reason the region’s 2020 emission reduction targets were met.
Without this, 70% of manufacturers would have failed to meet the EU standards. That’s because the emissions performance of conventional diesel and petrol cars have hardly improved.
This is in line with recent research that found only a shift to lightweight battery-electric vehicles, alongside deep decarbonisation of the electricity grid, will get Australia close to net zero by 2050.
Both regions have designed similar paths for future emissions reduction efforts. However, EU targets have been set for a longer term (2015-35). Australia has only set annual targets for the period 2025 to 2029.
Our research suggests sales of battery electric cars will need to increase in each region to meet future CO₂ emissions targets. In the EU, electric vehicle sales will need to hit 50% by 2030 to meet its target. In Australia, electric vehicle sales will need to reach 60% by 2029 to meet its more lenient target.
Shaping future policy
As the EU shows, setting ambitious, effective and legally binding emissions targets can drive innovation and transform markets.
But mandatory targets are not enough on their own. Complementary policies are needed, such as providing incentives to purchase electric cars, and developing charging infrastructure. This holistic approach looks beyond vehicle technology to also consider solutions such as promoting active travel, improving public transport and reducing the need for travel altogether.
Our research also clearly shows Australia needs to update official test procedures. It’s crucial to include on-board fuel consumption monitoring in the new standard, as is done in Europe, to monitor real-world fuel/electricity use and emissions.
Future regulations should consider incorporating the emissions over the life of a vehicle from manufacturing and fuel/energy production to recycling and disposal.
Accurate information for consumers, as well as properly designed government policies, will help Australia finally start reducing greenhouse gas emissions from transport.
Watching a pet dog run free can be a source of joy for many people. But letting your dog off the leash is not so good for wildlife, especially if you’re in an area set aside for native species.
In our new research, we conducted open-ended interviews with dog walkers to better understand their behaviour. This was the first step towards a new community-based social marketing campaign to increase the proportion of dogs on lead in nature reserves.
We found people walk their dog there for two main reasons: they love the natural atmosphere, and/or it’s near home. But whether they keep their dog on a lead depends on what they feel is best for the dog at the time, and who’s nearby. Our research shows changing that behaviour depends on meeting the needs of pet owners and their dogs.
On the flip side, we know non-native species can sometimes support native species. For instance, some dogs are trained to protect wildlife. We wanted to better understand what’s working well so we can boost these benefits while reducing any potential harm.
Protecting the last of the bandicoots
Wirraparinga–Brownhill Creek Recreation Park is home to the nationally endangered southern brown bandicoot, known as “marti” to the Kaurna people.
Marti are the last of eight species from the bandicoot family living in the wild of SA.
At Wirraparinga, marti live in the thin strip of protected dense vegetation along the creek line reserve. But this reserve is also popular with dog walkers, joggers, cyclists and other visitors. Dogs are legally required to be always on a lead, but often aren’t.
Members of the local conservation group initially asked us to survey the marti population in 2020. They wanted to know how many marti were there, and where.
To our surprise, this isolated colony was . Within five hectares of habitat we found ten marti, including a mum with three joeys.
Protecting this marti family from predation and stress became a priority for the community group. They expressed concern about unrestrained dogs, as well as foxes. And they asked us how to increase the proportion of people walking their dog on a lead.
Talking about walking in nature
We conducted semi-structured interviews with 37 dog walkers in this reserve during September 2021.
When asked “why this park?”, most people told us they enjoy walking in nature. But the decision to walk on or off lead was more complex. Most walk their dog on a lead at least some of the time. For those who switch between on and off lead, the decision depends on what’s going on around them.
People told us they prefer to have their dog off lead if they feel it’s best for their dog – “because it’s lovely to let (her) go off the lead and be just a dog”.
Giving a dog the freedom to chase a ball, follow a scent or play in the creek were common reasons for letting a dog off lead.
Some, but not all, put their dog back on lead when they saw other dogs, wildlife or people.
The power of social norms
Many people don’t consider their dog a threat to wildlife. So any negative consequences of letting a dog off lead in nature may be mostly unintentional.
We found dog walkers were mainly guided by social norms. These are shared behaviours, underpinned by shared values, that can have powerful but often invisible influences on individuals in a group. People noticed most other people use a lead, saying for example: “When there’s more people around, I respect other people’s wishes and put (the lead) on”.
Those who walked their dog on a lead – either some or all of the time – said they did so because they cared for and wanted to protect the natural world. These motivations suggest dog walkers value a peaceful walk free from conflict. This is the first study to identify peace as a universal driver in people who walk with their dog on a lead.
So at least in this nature reserve, people kept their dog on lead (or put their dog back on lead) to avoid conflict with other dogs, wildlife and people.
Helping people to do the right thing
We need to increase the proportion of people who keep their dog on lead in nature reserves.
Trying to make people obey the signs generally doesn’t work. Understanding and supporting people who value both their dog and wildlife, as well as connections with other people, is likely to be more effective.
Through our research, we discovered an unmet need for dog walkers to access wild spaces where their dog can be free to burn off energy and explore before going into a nature reserve. Having the option of visiting an attractive, easily accessible, enclosed natural dog park – reached from the same car park as the next-door nature reserve – may help more dog walkers keep their dog on lead when in the nature reserve.
Links between social norms and behaviour are a lever for policy makers who want more people to keep their dog on lead in nature reserves. We recommend designing community-based social marketing campaigns that connect with the dog walkers’ underlying values of caring for their dog and keeping the peace with other dogs, wildlife, and people.
Our findings show how nurturing peaceful connections among people, dogs and wildlife can empower dog walkers to keep their dog on lead in nature reserves.
We acknowledge the roles of our colleagues in the study this article is based on: Conservationist Dr Rossi von der Borch from the Bee Hub of Brownhill Creek who co-founded and co-designed the research, and University of Adelaide psychology researchers Dr Mark Kohler co-designed the research, while Dolly Dawson coded the data, and Nusrat Asad conducted and transcribed many of the interviews.
It was a story that pulled at the heartstrings. In 2018, an orca called Tahlequah was seen dragging the corpse of her newborn baby calf for 17 days, over 1,000 miles along the coast of North America. Eventually, Talequah let the baby go (happily, she’s had another baby since), but her behaviour left behind lots of questions among scientists about grief in animals.
In this week’s episode of The Conversation Weekly podcast, we speak to Susana Monsó, a philosopher who researches animal ethics and animal minds, about the different ways animals understand death.
Since starting her research on animals and death, one of Monsó’s favourite animals has been the opposum. These cute, furry marsupials play dead when they feel threatened, as she explains.
“She adopts the bodily and facial expression of a corpse. Her bodily functions are reduced. Her breathing and heart rate drop. Her body temperature drops. She opens her mouth and her tongue hangs out and adopts this bluish hue and she expels this putrid smell and liquid from her anal glands, and she stops responding to the world.”
Monsó, who is an associate professor of philosophy at the National Distance Education University in Madrid, Spain, found the opposum’s behaviour so fascinating that the animal became the protagonist of her new book, Playing Possum: How Animals Understand Death.
She says that an opposum’s death display, which is aimed at convincing a predator that it’s dead to give it a chance to escape, must have had an evolutionary advantage. But, for playing dead to work, Monsó says, the predator really needs to believe it.
“The opossum shows us how her predators think of death, what they think a corpse looks like and smells like and feels. That’s why she succeeds in deceiving them, and this makes it more likely for her to pass on her genes.”
But some animals seem to react to death in ways that appear to be counterproductive. Monsó gives the example of a chimpanzee in a zoo in Valencia that was seen holding onto her baby’s corpse for seven months, and to the orca Tahlequah.
“It seems like very maladaptive in a lot of respects … why are these mothers spending so much energy on these babies who are dead, they’re not contributing to passing on their genes.”
While there may be a number of factors involved, Monsó says one of the biggest is maternal grief and the bond between mother and baby.
“These are animals that have extended periods of maternal care and a high level of dependency on the part of the baby. And so evolution needs to have provided the mothers with very strong motivations to take care of the babies because otherwise the babies are not going to make it to maturity.”
Monsó points to what she calls the minimal concept of death: one animal understanding that a dead animal is both no longer functioning as it would when it was alive, and that this is an irreversible situation. She says that some animals may also understand that death can happen to individuals who are now alive, but that this will depend on an animal’s experience and its intelligence.
Listen to the full episode of The Conversation Weekly podcast to hear Monsó talk more about her research, and the debates about anthropomorphism that emerge relating to research into animals and death.
This episode of The Conversation Weekly was written and produced by Katie Flood and Mend Mariwany. Gemma Ware is the executive producer. Sound design was by Michelle Macklem, and our theme music is by Neeta Sarl.
In the early hours of December 3 1984, 27 tonnes of toxic gas methyl isocyanate leaked from a storage tank at Union Carbide Corporation’s pesticide plant on the outskirts of the central Indian city of Bhopal. Amnesty International estimates that more than 22,000 people have died as a result of the leak and more than half a million people suffer permanent injury.
What would become the “world’s worst industrial disaster” continues to devastate lives 40 years on. The water of 200,000 people in 71 surrounding villages in Madhya Pradesh state is contaminated by tonnes of toxic waste. Children with birth defects and other medical conditions are still being born. The disaster has imposed hefty medical costs on people who were already poor, which is particularly difficult and cruel for families whose breadwinners died as a result of that night.
Union Carbide was accused of negligence and cutting costs in the build-up to the disaster. In 2008, eight former plant employees, all Indian, were the first company staff to be convicted of negligence since the incident. Former CEO Warren Anderson, an American citizen, was released hours after his arrest by Indian authorities under pressure by US officials in 1984. He died in 2014, at the age of 92, in a nursing home in Florida.
Union Carbide and the Indian government reached a settlement of US$470 million (£368 million) in 1989, with each survivor due to receive US$500 in compensation. This figure was agreed without consulting the survivors and was only designed to compensate the short-term impact to employees, not the enduring harm to women, children and the elderly.
Dow Chemical merged with Union Carbide in 2001 and has claimed that the settlement absolves them of further legal responsibility. In 2010, a five-bench panel of India’s Supreme Court dismissed a plea to review it, saying that “the question of compensation can’t be raked up three decades after the settlement”.
A 40-year struggle for justice
Environmental racism explains the disparate fates of the survivors and culprits of the Bhopal disaster, according to Amnesty International. This is where discrimination causes some people to bear the brunt of environmental degradation, violating their human rights in the process.
Despite the apparent stalemate, survivor groups have remained dogged in their fight for justice and accountability. I have documented some of these efforts in a theatre play, We All Live in Bhopal, which catalogues the first 30 years of the struggle. The play shows the resilience of survivors and their communities, and the hope which inspires their activism.
Women survivors are the backbone of the struggle for global awareness and legislative redress. Champadevi Shukla and Rashida Bee organised a 19-day hunger strike in New Delhi in 2002 following the announcement of the merger with Dow Chemical. This coincided with a month-long relay hunger strike in Bhopal, and similar efforts in ten countries by 1,500 people.
Their sustained efforts won them the 2004 Goldman Environmental Prize, which “honours ordinary people who take extraordinary actions to protect the planet”. Shukla and Bee used their prize money to set up the Chingari Trust, which helps children with disabilities stemming from the disaster.
Bhopal prompted a host of environmental protection efforts by the Indian government, including the Environmental Protection Act of 1986, which created a legal framework for the government to deal with everything from pollutants to industrial waste disposal. Nonetheless, the country’s rapid economic growth concerns some survivors who fear another Bhopal. The most recent report of the Federation of India Chambers of Commerce and Industries ranked industrial accidents as the third highest risk to the country’s business operations.
For now, Bhopal’s survivors continue to wage their struggle for justice.
Antarctica, the world’s most remote, harsh and pristine continent, is not free from marine pollution. Where human activity goes, plastic debris inevitably follows.
What might the early explorers of this icy wilderness think today, upon discovering a continent transformed by permanent fishing activities, research stations, military presence, tourism, and all their environmental impacts? Among these, plastic pollution stands out, as it has created a unique new ecological niche in the ocean.
Once it gets into the water, plastic debris provides surfaces that can be quickly colonised by microbial communities, forming a biofilm. This plastic-borne community is known as the plastisphere, and it poses a serious threat to marine ecosystems, particularly in the cold, understudied waters of the Southern Ocean.
The plastisphere: an emerging threat
As plastic debris drifts through the ocean, the plastisphere develops through typical ecological succession, eventually becoming a complex and specialised microbial community. Plastics not only provide shelter for these microorganisms but also act as a vector, allowing potentially harmful pathogens like Vibrio spp., Escherichia coli, and bacteria carrying antibiotic resistance genes, to spread across marine environments, even reaching remote, untouched areas.
Beyond being a home for microbes, the plastisphere can disrupt the natural balance of ocean life at the microscopic level. These changes don’t stay in the water, as they can spread outward, potentially affecting how the ocean absorbs carbon and produces greenhouse gases. This has consequences for the air we breathe around the world.
However, it’s not all bad news, as bacteria known for their potential to degrade plastics or hydrocarbons – such as Alcanivorax sp., Aestuariicella sp., Marinobacter sp. and Alteromonas sp. – are frequently identified on plastics.
A hostile research environment
We currently know very little about the plastisphere, especially in the Southern Ocean, where uncovering its dynamics is key to understanding its impacts on one of the planet’s most remote and vulnerable marine environments. For this reason, our recent study sought to investigate the abundance and diversity of microbial communities in the Southern Ocean plastisphere, particularly following the initial colonisation of plastic debris.
Working in Antarctica is not an easy task. Just reaching this continent is a challenge, and once there, scientists have to contend with harsh environmental conditions: freezing temperatures, powerful winds, icebergs, and the constant pressure of limited time to carry out their work. These challenges make every moment in the field both demanding and invaluable.
This is why we approached our study with a controlled and manageable experiment. We set up aquariums filled with seawater collected near the Spanish research station on Livingston Island, South Shetlands. Inside, we placed small, rounded pellets of the three most common types of plastic polluting the sea – polyethylene, polypropylene, and polystyrene. We left them at environmental conditions (around 0 ºC and between 13 – 18 h of sunlight) for 5 weeks, aiming to recreate the most plausible outcomes in the field.
We compared the colonisation of plastics with glass, an inert surface. Samples of plastics and glass were collected periodically to track bacterial colonisation.
Plastisphere dynamics in Antarctica
Studying bacteria means making the invisible visible, so we combined several techniques to get a better picture of the plastisphere. Using scanning electron microscopy, we obtained biofilm images. We combined flow cytometry and bacterial culture to count total cells and colonies, and we sequenced the 16S rRNA gene to identify the succession of bacterial settlers.
This meticulous approach revealed that time was the key driver of change. Microbes quickly colonised the plastic, and within less than two days, bacteria like genus Colwellia were already fixed in the surface, showing a clear progression from initial settlers to a mature diverse biofilm including other genera like Sulfitobacter, Glaciecola or Lewinella.
These species, although also detected in water, show a clear preference for the social life of a biofilm community. Moreover, we did not detect clear differences between the bacterial communities from plastics and glass, suggesting that any stable surface can host these communities.
While similar processes happen in the other oceans, in Antarctica the process seems slower. The region’s lower temperatures slow bacterial development.
Plastic-eating bacteria?
One key discovery was the presence of Oleispira sp. on polypropylene. This bacteria is hydrocarbon-degrading, meaning it belongs to a group of microorganisms that can break down oil and other pollutants.
Their role within the Antarctic plastisphere raises important questions, like whether these kinds of bacteria could mitigate the impacts of plastic pollution. If so, they could be key to the future of Antartica and our oceans.
However, there is still much to be discovered, particularly regarding their potential for bioremediation in extreme environments. Understanding these processes could pave the way for innovative strategies to address the growing challenge of plastic waste in marine ecosystems.
Three-quarters of Earth’s land has become drier since 1990.
Droughts come and go – more often and more extreme with the incessant rise of greenhouse gas emissions over the last three decades – but burning fossil fuels is transforming our blue planet. A new report from scientists convened by the United Nations found that an area as large as India has become arid, and it’s probably permanent.
A transition from humid to dry land is underway that has shrunk the area available to grow food, costing Africa 12% of its GDP and depleting our natural buffer to rising temperatures. We have covered several consequences of humanity’s fossil fuel addiction in this newsletter. Today we turn to the loss of life-giving moisture – what is driving it, and what we are ultimately losing.
Why is the land drying out so fast? It’s partly because there is more heat trapped in the atmosphere by greenhouse gases emitted from burning fossil fuels. This excess heat has exacerbated evaporation and is drawing more moisture out of soil.
‘Oil, not soil’
Climate change has also made the weather more volatile. When drought does cede to rain, more of it arrives in bruising downpours that slough the topsoil.
A stable climate would deliver a year’s rain more evenly and gently, nourishing the soil so that it can nurture microbes that hold onto water and release nutrients.
This is the kind of soil that industrial civilisation inherited. It’s disappearing.
“Soil is being lost up to 100 times faster than it is formed, and desertification is growing year on year,” says Anna Krzywoszynska, a sustainable food expert at the University of Sheffield.
“The truth is, the modern farming system is based around oil, not soil.”
Fossil fuels have unleashed agriculture from the constraints of local ecology. Once, the nutrients that were taken from the soil in the form of food had to be replaced using organic waste, Krzywoszynska says. Synthetic nitrogen fertilisers, made with fossil energy at great cost to the climate, changed all that.
Next came diesel-powered machinery that brought more wilderness into cultivation. Farm vehicles as heavy as the biggest dinosaurs now churn and compact the soil, making it difficult for earthworms and assorted soil organisms to maintain it.
Tractors and chemicals served humanity for a long time, Krzywoszynska says. But soil is now so degraded that no amount of fossil help can compensate.
“Across the world, soils have been pushed beyond their capacity to recover, and humanity’s ability to feed itself is now in danger.”
Green pumps and white mirrors
The primary way that we have been making up for lost food yield is turning more forests into farms. This is accelerating our journey towards a drier, less liveable world because forests, if allowed to thrive, create their own rain.
“Water sucked up by tree roots is pumped back into the atmosphere where it forms clouds which eventually release the water as rain to be reabsorbed by trees,” say Callum Smith, Dominick Spracklen and Jess Baker, a team of biologists at the University of Leeds who study the Amazon rainforest.
Some experts have argued that the UN report understates Earth’s growing aridity by overlooking the water that is held in snow caps, ice sheets and glaciers. Climate change is melting this frozen reservoir, which also serves as a seasonal source of water.
“And as water in its bright-white solid form is much more effective at reflecting heat from the sun, its rapid loss is also accelerating global heating,” says Mark Brandon, a professor of polar oceanography at The Open University.
How do we adapt our relationship with the land to remoisturise the world? Krzywoszynska argues that there is no easy solution, but the future of food-growing “is localised and diverse”.
“To ensure that we eat well and live well in the future, we’ll need to reverse the trend towards greater homogenisation which drove food systems so far.”
The good news, according to Krzywoszynska, is that farmers are experimenting with methods that restore the soil even as they produce a diverse range of nutritious food. These innovators need rights and secure access to the land, the opportunity to share their experiences and financial and political support.
“Regenerating land is a win-win, for humans and their ecosystems, if we dare to look beyond the immediate short-term horizon,” she says.
Delhi’s air pollution is so bad that it’s sometimes hard to discern anything more than a few metres in front of you. And it is affecting people’s health. Breathing is uncomfortable, and one of us (Komali) developed rashes and red eyes on a recent trip to the city.
Our experiences are not unusual. Delhi – officially the National Capital Territory of Delhi – is the world’s second most populated urban area, and is among its most polluted. Air pollution recently went 26 times over the healthy limit prescribed by the World Health Organization.
The air quality index, or AQI, is a measure of how polluted the air is on a scale of 0 (clean) to 500 (maximum pollution). On November 19, Delhi’s average was 485. Many of its air pollution sensors maxed out at 500, so the true figure would be even higher.
Things peak every winter when many people suffer from respiratory problems and hospital visits increase. An extraordinary 11.5% of all deaths in the city can be attributed to air pollution, a loss of around 12,000 lives every year.
A human-made calamity
This is a human-made calamity with many causes. Some factors are common to many large and fast-growing cities, especially in emerging economies. Delhi has many coal power plants, for instance, and its streets are choked with heavy traffic. Decades of dust, often from the construction industry, have accumulated in and around the city. Waste is often simply burned.
But some factors are more specific and it is these that push Delhi from “regular pollution” into catastrophe. Every year, farmers across northern India especially the breadbasket states of Punjab and Haryana burn off unwanted straw left behind in fields, sending huge clouds of smoke downwind towards Delhi. Fireworks during Diwali (held on October 31 this year) also cause a small but noticeable increase in air pollution.
All this is exacerbated when winter begins and colder and more polluted air becomes trapped over the city by a layer of warmer air above it – a process known as temperature inversion.
A conscious effort
The risk of pollution is increasing. Central and state authorities blame each other and there is a lack of political will to address the problem. Individual people seem unwilling to take responsibility and stop polluting.
A conscious effort is needed. Fortunately, certain policies could make a difference. Materials should be covered at construction and demolition sites, for instance, to stop so much dust from being blown into the air. This may require Delhi to strengthen its legal enforcement system.
The city should plant more pavement trees and create new parks. Trees are good at combating air pollution. Waste burning should be restricted. Eventually, coal power will need to be replaced by wind and especially solar. When pollution is at its worst, the city can impose strict restrictions on large diesel-powered freight vehicles transporting non-essential items.
Farmers, for their part, must stop burning plant material left behind (known as stubble) after food is harvested. This is easier said than done. The areas upwind of Delhi tend to have two growing seasons, and many farmers burn off their rice stubble in November before planting wheat in the same field. The system has persisted for a long time and is effectively locked in, with most powerful actors not having enough incentive to change things.
There are some alternatives. Farmers could be encouraged to diversify their crops, perhaps through conditions attached to loans. Some of that stubble could instead be used as cattle feed, in compost, as a roof material, or burned in bioenergy plants to produce electricity.
Evidence-based strategies and best practices are crucial. The goal must be to reduce the air quality index to the “good” category of 0–50 and ultimately to eliminate toxic air in Delhi and the surrounding region.
At the bottom of the oceans and seas lie more than 8,500 shipwrecks from
two world wars. These wrecks have been estimated to contain as much as 6 billion gallons of oil, as well as munitions, toxic heavy metals and even chemical weapons.
For decades, these wrecks have largely lain out of site and out of mind. But
all this time, their structures have been degrading, inexorably increasing the chances of sudden releases of toxic substances into the marine environment.
In parts of the globe, climate change is exacerbating this risk. Rising ocean
temperatures, acidification and increasing storminess accelerate the breakdown of
these wrecks.
Of course, wrecks from the world wars are far from the only ones to be found at the bottom of the sea, with many others adding to the problem. The cost of addressing this global issue has been estimated at US$340 billion (£261 billion).
How many of these wrecks pose a threat to people’s safety, to coastal communities and to the environment? What can be done – and why haven’t we done it sooner?
Mapping the problem
The raw figures in dollars and the numbers of wrecks on the map rightly cause concern. Work by researchers such as Paul Heersink have drawn together different datasets to help visualise the scale of the challenge. Yet these figures, and the position of dots on maps, may also give a false sense of certainty.
It remains the case that the world’s oceans and seas are not as well mapped as we
would like, with about 23% having been described and mapped in detail. Even that level of detail often falls short of what we need to positively identify a wreck, let alone determine the risk it might pose.
There is an ongoing global push to improve our mapping of ocean space under the
auspices of the Seabed 2030 project, which is looking to reach a universal resolution of 100x100m. That means one “pixel” of information would be equivalent to about two football pitches. This will be transformative for our understanding of the ocean floor, but will not reveal the detail of all those things that you could hide within those two football pitches (which includes quite a few wrecks).
Many of the wrecks that may pose the greatest problems are found in shallower coastal waters, where government mapping initiatives and work by industry provide much higher resolutions, yet still the challenge of identification remains.
What about archival records? Historical records, such as those held by Lloyd’s Register Foundation in London, are fundamental to bringing greater certainty to the scale and nature of the challenge. They contain the details of ship structures, cargos carried and last known positions prior to loss.
The accuracy of those positions, however, is variable, meaning that knowing exactly
where on the seabed a wreck might be, and so how to survey it and assess its risk, is not straightforward. This is placed in stark relief by the work of British maritime archaeologist Innes McCartney and oceanographer Mike Roberts, whose detailed geophysical and archival investigations in the Irish Sea demonstrated that historic wrecks have been frequently misattributed and mislocated. This means that the dots on the map are often in the wrong places, and up to 60% can be sitting in unknown locations on the sea floor.
A race against time
Most of the wrecks causing greatest concern are of metal, or metal and wood
construction. The steel in these wrecks is slowly degrading, increasing the chance of cargos being spilt, and components breaking down. However, this is only part of the risk.
The sea is becoming an ever busier place, as we carry out more intensive
fishing and ramp up the construction of offshore wind farms and other
energy installations to meet net zero commitments. These all affect the seabed and can physically disturb or change the dynamics of wreck sites.
There is increasing global recognition of the need to address this problem. It has remained unresolved to date because of the complex international and interdisciplinary challenge it poses.
Many of the wrecks lie in waters off countries that have nothing to do with the original owner of the ship. How then, do we determine who is responsible? And who pays for the clean-up – especially when the original owner benefits from the legal loophole of sovereign immunity? Under this concept, the flag State (the country where the ship is registered) cannot be held responsible under international law and therefore is not legally obliged to pay up.
Beyond these fundamental questions of responsibility, there are technical
challenges. It’s difficult to know exactly how many wrecks of concern there are, and how to locate them. So how do we assess their condition and determine if intervention is needed? And if so, how do we intervene?
Each of these questions is a complex challenge, and solving them requires the
contributions of historians, archaeologists, engineers, biologists, geophysicists,
geochemists, hydrographic surveyors, geospatial data analysts and engineers.
This has already been happening, with regional projects making critical headway
and demonstrating what can be achieved. However, the immense scale of the
problem outweighs the amount of work done to date.
New technologies are clearly critical, as are new attitudes. At the heart of the
problem is an issue of knowledge and certainty – is this the wreck we think it is, does it pose a problem and if so, over what time scale?
Advances in subsea drones known as Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs), which are fitted with an array of sensors to measure the seabed and detect pollutants, could help enhance our knowledge about the locations of wrecks, what they’re carrying and their state of deterioration. AUVs can provide relatively cheap, high resolution data that produces fewer emissions than a comparable survey campaign conducted from a large research vessel.
But we also need to share that information, and compare it with data from archives to help generate knowledge and higher levels of certainty. Too often, underwater surveys and investigations occur in silos, with data held by individual agencies or companies, preventing a rapid and cumulative increase in understanding.
The severity of the environmental and safety risk posed by wrecks on the ocean floor, and how it changes over time, is not fully known. But this is a problem we can solve.
Action is needed now, driven by a robust regulatory and funding framework, and
technical standards for remediation. A global partnership – codenamed Project Tangaroa – has been convened to stimulate that framework – but political will and financing is required to make it a reality.
Through targeted archival and survey work, and by sharing data and ideas, we can chart a course to a future where the sea is not a place where we ignore things today that will threaten us tomorrow.
As I walked through passport control in Reykjavik en route to Nuuk, the capital of Greenland, the border agent asked me the standard question of why I was travelling. “To look at trees,” I answered.
He peered at me suspiciously through the glass and said: “There are no trees in Nuuk.”
“Yes there are; people are growing trees there, and there’s a forest in south Greenland.”
“I think you’re lying,” he said flatly, not having any of it. The Icelander seemed to be enjoying this little diversion from the rote reasons most travellers give for visiting Greenland: to see icebergs, Viking ruins, or polar bears.
I was indeed coming to Greenland for the plants – my first visit – and the people who cultivate them. That might sound strange, given that 95% of Greenland, the largest island in the world, is covered by an immense ice sheet. Alarming news about Greenland’s accelerating ice loss (30 million tonnes per hour) appears daily. Less newsworthy, but equally dramatic, is what is happening on the 5% of Greenland’s land that is ice free – it is becoming green.
“Arctic greening” is the climate change phenomenon where land once covered by ice and snow is being colonised by plants. The plants themselves are also changing. Diminutive tundra vegetation is growing taller (so-called “shrubification”) and new plants and insects are moving in from the south.
Across the Circumpolar North (a region spanning three continents that includes eight countries), scientists have observed increases in greening of between 20% and 40% in recent decades. The consensus is that greening is accelerating across diverse Arctic regions.
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Greening sounds good compared to deforestation, but in the Arctic, the expansion of plant life amplifies dangerous feedback loops. When we think of plants storing carbon from the atmosphere, we typically think of the above-ground plants that we can see. But in the Arctic, carbon storage is mostly below ground, in the frozen soil – permafrost. Permafrost holds more carbon than all the above-ground plants on Earth and twice as much as in the atmosphere.
The growth of trees and shrubs accelerates the thawing of permafrost, increasing global heating in a part of the world that is already warming up to four times faster than the rest of the planet. So, Arctic greening doesn’t just take over land exposed by retreating ice – it probably accelerates ice melt.
But this kind of Arctic greening is not the phenomenon that I came to investigate. I was interested in the deliberate transformation of Greenland into a literally “green land” via new forests, gardens, and farms. This kind of greening began 1,000 years ago with Erik the Red, the Viking who first farmed Greenland’s southern fjords. In one of the earliest real estate boondoggles, Erik named the settlements Greenland (Grœnland in Old Norse) in order to inspire more farmers to follow him to this icy world.
Today, the ancient project of making Greenland green continues in modern, multi-ethnic Greenlandic culture, from mining to gardening to forestry. Intrigued by this convergence of two different kinds of greening – one due to climate change and the other due to human desires – I came to Greenland to understand the connection between them.
So in May 2024 I headed to the Greenland Arboretum in Narsarsuaq, a community of around 100 people near Erik the Red’s farms. The arboretum was established in 2004 but its origins in Nordic forestry go back to the 19th century. Nordic foresters have spent decades planting species from northern Asia, Europe and North America, inspired by scientific curiosity into what can grow, and a colonial assurance that they could decide what should grow.
I have been studying the Arctic for many years, from the controversial legacies of Arctic exploration to my forthcoming book on the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, and I was astonished by what I found. Not only is the deliberate cultivation of new plants happening on a remarkable scale, but there exists a near total absence of laws regulating plants – an approach that appears unique to Greenland. In this legal vacuum, it is not only plants that are flourishing. I learned that Greenland’s plants are thriving because of the entangled efforts of an international mining company, gardening enthusiasts, farmers, and the dedication of a few remarkable men.
I discovered that significant tree planting is funded by a mining company, keen to show its green credentials by “offsetting” its extraction plans. Amaroq Minerals, which holds the most exploration licenses in Greenland, is a key player in the country’s recent critical minerals resource boom. Greenland now rivals China as the planet’s main source for rare minerals essential for green technologies.
Extractive industries that embrace such tree-planting schemes may do so because they are keen to show their green credentials by “offsetting” their extraction plans. Amaroq, however, is keen to point out that it “currently has no plans on accounting for any sequestration on carbon offset”.
Though Amaroq was not involved in the initial set up of the arboretum, by funding tree plantations it is joining Greenland’s 1,000-year experiment in deliberately greening the land. For decades Greenlanders have been working to introduce exotic plants onto their land “to make the city green”, as one gardener told me. It is as if the nation is conducting a large-scale experiment in multiple locations with no controls to see what would happen if the power of plants is unchecked.
Getting lost in the arboretum
The Greenland Arboretum is in Narsarsuaq, a former US base. Today, Hotel Narsarsuaq staff fly Greenland flags out front, reminders of this nation’s autonomy in all matters (except foreign policy and security).
I was here to meet with a Danish biologist, Anders Ræbild, who is conducting research alongside the man largely responsible for the aboretum’s existence, Kenneth Høegh. Høegh is an agronomist and businessman who grew up in Narsaq, a few miles south. He planted his first trees there (Siberian Larch) at the age 14 and he proudly told me they still live today. He now serves as the Greenlandic Ambassador to the US, but in the world of Greenland’s trees, he holds a much more influential position.
This was my first day in Greenland, and even before I reached the arboretum’s treeline, my ears registered the surrealness of this forest in a supposedly treeless land: birdsong was everywhere. Tiny Common Redpolls were careening through the air, feasting on the seeds of the trees. On this sunny, warm day hovering around 0°C, the forest was ringing with their frenzied pursuit of food and sex. The short Arctic summer was just beginning, and all Arctic life, plants included, takes advantage of these few months with abandon.
I was travelling with my son River, a university student, and we followed the trees as they climbed up the thin soil of a small mountain peak. Neither arboretum nor forest accurately describes this beautiful place. It is too incoherent to be the former but too ordered to be the latter. Stands of 20 or 30-foot Siberian Larches, Norwegian Spruce, Lodgepole Pines from Colorado, Stone Pines from Mongolia, and the occasional deciduous Alaskan Balsam Poplar were arranged together. This is a meeting place of trees from across the northern world, not a coherent forest from any particular part of it.
It is also remarkably large at nearly 400 acres. So large in fact, that though we were supposed to meet in the forest and could hear one another yelling, we couldn’t find each another within it. I knew the maths in the abstract but I was still overwhelmed by the numbers on the ground – over 100,000 trees planted in all, from over 100 species, since the 1970s.
The man who loved trees
Later that evening, we met Høegh and his colleagues at his cabin for dinner – lamb for them from local farms, cabbage and potatoes for River and me, flown in from Europe like most Greenlandic food.
Høegh is a charismatic man, who was head of the Consultancy Service for Agriculture for the Greenlandic government before he began diplomatic work. After spending several hours in his company, it is clear that regardless of his profession, the trees are his vocation. Høegh described being hand-picked as a student by his predecessor, a Danish forester, along with another forester. The three of them travelled the world for decades, collecting trees. Together these three men appear to have individually directed the planting of the vast majority of trees in Greenland.
At this point, you might be thinking, what about the risks of importing foreign species into an island ecosystem? The potential pests hitching rides in these seedlings? Given that the trees overshadow the tundra plants, what could happen to the local biodiversity given the influx of so many new species? Who is paying for all this? And finally, what are the laws and ethics governing such a large-scale ecological engineering project? These were the questions that brought me to Greenland.
I asked Høegh the question regarding the dangers of importing non-native plants on such a scale. He posed a counter question: when do plants become native? This is a great question, because not just where, but when matters. Plants, like animals, are always on the move and their “native” ranges change over time. We tend to speak of native species in only spatial terms: what is native or non-native to particular places now. When speaking of changes over time, we typically draw the line at what was introduced or eradicated by European colonisation, or humans more broadly.
If people introduce a new plant, this makes it non-native. If animals do it in their fur, feathers, or poop, that is “natural”. The assumption is that humans stand apart from nature, and that nature was in pristine balance before humans (especially Europeans) meddled with it. This Edenic idea is prevalent today, in numerous religious and secular beliefs, including conservation sciences. Regardless of where one stands, the consensus that “native” ecologies are inherently good or easily defined is now highly contested.
Growing a forest
Høegh’s approach to the question of native plants is to take the long view (the extremely long view, in fact) reaching back to Greenland’s ancient forested past. Before the last Ice Age, Greenland was forested with the tree species introduced in the arboretum. Most living things in Greenland migrated there after the ice began retreating 10,000 years ago. All are newcomers, with humans only just behind the pioneer plants, arriving 5,000 years ago.
Høegh suggested that since yews, firs, spruce, and poplar were at home in Greenland long ago, why not now and in the future, when our warming climate is expected to resemble that of the Pliocene epoch, between 2 and 5 million years ago.
When I asked him if he is growing a forest, Høegh said modestly that he sees his work “like a stamp collection”. He is content that the Arboretum can be different things to different people. For him it is a living collection, and for others, it may be a forest or potentially a source of income or even a sacred place.
Waiting for a ferry in Qaqortoq, I heard a rare local voice of dissent. Fredrik, who grew up there, knew many fellow Inuit who had volunteered to help plant the arboretum. Despite that, he said: “I don’t see the meaning of it.” The forest does not move him or interest him, he said, and he has no intention of visiting. Fredrik described seeing alarming ecological changes in the last two years: a new kind of snail plagues his yard in large numbers and he is concerned that the trees are bringing in such pests.
An experiment without controls?
I had asked Høegh about the dangers of importing new plant life, given the potential risks of invasive species. He replied that they always obtain a permit to plant. River, an environmental science student, asked how the trees are altering the soil chemistry and affecting established species. The answer was that no one knows. Greenland’s Arboretum appears to be a large-scale experiment, but I was starting to wonder: where are the controls?
This is where Greenland’s unique political and legal status comes into play. Greenland is one of the few nations that does not recognise international laws against the importation of plants. Laws against the import or export of animals –crucial to hunting and tourism – are very strict. But you can theoretically come into Greenland with any live plant material you like. Once here, there are no clear restrictions on what you can plant in your garden or in open spaces.
The head of Greenland’s agricultural department confirmed to me that the country “does not currently have legislation regulating plant health”. He also directed me to Greenland’s 2003 “Law on Nature Conservation” which states that the government “can grant permission” and “can set conditions” for foreign plants.
But when I followed up in person at the Qaqortoq municipality office, where permits would be granted, I was told apparently contradictory information: that planting permits are requested and issued verbally, with no paperwork. There are no forbidden species and there is no scientific input. Another administrator confirmed that there weren’t “any standards or rules about what you can bring in or plant”. When I asked him about the local appetite for introducing rules, he said these “would be very hard to administer”. After speaking to many people in Greenland, it does not appear to me (or to many of them) that plant regulations are applied consistently.
Greenland’s exemption from international plant regulations stems from its growing autonomy from Denmark. Colonised by Denmark since 1721, Greenland is a multiracial (Danish and Inuit) and majority-Indigenous autonomous nation moving rapidly toward full independence. After Greenland gained Home Rule in 1979, it pulled out of the European Community (EC) in 1985, and having achieved Self Rule in 2009, it is poised to pursue full independence. Denmark’s participation in European and global plant treaties had meant Greenland too followed those rules. Once Greenland left the EC and colonial status, its plants entered a legal limbo.
Greenland’s trajectory towards full independence is entwined with its booming extractive industries. Full independence would mean the end of the Danish block grant of DKK 3.9 billion (just over £435 million) that provides about half of Greenland’s public budget.
The question now is how Greenland will self-fund its future. After several reversals of policy on uranium and oil exploration, in 2021 a new Indigenous-majority Greenlandic government committed to extracting rare earth elements and minerals for a fossil fuel-free future.
While all eyes have thus focused on Greenland’s extractive potential, plants have slipped through the cracks. But my research has uncovered a previously unknown connection between the two.
Mining, greening and offsetting
Significant tree plantings are currently funded by Amaroq Minerals, which is opening a new gold mine in South Greenland. Registered in Canada, Amaroq is part of a new generation of mining companies extracting the rare earth minerals needed for the wind turbine magnets and car batteries crucial to the green energy transition.
I discovered this link between the trees and mining when I visited the Upernaviarsuk Research Station farm to learn how agriculture is coping with the destabilising climate. I was surprised to see thousands of tree seedlings growing in their vegetable greenhouses. Farm director Kim Neider told me the trees were funded by Amaroq and destined for the arboretum.
In subsequent conversations with Amaroq’s leadership, I learned that they have been active in funding Greenlandic tree plantations for several years, and that 2023 was the first year in which they actually produced seedlings, for Qanasiassat, another plantation that Høegh is expanding near the arboretum. In 2023, Amaroq funded the cultivation of 14,500 seedlings, committing DKK 348,500 (worth about £38,740 today). They have agreed to a further $2,000 Canadian dollars per year going forward, although the company has said there is not a limit on this figure.
Amaroq has a social vision almost as ambitious as its extractive vision, fuelled by its extensive exploration licenses and gold mine opening in Nalunaq, South Greenland, in 2024. Using the profits from this mine, its young CEO, Eldur Olafsson, explained to me, they intend to become a “climate company”, helping to build a sustainable hydroelectric power grid (currently, most smaller communities run on diesel).
Funding tree planting could give Amaroq carbon credits, which many companies purchase to offset their high carbon emissions – this approach has been criticised by many as a form of greenwashing. Amaroq says it “currently” has no plans to do so – “perhaps in the future,” I was told.
But primarily the plantings are a part of their social vision to benefit local livelihoods (like forestry) in the future, Olafsson wrote in an email to me. If this sounds like Høegh’s vision for the arboretum, that is because he arranged the funding partnership with Amaroq and calculated their carbon offset, according to Amaroq’s executive vice president who confirmed this to me over Zoom and email, sharing the carbon calculation with me. Amaroq later told me this was an “informal calculation”.
Granting any carbon offset credit for tree planting in the Arctic is controversial because it generates more greenhouse gases than the trees can capture. One quarter of the northern hemisphere is permafrost, a frozen accumulation of thousands of years of dead plants (and pathogens) storing vast amounts of carbon. The tree roots deepen the active layer of the permafrost (the thin layer of soil that thaws and refreezes each year). They introduce microbial activity into the frozen soil, accelerating the permafrost thaw and allowing for decomposition (and carbon release) to continue through the winter. Scientists describe the smell of thawing permafrost as anything from a “pooey vinaigrette” to a “peaty Scotch”. Also, the taller the plants, the more they absorb the sun’s energy instead of reflecting it like the snow beneath them would.
Greenland’s trees are also capturing carbon dioxide. But because trees grow more slowly in the Arctic than elsewhere, it will take decades before any carbon benefit can balance the carbon they release now. And even at the global scale, in 2023 scientists were alarmed to discover that the “carbon sink” (the plants) we rely on to absorb our carbon emissions failed to absorb a net amount of carbon for the first time ever.
Greenland is pursuing independence and extraction simultaneously in this volatile new climate. Amaroq’s involvement with tree planting in Greenland shows that plants are present in both pursuits.
I believe Greenland’s laissez-faire attitude to plants is directly related to its move towards independence. It is not an oversight, but a reaction against the policy of isolation that Danish colonisation imposed for so long. For two centuries, Denmark controlled Greenland’s contact with the outside world: movement of people, plants, animals and goods to or from Greenland required Danish government permission. This economic and cultural paternalism that Greenlanders endured helps explain their libertarian attitude to plants today. Greenland can at last choose its own laws, and its own plants.
‘We always wanted to live in a forest’
But Amaroq and the arboretum are not acting alone and are relative newcomers compared to the established efforts of farmers and gardeners when it comes to greening the land. As I visited farms and gardens, I was surprised by the passion of Greenlanders for their plants. But my surprise was due to my own assumptions of what Greenlanders should care about.
When I visited the garden of one Qaqortoq gardener, Alibak Hard, I understood the inadequacy of these assumptions. He told me stories about his individual plants, including Greenland’s only maple tree (planted by Høegh) and even a pansy, flowering at my feet in freezing temperatures. I asked Alibak about the source of his passion for exotic plants and he said: “We always wanted to live in a forest.”
You can be born and live your life in this Arctic land dominated by ice and yet dream of alien plantscapes – forests full of red-leaved maples, strange flowers underfoot. I told Alibak that many of my fellow academics would say bringing foreign plants into Greenland reflects a colonial, not a Greenlandic, attitude to nature. He replied: “Why shouldn’t we change the land like we want?”
Another Qaqortoq gardener told me about the garden club he began in the 1980s, which had over 100 members who would collectively import new plants from Iceland every year. Their goal, he said, was “to make the city green”.
When Greenlanders assert such a desire to shape their lands, to diversify the plants in their daily lives, it runs counter to outsider ideals of what Greenland should be. Greenland has been imagined as a sublime icescape onto which outsiders projected their desires – for primordial nature, or authentic Inuit culture unspoiled by modernity. Listening to Greenlanders’ views on plants challenged my expectations of what resistance to colonialism looks like. Transforming your lands and plants as you wish can be a powerful exercise of independence.
Ultimately, no one knows how the introduction of hundreds of new species via gardens, farms, and tree plantations is affecting Greenland’s ecology now that the warming climate enables these plants to thrive. I collected many anecdotes about ecological novelties – red beetles never seen before, new birds, new snails, an outbreak of caterpillars. The most obvious newcomer required no one to alert me, because this purple plant was everywhere I walked in Qaqortoq: Nootka lupines.
This Alaskan plant was introduced multiple times in Greenland because it can enrich soil by fixing nitrogen and can combat erosion. Gardeners also introduced them for their beauty. Once established, though, Lupines can rapidly become invasive.
Icelandic conservationists recruited lupines in the 1970s to reverse soil erosion, but today those ecosystem engineers have expanded their range by a shocking 35-fold. There is now open biological warfare between locals and lupines in eastern Iceland. Arctic greening appears purple on the eastern slopes of Iceland, and south Greenland may be heading in the same direction.
Without clear laws on which plants cannot be introduced, there is theoretically nothing to stop someone also experimenting with Giant Siberian Knotweed or gorse. Such pioneer plants are brilliant at thriving in disturbed environments and can help establish a succession of new life, even as they decrease biodiversity by crowding out established plants.
Stefano Mancuso is a biologist fascinated by invasive plants because of their remarkable survival skills, which he believes are signs of their intelligence. “The invasive species of today,” he writes, “are the native flora of the future, just as the invasive species of the past are a fundamental part of our ecosystem today.”
I share the long view with Høegh and Mancuso, that “native” species need to be rethought in both space and time, given the dynamic movements of plants in their 400+ million years evolving on Earth. But in the short term in Greenland, I worry that living solely with this long view without safeguards on moving plants in the present is dangerous.
And this assumption that it is okay for a few men to initiate the transformation of hundreds of acres of communally-owned land is a cavalier one. It resembles the colonial-era attitude that Greenland is a site suitable for social or environmental engineering.
Is it possible to hold these different timescales in mind simultaneously, to act both with short and long-term perspectives? I say yes, it is both possible and necessary to do this. Before releasing thousands of plants onto Greenland’s tundra because they can grow there, or they used to grow there, there should be public consultation, considering whether they should grow there today.
Høegh and his affiliates like Greenland Trees (which accepts international donations to plant trees for carbon offsets) engage local schools to help plant the trees, but it is unclear if ecological education plays a role. Amaroq likewise partners with Siu-Tsiu, the state programme helping young Greenlanders develop new jobs. This may be admirable social engagement, but it follows the lead of select individuals or external groups to green Greenland, rather than a collective desire to do so.
Future warming
Greenland had little to fear from pests, wildfires and invasive species in the past due to its cold climate. But today, the risk perception of these hazards lags behind the new warming climate. And Greenland’s laws governing plants also lag behind the new climate.
But the embrace of tree planting, cosmopolitan gardening, and farming by many Greenlanders also reflects their extraordinary ability to innovate. Greenlanders are not just skilled at adapting to change, argues anthropologist Mark Nuttall, but at anticipating change proactively.
Extraction and greening are rapidly co-evolving in Greenland, following the expanding networks of mines, roads, military bases, farms and airports. The trees planted by Høegh and Amaroq reveal their seamless integration. I asked scientists if they could foresee what these new forests might look like in 50 or 100 years. They agreed that the situation was too complex to predict.
Yet the scientific consensus holds that “future warming is likely to allow growth of trees and shrubs across much of ice-free Greenland by year 2100,” including its far north. The question remains then: will people, from gardeners and farmers to mining corporations, aid more plants in reaching these warming lands, despite the risks?
Greenlanders speak with many voices on questions of what to extract and how, and which plants to grow and where. In this modern society, climate change intensifies the importance of paying attention to the plants in the present, literally and legally. To see the plants in the foreground of a changing Greenland is to perceive the dramatic changes they too are creating at breathtaking speed.
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Adriana Craciun, Institute Associate at the Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge, and Emma MacLachlan Metcalf Chair of Humanities, Boston University
Attracting Insectivore Birds to Your Garden: DIY Natural Tick Control- small bird insectivores, species like the Silvereye, Spotted Pardalote, Gerygone, Fairywren and Thornbill, feed on ticks. Attracting these birds back into your garden will provide not only a residence for tick eaters but also the delightful moments watching these tiny birds provides.
Aussie Backyard Bird Count 2018 - Our Annual 'What Bird Is That?' Week Is Here!- This week the annual Aussie Backyard Bird Count runs from 22-28 October 2018. Pittwater is one of those places fortunate to have birds that thrive because of an Aquatic environment, a tall treed Bush environment and areas set aside for those that dwell closer to the ground, in a sand, scrub or earth environment. To take part all you need is 20 minutes and your favourite outdoor space. Head to the website and register as a Counter today! And if you're a teacher, check out BirdLife Australia's Bird Count curriculum-based lesson plans to get your students (or the whole school!) involved
John Gould's Extinct and Endangered Mammals of Australia by Dr. Fred Ford - Between 1850 and 1950 as many mammals disappeared from the Australian continent as had disappeared from the rest of the world between 1600 and 2000! Zoologist Fred Ford provides fascinating, and often poignant, stories of European attitudes and behaviour towards Australia's native fauna and connects these to the animal's fate today in this beautiful new book - our interview with the author
National Bird Week 2014 - Get Involved in the Aussie Backyard Bird Count:National Bird Week 2014 will take place between Monday 20 October and Sunday 26 October, 2014. BirdLife Australia and the Birds in Backyards team have come together to launch this year’s national Bird Week event the Aussie Backyard Bird Count! This is one the whole family can do together and become citizen scientists...
Palm Beach Protection Group Launch, Supporters Invited: Saturday Feb.16th - Residents Are Saying 'NO' To Off-Leash Dogs In Station Beach Eco-System - reports over 50 dogs a day on Station Beach throughout December-January (a No Dogs Beach) small children being jumped on, Native birds chased, dog faeces being left, families with toddlers leaving beach to get away from uncontrolled dogs and 'Failure of Process' in council 'consultation' open to February 28th
Seen but Not Heard: Lilian Medland's Birds - Christobel Mattingley- one of Australia's premier Ornithological illustrators was a Queenscliff lady - 53 of her previously unpublished works have now been made available through the auspices of the National Library of Australia in a beautiful new book
The Mopoke or Tawny Frogmouth– For Children - A little bit about these birds, an Australian Mopoke Fairy Story from 91 years ago, some poems and more - photo by Adrian Boddy
New Shorebirds WingThing For Youngsters Available To Download
A Shorebirds WingThing educational brochure for kids (A5) helps children learn about shorebirds, their life and journey. The 2021 revised brochure version was published in February 2021 and is available now. You can download a file copy here.
If you would like a free print copy of this brochure, please send a self-addressed envelope with A$1.10 postage (or larger if you would like it unfolded) affixed to: BirdLife Australia, Shorebird WingThing Request, 2-05Shorebird WingThing/60 Leicester St, Carlton VIC 3053.
Shorebird Identification Booklet
The Migratory Shorebird Program has just released the third edition of its hugely popular Shorebird Identification Booklet. The team has thoroughly revised and updated this pocket-sized companion for all shorebird counters and interested birders, with lots of useful information on our most common shorebirds, key identification features, sighting distribution maps and short articles on some of BirdLife’s shorebird activities.
Shorebirds are a group of wading birds that can be found feeding on swamps, tidal mudflats, estuaries, beaches and open country. For many people, shorebirds are just those brown birds feeding a long way out on the mud but they are actually a remarkably diverse collection of birds including stilts, sandpipers, snipe, curlews, godwits, plovers and oystercatchers. Each species is superbly adapted to suit its preferred habitat. The Red-necked Stint is as small as a sparrow, with relatively short legs and bill that it pecks food from the surface of the mud with, whereas the Eastern Curlew is over two feet long with a exceptionally long legs and a massively curved beak that it thrusts deep down into the mud to pull out crabs, worms and other creatures hidden below the surface.
Some shorebirds are fairly drab in plumage, especially when they are visiting Australia in their non-breeding season, but when they migrate to their Arctic nesting grounds, they develop a vibrant flush of bright colours to attract a mate. We have 37 types of shorebirds that annually migrate to Australia on some of the most lengthy and arduous journeys in the animal kingdom, but there are also 18 shorebirds that call Australia home all year round.
What all our shorebirds have in common—be they large or small, seasoned traveller or homebody, brightly coloured or in muted tones—is that each species needs adequate safe areas where they can successfully feed and breed.
The National Shorebird Monitoring Program is managed and supported by BirdLife Australia.
This project is supported by Glenelg Hopkins Catchment Management Authority and Hunter Local Land Services through funding from the Australian Government’s National Landcare Program. Funding from Helen Macpherson Smith Trust and Port Phillip Bay Fund is acknowledged.
The National Shorebird Monitoring Program is made possible with the help of over 1,600 volunteers working in coastal and inland habitats all over Australia.
The National Shorebird Monitoring program (started as the Shorebirds 2020 project initiated to re-invigorate monitoring around Australia) is raising awareness of how incredible shorebirds are, and actively engaging the community to participate in gathering information needed to conserve shorebirds.
In the short term, the destruction of tidal ecosystems will need to be stopped, and our program is designed to strengthen the case for protecting these important habitats.
In the long term, there will be a need to mitigate against the likely effects of climate change on a species that travels across the entire range of latitudes where impacts are likely.
The identification and protection of critical areas for shorebirds will need to continue in order to guard against the potential threats associated with habitats in close proximity to nearly half the human population.
Here in Australia, the place where these birds grow up and spend most of their lives, continued monitoring is necessary to inform the best management practice to maintain shorebird populations.
BirdLife Australia believe that we can help secure a brighter future for these remarkable birds by educating stakeholders, gathering information on how and why shorebird populations are changing, and working to grow the community of people who care about shorebirds.
A sea-roots movement dedicated to mobilising and empowering surfers for continuous and positive climate action.
Surfers for Climate are coming together in lineups around the world to be the change we want to see.
With roughly 35 million surfers across the globe, our united tribe has a powerful voice.
Add yours to the conversation by signing up here.
Surfers for Climate will keep you informed, involved and active on both the local and global issues and solutions around the climate crisis via our allies hub.
Help us prevent our favourite spots from becoming fading stories of waves we used to surf.
Together we can protect our oceans and keep them thriving for future generations to create lifelong memories of their own.
Over 50 Pittwater households have already pledged to make a difference for our local wildlife, and you can too! Create a habitat stepping stone to help our wildlife out. It’s easy - just add a few beautiful habitat elements to your backyard or balcony to create a valuable wildlife-friendly stopover.
How it works
1) Discover: Visit the website below to find dozens of beautiful plants, nest boxes and water elements you can add to your backyard or balcony to help our local wildlife.
2) Pledge: Select three or more elements to add to your place. You can even show you care by choosing to have a bird appear on our online map.
3) Share: Join the Habitat Stepping Stones Facebook community to find out what’s happening in the natural world, and share your pics, tips and stories.
What you get
• Enjoy the wonders of nature, right outside your window. • Free and discounted plants for your garden. • A Habitat Stepping Stone plaque for your front fence. • Local wildlife news and tips. • Become part of the Pittwater Habitat Stepping Stones community.
No computer? No problem -Just write to the address below and we’ll mail you everything you need. Habitat Stepping Stones, Department of Environmental Sciences, Macquarie University NSW 2109. This project is assisted by the NSW Government through its Environmental Trust
The Avalon Preservation Association, also known as Avalon Preservation Trust. We are a not for profit volunteer community group incorporated under the NSW Associations Act, established 50 years ago. We are committed to protecting your interests – to keeping guard over our natural and built environment throughout the Avalon area.
Membership of the association is open to all those residents and/or ratepayers of Avalon Beach and adjacent areas who support the aims and objectives of our Association.
Report illegal dumping
NSW Government
The RIDonline website lets you report the types of waste being dumped and its GPS location. Photos of the waste can also be added to the report.
The Environment Protection Authority (EPA), councils and Regional Illegal Dumping (RID) squads will use this information to investigate and, if appropriate, issue a fine or clean-up notice. Penalties for illegal dumping can be up to $15,000 and potential jail time for anybody caught illegally dumping within five years of a prior illegal dumping conviction.
This Youth-run, volunteer-based environment initiative has been attracting high praise from the founders of Living Ocean as much as other local environment groups recently.
Sydney Wildlife rescues, rehabilitates and releases sick, injured and orphaned native wildlife. From penguins, to possums and parrots, native wildlife of all descriptions passes through the caring hands of Sydney Wildlife rescuers and carers on a daily basis. We provide a genuine 24 hour, 7 day per week emergency advice, rescue and care service.
As well as caring for sick, injured and orphaned native wildlife, Sydney Wildlife is also involved in educating the community about native wildlife and its habitat. We provide educational talks to a wide range of groups and audiences including kindergartens, scouts, guides, a wide range of special interest groups and retirement villages. Talks are tailored to meet the needs and requirements of each group.
Found an injured native animal? We're here to help.
Keep the animal contained, warm, quiet and undisturbed. Do not offer any food or water. Call Sydney Wildlife immediately on 9413 4300, or take the animal to your nearest vet. Generally there is no charge. Find out more at: www.sydneywildlife.org.au
Southern Cross Wildlife Care was launched over 6 years ago. It is the brainchild of Dr Howard Ralph, the founder and chief veterinarian. SCWC was established solely for the purpose of treating injured, sick and orphaned wildlife. No wild creature in need that passes through our doors is ever rejected.
People can assist SCWC by volunteering their skills ie: veterinary; medical; experienced wildlife carers; fundraising; "IT" skills; media; admin; website etc. We are always having to address the issue of finances as we are a non commercial veterinary service for wildlife in need, who obviously don't have cheque books in their pouches. It is a constant concern and struggle of ours when we are pre-occupied with the care and treatment of the escalating amount of wildlife that we have to deal with. Just becoming a member of SCWC for $45 a year would be a great help. Regular monthly donations however small, would be a wonderful gift and we could plan ahead knowing that we had x amount of funds that we could count on. Our small team of volunteers are all unpaid even our amazing vet Howard, so all funds raised go directly towards our precious wildlife. SCWC is TAX DEDUCTIBLE.
Avalon Community Garden is a community led initiative to create accessible food gardens in public places throughout the Pittwater area. Our aim is to share skills and knowledge in creating fabulous local, organic food. But it's not just about great food. We also aim to foster community connection, stimulate creative ideas for community resilience and celebrate our abundance. Open to all ages and skills, our first garden is on the grounds of Barrenjoey High School (off Tasman Road). Become part of this exciting initiative to change the world locally.
Living Ocean was born in Whale Beach, on the Northern Beaches of Sydney, surrounded by water and set in an area of incredible beauty.
Living Ocean is a charity that promotes the awareness of human impact on the ocean, through research, education, creative activity in the community, and support of others who sustain ocean health and integrity.
And always celebrating and honouring the natural environment and the lifestyle that the ocean offers us.
Our whale research program builds on research that has been conducted off our coastline by our experts over many years and our Centre for Marine Studies enables students and others to become directly involved.
Through partnerships with individuals and organizations, we conceive, create and coordinate campaigns that educate all layers of our community – from our ‘No Plastic Please’ campaign, which is delivered in partnership with local schools, to film nights and lectures, aimed at the wider community.
Additionally, we raise funds for ocean-oriented conservation groups such as Sea Shepherd.
About Pittwater Natural Heritage Association (PNHA)
With urbanisation, there are continuing pressures that threaten the beautiful natural environment of the Pittwater area. Some impacts are immediate and apparent, others are more gradual and less obvious. The Pittwater Natural Heritage Association has been formed to act to protect and preserve the Pittwater areas major and most valuable asset - its natural heritage. PNHA is an incorporated association seeking broad based community membership and support to enable it to have an effective and authoritative voice speaking out for the preservation of Pittwater's natural heritage. Please contact us for further information.
Our Aims
To raise public awareness of the conservation value of the natural heritage of the Pittwater area: its landforms, watercourses, soils and local native vegetation and fauna.
To raise public awareness of the threats to the long-term sustainability of Pittwater's natural heritage.
To foster individual and community responsibility for caring for this natural heritage.
To encourage Council and the NSW Government to adopt and implement policies and works which will conserve, sustain and enhance the natural heritage of Pittwater.
Act to Preserve and Protect!
If you would like to join us, please fill out the Membership Application Form ($20.00 annually - $10 concession)
Think before you print ; A kilo of recycled paper creates around 1.8 kilograms of carbon emissions, without taking into account the emissions produced from transporting the paper. So, before you send a document to print, think about how many kilograms of carbon emissions you could save by reading it on screen.
Friends Of Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment Activities
Bush Regeneration - Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment
This is a wonderful way to become connected to nature and contribute to the health of the environment. Over the weeks and months you can see positive changes as you give native species a better chance to thrive. Wildlife appreciate the improvement in their habitat.
Belrose area - Thursday mornings
Belrose area - Weekend mornings by arrangement
Contact: Phone or text Conny Harris on 0432 643 295
Wheeler Creek - Wednesday mornings 9-11am
Contact: Phone or text Judith Bennett on 0402 974 105
Pittwater Environmental Foundation was established in 2006 to conserve and enhance the natural environment of the Pittwater local government area through the application of tax deductible donations, gifts and bequests. The Directors were appointed by Pittwater Council.
About 33% (about 1600 ha excluding National Parks) of the original pre-European bushland in Pittwater remains in a reasonably natural or undisturbed condition. Of this, only about 400ha remains in public ownership. All remaining natural bushland is subject to encroachment, illegal clearing, weed invasion, feral animals, altered drainage, bushfire hazard reduction requirements and other edge effects. Within Pittwater 38 species of plants or animals are listed as endangered or threatened under the Threatened Species Act. There are two endangered populations (Koala and Squirrel Glider) and eight endangered ecological communities or types of bushland. To visit their site please click on logo above.
Avalon Boomerang Bags was introduced to us by Surfrider Foundation and Living Ocean, they both helped organise with the support of Pittwater Council the Recreational room at Avalon Community Centre which we worked from each Tuesday. This is the Hub of what is a Community initiative to help free Avalon of single use plastic bags and to generally spread the word of the overuse of plastic.
"I bind myself today to the power of Heaven, the light of the sun, the brightness of the moon, the splendour of fire, the flashing of lightning, the swiftness of wind, the depth of the sea, the stability of the earth, the compactness of rocks." - from the Prayer of Saint Patrick