Friday, 26 September 2025

WOOD-FIRED POWER STATION REJECTED BY INDEPENDENT PLANNING COMMISSION

 MEDIA RELEASE 

Conservation Groups Welcome Independent Planning Commission’s Rejection of Proposal to Increase Landclearing for Electricity

North East Forest Alliance and North Coast Environment Council welcome the IPC’s rejection of Verdant Earth's proposal to restart the closed coal-fired Redbank power station, using trees obtained from clearing more than 20,000 ha of land a year, to spew 1.3 million tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere.

On the September 15, the Independent Planning Commission refused the development application from Verdant Earth Technologies Ltd to restart the Redbank Power Station at Warkworth using biomass instead of coal tailings as fuel.

“Burning forests produces higher CO2 emissions than burning coal, so it is madness to replace coal with wood to generate electricity as it undermines our transition to a low carbon economy”, said NEFA spokesperson Dailan Pugh.

“It is particularly galling that in this case the proponents claimed that burning 850,000 tonnes of biomass per annum would result in no CO2 emissions at all, when in fact the power-plant would release 1.3 million tonnes of CO2 through its smokestacks each year, thereby significantly increasing atmospheric carbon when we urgently need to be transitioning to non-polluting solar and wind power.

“This is compounded by the fact that the biomass was intended to be obtained by clearing native vegetation, which is contrary to the need to restore and increase native vegetation as it is the only means we have of removing carbon from the atmosphere at scale. 

“The Independent Planning Commission rejected the proposal on the grounds that there had been no assessment of the environmental impact of increasing land clearing in western NSW from the current 6,635 ha per annum to over 20,000 ha per annum” Mr. Pugh said.

“It is madness in the midst of our current biodiversity and climate emergencies to contemplate cutting down the homes of a multitude of species and burning them to release more carbon into the atmosphere”, said Susie Russell from the North Coast Environment Council.

“This is the culmination of a six year community campaign against generating electricity by burning wood, and specifically this proposal that had initially proposed to take timber from north coast forests.

“The IPC meeting with stakeholders in Singleton last month received many presentations from both concerned locals, environment groups and biodiversity experts, critical of the proposal.

“They were proposing to clear land 600 kilometres from the power station, woodchip it, store it and then using B doubles, truck it to the Hunter Valley. There was no accounting for the emissions from any of that process which would have been fuel intensive. The whole project just didn’t stack up,” Ms Russell said.

The ALP’s 2024 NSW Labor Platform states:

3.112 NSW Labor recognises that burning timber and cleared vegetation for electricity is not carbon neutral and is neither clean or renewable energy, and therefore forms no part of a credible strategy for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Labor will introduce legislation prohibiting the burning of any forests and cleared vegetation for electricity.

“We call upon the NSW Government to urgently implement their commitment to introduce legislation prohibiting the burning of any forests and cleared vegetation for electricity, to stop any repeat of this madness” Mr. Pugh said.

North East Forest Alliance (NEFA) & North Coast Environment Council (NCEC) .

 

 

Tuesday, 16 September 2025

GUARDING THE CLARENCE RIVER

 For many years Clarence River health has been a concern for people living in its very extensive catchment.  Past health threats including plans to divert major flows to the west or the north have been met with very strong community opposition which led to these plans being dropped. 

More recently the threat posed by the uptake of mining leases in the search for critical minerals has alarmed the river’s protectors. The Clarence Catchment Alliance (CCA) has been alerting the community and local councils to how damaging mining pollution of the Clarence would be to the drinking water of over 100,000 urban dwellers as well as important local industries including fishing, agriculture and tourism.  Its recent public meetings in Grafton, Copmanhurst, Drake and Dorrigo were the precursors for a deputation to Sydney several weeks ago.  The CCA, along with many in the local community, want the State Government to ban mineral mining in our catchment and this was the case they took to the State Government.  If the Government fails to act as it should, the campaign will continue.

Clarence River health and the need to protect it in the long term is the focus of another group which has been gathering community support in recent months.  The Clarence River Guardians, launched early this year, has a range of members including representatives from organisations including First Nations people, the CCA, Canegrowers, Clarence Council, environment groups, Landcare, and local High Schools.

The River Guardians have developed a citizen science project in partnership with Southern Cross University.  This project will help establish parameters and scientific information that will assist in protecting and understanding the Clarence and its catchment.

The first part of the project is a baseline study of river sediments where volunteers, in collaboration with First Nations Custodians, will collect 100 or more river sediment samples from key locations across the catchment on October 18-19.  Samples will be analysed for over 50 elements including heavy metals with the data being stored as a community resource. 

For more information or to volunteer, check  https://www.clarenceriverguardians.net

-        Leonie Blain

  Published in the Voices for the Earth column in The Clarence Valley Independent , 27th  August, 2025.

Sunday, 7 September 2025

ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE GREAT KOALA NATIONAL PARK

 National Parks Association of NSW

Media Release

The National Parks Association of NSW (NPA) welcomes the NSW Government’s announcement of the declaration of the Great Koala National Park.

 ‘This is an incredible moment for Australia’s National Parks’, stated NPA NSW President Liz Jeremy, ‘the culmination of more than a decade of determined advocacy for the future of koalas by local communities and conservationists’. 

‘We congratulate the NSW Government on finally making the Great Koala National Park a reality.  The road between NPA’s original 2015 report to the NSW Government and today’s decision has been a long and often frustrating one, but emphatically worth it’. 

Dr Douglas of NPA Coffs Coast Branch, stated ‘What has been achieved is much more than the permanent protection of 176,000 hectares of forest and koala habitat.  NPA’s vision for the Great Koala National Park was always about more than a change of land title, it was about connecting existing reserves with vulnerable habitats to secure a forest estate of international conservation significance.  A forest estate large enough to connect escarpment to coast, safeguard entire catchments and give our threatened forest fauna and flora the best possible chance of survival’.

‘While celebrating the new park we must also acknowledge that it won’t be enough to guarantee the survival of koalas in NSW.  The decade since the 2015 report proposal has provided a much better understanding of the distribution of koalas across existing reserves, State Forests and plantations.  The next step is to identify areas outside the park that will need to be managed in ways that allow for the movement and persistence of koalas’ Ms Jeremy noted. 

Liz Jeremy noted ‘We should all recognise the impact of the decision on the forestry industry and the families who rely upon forestry jobs.  NPA fully supports the Government’s proposed transition package, especially measures to increase investment in the establishment of plantations on degraded agricultural lands’.

NPA acknowledges the support it has gained from other conservation organisations on the north coast including the Nambucca Valley Conservation Association, Bellingen Environment Centre, Clarence Valley Environment Centre, North-east Forest alliance and North Coast Environment Centre.  We also thank the Nature Conservation Council of NSW and World Wide Fund for Nature for their ongoing support.

Wednesday, 3 September 2025

RICHMOND RIVER KOALA PARKS PROPOSAL

Conservation and community groups are calling for 56,000 hectares of State Forests in the southern Richmond River Valley and along the Richmond Range to be protected.

The aim of this proposal is to:

  • Ø   Safeguard a nationally important Koala population, genetically distinct from those in the Great Koala National Park.
  • Ø    Protect the habitat of more than 130 threatened species.
  • Ø    Improve the health of the Richmond River.
  • Ø    Create a regionally significant wildlife corridor linking Bundjalung National Park on the coast to the Border Ranges National Park.
  • Ø    Advance NSW’s target of 30% land protection by 2030 in one of Australia’s richest biodiversity hotspots.

As part of the campaign Ballina MP Tamara Smith has arranged an information session about the new national park proposal in the Macquarie Room at Parliament House on Wednesday 17 September from 6-7 pm.   

Speakers will be Dailan Pugh OAM from NEFA and koala expert Dr Steve Phillips.