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Ecologically sustainable development in Australia: the last ten years (and the next)
by Merrill Findlay for the National Parks Journal, October 2000
One
of the Kimberley's senior lawmen at Dalalnger
(Dimond Gorge) on Western Australia's still-wild Fitzroy
River, a site proposed for a dam to irrigate genetically
modified cotton in the 1990s.
Photo by Merrill Findlay, 1998.
We
were all a decade younger then. Bob Hawke was in The Lodge,
Ros Kelly was Minister for the Environment, and Our
Common Future, the 1987 report of the World Commission
on Environment and Development, or Brundtland Report,
had been published long enough for the words “Sustainable
Development” to be on the lips of every senior bureaucrat
and politician in every member state of the United Nations.
Except Australia.
Here
the new buzz-term had a prefix, which the then-influential
environment movement had insisted upon to differentiate
what we were talking about from all the other kinds of
development most other vested interest groups wanted to
sustain. The Hawke government’s 1989 policy response to
the World Commission’s report was therefore called Ecologically
Sustainable Development: A Commonwealth Discussion Paper.
This document committed the Commonwealth Government to
a two year policy process to develop a National Strategy
for Ecologically Sustainable Development, leading up to
the 1992 UN Conference on Environment and Development
in Rio De Janiero, also known as the Earth Summit.
The
environment movement’s formal intervention in what became
known as “the ESD process” began with a carefully argued
joint submission by the Australian Conservation Foundation,
Greenpeace (Australia), The Wilderness Society, and World
Wide Fund for Nature – Australia (Hare et al, August 1990)
critiquing both the Brundtland Report, and the Commonwealth’s
own discussion paper. It presented an alternative set
of thirteen principles within which “policies designed
to achieve ecological sustainability should be cast.”
On the basis of this research the environment organisations
were invited to participate in the Hawke government’s
Working Groups to examine what ESD might mean across nine
industry sectors of the national economy. The Wilderness
Society decided to stay outside the process, and Greenpeace
withdrew in protest at the government’s position on Resource
Security in the foresty industry. ACF and WWF agreed to
participate in all but the forestry working groups, and
received substantial federal funding to facilitate this.
“We
went into it with our eyes open, knowing it was a political
process and would involve compromises to get a result,
but it gave us the money to do a lot of policy research
we needed to do anyway and that was valuable,” recalls
consultant Karen Alexander, who managed the joint environment
groups’ ESD Liaison Unit at the time. “I don’t know if
I’m exaggerating, but people were excited about it. We
had a real sense that something could be achieved.”
According
to Alexander and many other participants in the federal
ESD process, some of the outcomes from the working groups
were “quite ground-breaking”. “But then it all got bureaucratised
and we withdrew,” she recalls. “And Keating dumped ESD.
I’ve never heard him so bored as when he talked about
the environment. I felt such sadness when I looked at
the policy statements in the Compendium of ESD Recommendations
that accompanied the 1992 National Strategy for Ecologically
Sustainable Development and the National Greenhouse Response
Strategy, and compared the words with reality.”
This
disappointment at the gap between government rhetoric
and reality, between policy and practice, is felt almost
universally amongst environmentalists. “Basically we’ve
thrown away the last ten years, and if anything we’ve
gone backwards,” says energy consultant Alan Pears, who
represented the environment groups in the Energy Use Working
Group. “For example, we’ve now acknowledged that introduction
of electricity markets has increased greenhouse gas emissions
by 6 million tonnes of CO2 equivalents per year above
the predictions, yet the restructuring of the electricity
industry was the centrepiece of the 1992 National Greenhouse
Response Strategy! At that time supporters of electricity
reform claimed it was the most powerful greenhouse strategy
we could apply!”
Michael
Buxton, now head of RMIT University’s Environment and
Planning Program, was on the Steering Committee for the
1992 Intergovernmental Agreement on the Environment (IGAE),
which committed the State governments to the Commonwealth’s
ESD Strategy. He also looks back at the last decade with
sadness, regret, even anger at the lost opportunities.
“Very little is being done to tackle the fundamental causes
of environmental degradation, such as water allocation
and use, land cultivation and grazing methods, coastal
and urban development, and land clearance,” he insists.
“Institutional responses have been a monumental failure!”
He cites the Murray Darling Commission as “the perfect
demonstration” of this. “It’s a farce,” he says. “All
the wrong decisions have been made and now we have to
claw back water use in a reducing supply.” Indeed some
commentators now believe the Murray Darling system is
so seriously degraded that little can be done to save
it.
Mike
Krockenberger, ACF’s Strategies Director, agrees that
institutional responses to environmental degradation have
so far failed to change society's handling of the environment
in any meaningful way in this country. “There are however
some positive signs,” he concedes. “One of the major differences
now is that an increasing number of businesses are becoming
enlightened, especially with Greenhouse and salinity issues,
because they see they are potential beneficiaries from
environmental action. We’re getting beyond the “greenwash”
phase in corporate culture. We’re somewhere between PR
and a recognition that real action is required!”
But
the absence of leadership from all governments over the
last ten years remains deeply disappointing. “While there
are some individuals who know what’s going on, no single
government has a real sense of the economic and structural
changes that are required,” Krockenberger says.
As
a signatory to both Agenda 21 (the very gentle “blueprint”
for sustainable development that emerged from the 1992
Earth Summit) and the accompanying biodiversity and climate
change conventions, the Australian government has
binding obligations to the international community. As
a signatory, it must report annually to the UN Commission
for Sustainable Development on its progress towards ecological
sustainability.
So
far, the reports have been little more than a greenwash,
but how long can we get away with this? Will the international
community accept Australia’s recalcitrance at the next
Earth Summit in 2002, or at the next Conference of Parties
to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change, in November this year? And how will Professor
Bruce Thom, Chair of the Australian State of the Environment
Report Committee, and his team assess our progress towards
ecological sustainability when they report to the nation
next year? What will their much-hyped “sustainability
indicators” tell us?
Felicity
Wishart, who worked with the ESD Liaison Unit all those
years back, and is now the coordinator of the Queensland
Conservation Council, accepts that the future is not looking
good. “There will probably be major biodiversity losses,
runaway Greenhouse, and other irreversible pollution problems
with nuclear waste and chlorine based toxins that are
here to stay, and all the stuff we don’t yet know about,
like synthetic oestrogens”, she says. “But we humans have
the foresight, intelligence, and knowledge to come up
with ways of living that can protect the environment and
give us all fulfilling lives, and if we don’t keep striving
for that then we do ourselves incredible disservice. For
me, that’s the most deciding challenge in life, to be
able to find the solutions to these incredibly complex
problems.”
And
the challenge is profound.
ESD
CHALLENGES WE HADN’T EVEN THOUGHT OF 10 YEARS AGO!
Trial
plot of Bt cotton on Shamrock Gardens, south of Broome
in Western Australia's Kimberley region. Photo
by Merrill Findlay, 1998.
A
decade ago few of us had thought about the ESD implications
of genetic engineering, Native Title, corporate globalisation,
and the future of Australia’s still-underdeveloped north.
Nor were our rivers and underground water resources high
on the ESD agenda. But now, in the year 2000, these issues
have made ecological sustainability an even more complex
goal to achieve.
Western
Agricultural Industries (WAI) Pty Ltd’s proposal to irrigate
almost 250,000 hectares of transgenetic cotton and other
crops for the global market, on so-far uncleared Pindan
soils south of Broome, in northwest Western Australia,
highlights many of these new complexities. All the land
under question, mostly leasehold, is also subject to a
Native Title claim by the Karajarri and other traditional
landowners, who may, in the future, also be interested
in developing irrigation agriculture for their own economic
viability.
Cotton
requires intensive inputs of both water and pesticides,
and has caused massive environmental degradation wherever
it has been grown. The 1998 Memorandum of Understanding
(MOU) between the State of Western Australia and WAI proposes
that groundwater be taken from the Canning Basin for Stage
I, and that a dam be built on the still-wild Fitzroy River
to supply water to an expanded Stage II.
The
preferred dam site, Dimond Gorge, is of fundamental cultural
significance to many of the West Kimberley traditional
owners. The river system itself, and the many unique groundwater-dependent
ecosystems of the region, are also of extreme biological
significance. Not surprisingly, two recently completed
surveys for the WA Waters and Rivers Commission show an
almost exact correlation between high cultural values
and high biodiversity values in the areas subject to the
MOU.
Bt
cotton produces an enzyme that is toxic to the cotton
bollworm. Trials have been completed on Shamrock Gardens,
and excision from Shamrock Downs pastoral lease, south
of Broome, but little information is available on what
happens when the bollworm develops resistance to the Bt
gene, or whether the gene poses a threat to non-target
insect species. (Recent research in the US and Europe
has shown that pollen from Bt corn can kill monarch butterfly
caterpillers, for example.) More challenges for the future!
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revised March 2004, and again in January 2005. This page created 21 January 2008. |
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