
Environmental campaigners have won a reprieve from plans by the federal government to hand environmental protection powers to state governments and fast track applications for some developments.
A by the Business Council of Australia, prepared for the Commonwealth of Australian Government (COAG) meeting on December 7, made several proposals. These included:
路 鈥淎ll jurisdictions to commit to removing unnecessary carbon reduction and energy efficiency schemes (including green tape) following the introduction of a national carbon price on 1 July 2012;
路 Accredit state environmental approvals to remove the Commonwealth鈥檚 concurrence powers;
路 Low-impact, low-risk residential and light industrial developments that comply with the criteria in a planning scheme to be deemed 鈥榚xempt鈥 from the development assessment process.鈥
In response to the proposals, online activist group GetUp to bring attention to the reforms, saying: 鈥淎ustralia鈥檚 federal environmental powers have demonstrated their value time and time again. They鈥檝e been used to stop drilling for oil on the Great Barrier Reef, damming of the Franklin River in Tasmania and brought about the protection of some of our most precious places and wildlife. These threats will only continue to grow 鈥 from mining in the Tarkine to coal seam gas fracking and coal ports on the Great Barrier Reef.鈥
A protest outside parliament house in Canberra met politicians as they arrived for the COAG meeting. Prime Minister Julia Gillard later backed down on implementing the proposals by the planned deadline of March 2013.
The Business Council of Australia at the 鈥渇rustrating鈥 reversal, saying on December 6: 鈥淭here has been failure to make meaningful progress on the critical reform of eliminating costly double handling of environmental assessments and approvals under the national Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act.鈥
said: 鈥淚t is not a victory, it is simply a reprieve because of the concern of people around the country putting pressure on the government 鈥 It鈥檚 very clear that Julia Gillard and big business, gathered here today in Canberra as an advisory group to COAG, are still in cahoots about undermining environmental protection around Australia."