Thursday, November 7, 2024

In Other News

Related Posts

Labor rejects ban on native forest logging

The ALP National Conference has rejected a motion from their environment arm, LEAN to end native timber logging in Australia.

LEAN did not secure a ban on native forest logging but they did get a commitment from the ALP to rewrite the federal government’s outdated National Forest Policy Statement, which was last reviewed in 1992 – see the wording below.

Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek promised to consider establishing a federal environment protection commission in the second term of government – which is not much of a promise.

Labor Environment Action Network (LEAN) spokesperson, Felicity Wade, said:

“Native forest logging is a travesty in the 21st century. While it continues, we undermine the government’s policy objectives of ending extinctions and on emission reductions, and we prove ourselves a little bit deaf to the deep environmental concerns of our members.”

Australian Labor Party delegates, including the relevant and powerful unions: Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining And Energy Union (CFMMEU) and the Australian Workers Union (AWU) accepted an amended commitment to review the nation’s forestry policy.

This is the amended motion that was passed at the conference:

Labor supports the sustainable future of Australia’s forests and forest products industry and recognises the value and role of our forests in storing carbon and protecting biodiversity.

Labor will work with states and territories to update the 1992 National Forest Policy Statement to ensure it is contemporary and fit for purpose. We will:

• Expand Australia’s plantation estate to meet domestic and international demand for high-value, sustainably sourced wood products, and will develop an industry plan that facilitates regional job growth and vibrant sustainable communities.

• Deliver the management and restoration of native forests, recognising and rewarding carbon and biodiversity values and the need for their active and on-going management.

• Consistent with current government policy, ensure the application of National Environmental Standards to Australia’s native forests.

• Harness the social, environmental, and economic benefits that our forests can provide.

• Recognise the skills, knowledge and competencies of timber workers and their communities, as well as the central role First Nations communities play in restoring country and determining social, economic and environmental benefits flowing from forest management activity.

Australian Workers Union NSW branch vice president, Sandra Doumit, said:

What this amendment does not do is ignore our forestry workers.

It does not make grand statements about transition without any detail or plan. It does not encourage the purchase of unregulated and unsustainable overseas timber without any consideration of Australian jobs and Australian industry.

This amendment offers a practical and considered way forward [for] protecting our forests and Australian jobs.

Another amendment which passed reads:

Labor is committed to delivering the Glasgow Leaders Declaration on forests and land use which commits Australia to ‘halt and reverse forest loss and land degradation by 2030’.

Labor recognises that deforestation increases greenhouse gas emissions. Labor will deploy a variety of policy responses to deliver on our emission reduction and deforestation commitments including robust and additional nature-based solutions to prevent forest loss and degradation.

Labor will work with the states and territories on national vegetation mapping and monitoring programs.

LEAN’s proposal was based on A National Forest Protection & Workforce Plan for Australia, which we covered in detail.

The ALP rejected an outright ban on the same day that an Australia Institute survey showed a strong majority of Australian voters want bans on native forest logging extended to New South Wales and Tasmania

  • Seven in 10 Australians (69%) support extending native forest logging bans to New South Wales and Tasmania.
  • A majority of voters for each political party support an end to native forest logging in New South Wales and Tasmania.
  • Three in four Labor voters (75%) and three in five Coalition voters (58%) support the policy.
  • Support is highest among Greens voters (85%) and weakest among One Nation voters (57%).
  • A majority of Australians in every age group support ending native forest logging in New South Wales and Tasmania.

Wade told the conference:

I have to honour the 366 branches who meet week by week in dusty halls and commit to making Australia a better place, that back the call to get moving on getting out of native forest logging.

I also have to honour the seven out of 10 Australians who think the time is up for this industry. Native forest logging is a travesty in the 21st century. It is failing to innovate or find good ways to give real futures to its timber workers.

While it continues we undermine the government’s policy objectives on ending extinctions and emissions reduction, and we prove ourselves a little bit deaf to the deep environmental concerns of our members.

LEAN’s Climate Clearing and Cows land sector climate motion

The draft motion endorsed by 366 ALP branches, before the heavy amendments, was:

[Name] Branch/Sub-branch welcomes the Government’s achievements in acting to arrest climate change and environmental decline. We call on the Government to put protecting the natural environment at the centre of its climate change response and embrace the opportunity of building a world leading carbon drawdown industry.

[Name] Branch calls on the Albanese Labor Government to:

  1. Create a climate strategy for the land sector, working with the National Reconstruction Fund, the Powering the Regions Fund and Zero Emissions Taskforce to develop an industry plan for a world-leading land carbon industry which would create thousands of good regional jobs in managing land, forests and mangroves for carbon, and in significantly expanding our plantation base.
  2. Move to 100% plantation timber and end broadscale land clearing before the next federal election, creating uplift in regional employment and industrial diversification.
  3. Work with the agricultural sector to halve methane emissions from agriculture by 2030.

°°°

The ALP rejected the ban of native timber logging despite the motion being endorsed by a majority of members and branches before the conference began. This table lists the Australian Labor Party local branches and units which endorsed LEAN’s Climate Clearing and Cows land sector climate motion.

Abbotsford NSW
ACT Labor Conference
Adelaide SA
Adelaide FEC SA
Albany WA
Albert Park, VIC
Alexandria NSW
Annandale NSW
Annerley QLD
Arncliffe – Wolli Creek NSW
Ashbury NSW
Ashfield NSW
Ashgrove QLD
Ashwood VIC
Auburn-Lidcombe NSW
Austral – Bringelly – Cecil Hills NSW
Balga WA
Ballajura WA
Ballina SEC NSW
Balmain NSW
Banks FEC NSW
Banyo / Northgate QLD
Barcaldine QLD
Baroona QLD
Barron River QLD
Bass VIC
Bega NSW
Belconnen ACT
Bellarine VIC
Bellinger River NSW
Bendigo – Castlemaine
Bendigo East
Bendigo West
Bentleigh VIC
Berala NSW
Bermagui-Cobargo NSW
Berowra-Mt Colah
Berry-Shoalhaven Heads, NSW
Berwick VIC
Black Mountain ACT
Blacktown NSW
Blue Mountains SEC, NSW
Bondi Beach NSW
Boonah QLD
Boondall QLD
Boothby FEC SA
Botany NSW
Box Hill, VIC
Bragg SA
Bribie Island Qld
Brighton VIC
Brighton-le-Sands NSW
Brindabella Daytime ACT
Brisbane FOC QLD
Broadwater QLD
Broken Hill
Brooklyn-Mooney Mooney-Lower Hawkesbury NSW
Brunswick VIC
Bulimba/Hawthorne QLD
Bundaberg / Coral Coast QLD
Bundamba QLD
Burleigh QLD 
Byron Bay NSW
Caboolture- Morayfield QLD
Cairns Central QLD
Campsie NSW
Canberra North ACT
Cannington WA
Cannon Hill/Morningside QLD
Carrum VIC
Casey VIC
Cassowary Coast QLD
Caulfield VIC
Central Coast LGC NSW
Cheltenham SA
Chermside/Kedron QLD
Chifley FEC, NSW
Chipping Norton – Wattle Grove NSW
City and Haymarket, NSW
Clarinda VIC
Clovelly NSW
Coffs Harbour NSW
Colton SA
Como-Jannali NSW
Concord – Concord West – Rhodes NSW
Coogee, NSW
Cook FEC, NSW
Coopers Plains Acacia Ridge QLD
Cowper FEC
Cranbourne VIC
Cronulla-Caringbah NSW
Dandenong VIC
Dapto NSW
Davenport SA
Daytime ACT
Deagon QLD
Deception Bay QLD
Dee Why NSW
Dickson ACT
Doonside NSW
Double Bay – Bellevue Hill NSW
Dulwich Hill / Lewisham NSW
Dungog NSW
Dunstan SA
Eastwood NSW
Edmonton QLD
Eildon- Murrundindi VIC
Elsternwick VIC
Eltham VIc
Engadine NSW
Enmore-Camdenville NSW
Enoggerra QLD
Environment Direct Branch, WA
Epping NSW
Erskineville NSW
Essendon VIC
Eureka-Bacchus Marsh Vic
Eureka – Ballarat East VIC
Evelyn VIC
FNQ Policy conference QLD
Fivedock NSW
Footscray VIC
Frankston VIC
Fremantle WA
Gaven QLD
Geelong VIC
Geraldton WA
Gibson SA
Gilmore FEC, NSW
Gippsland Central 
Gladesville NSW
Glebe NSW
Glen Waverley VIC
Glenwood NSW
Gosford NSW
Goulburn NSW
Grafton NSW
Granville NSW
Grayndler FEC
Greater Springfield QLD
Greenway FEC, NSW
Greystanes – Pemulwuy , NSW
Gungahlin ACT
Haberfield NSW
Harbord NSW
Harris Park NSW
Hartley SA
Hastings VIC
Hawkesbury NSW
Hermit Park QLD
Hervey Bay, QLD
Heysen SA
Hillarys WA
Hindmarsh FEC SA
Homedale NSW
Hornsby NSW
Hughes FEC NSW
Hunters Hill NSW
Indooroopilly QLD
Ingleburn NSW
Ipswich QLD
Ipswich North QLD
Jervis Bay – St Georges Basin NSW
Jubilee QLD
Kalamunda Zig Zag WA
Kalkallo VIC
Katoomba NSW
Kawana QLD
Kelvin Grove QLD
Kenmore/Bellbowrie QLD
Kiama NSW
King SA
Kingborough, TAS
Kings Cross NSW
Kingsford-Smith FEC
Kogarah – Carlton NSW
Kororoit, VIC
Kurilpa QLD
Kuringai NSW
Lake Macquarie East, NSW
Lalor Park NSW
Lambton – New Lambton – Kotara NSW
Lane Cove, NSW
Lane Cove SEC NSW
Lanyon ACT
Lara VIC
Laverton VIC
Lee SA
Leichhardt NSW
Lilyfield Rozelle NSW
Lindsay FEC NSW
Lismore NSW
Liverpool NSW
Lower Mountains, NSW
Lytton QLD
Macedon – Daylesford VIC
Macquarie NSW
Makin FEC
Maitland East NSW
Malvern VIC
Manly NSW
Manly SEC NSW
Marayong South NSW
Maroubra NSW
Marrickville NSW
Mawson SA
Mayfield NSW
Mayo FEC
Melbourne VIC
Melton VIC
Mid Mountains NSW
Milperra – Panania – Revesby NSW
Milton- Ulladulla NSW
Mitchell FEC, NSW
Monbulk VIC
Moore FEC, WA
Mordialloc VIC
Moree NSW
Morialta SA
Mornington VIC
Mortlake Cabarita NSW
Morwell VIC
Mosman NSW
Mount Ainslie ACT
Mount Morgan QLD
Mt Rogers/Ginninderra ACT
Mullumbimby-Brunswick Valley
Nambucca River, NSW
Narrabeen Pittwater, NSW
Narre Warren North Vic
Narre Warren South VIC
Nepean VIC
New Farm QLD
Newland SA
Newtown SEC NSW
Nightcliff NT
Ninderry QLD
Noosa District QLD
North Lakes – Murrumba East Qld
North Rocks NSW
North Sydney NSW
Northbridge WA
Northcote VIC
Nowra- Bomaderry NSW
Oakleigh VIC 
Oatley-Peakhurst NSW
Olympic Peninsula NSW
Oodgeroo, QLD
Paddington NSW
Paddington QLD
Padstow NSW
Parramatta FEC NSW
Pascoe Vale VIC
Pakenham VIC
Parramatta NSW
Pennant Hills NSW
Penshurst NSW
Perth Labor Women WA
Petersham NSW
Pine Lakes QLD
Point Cook VIC
Polwarth – Surf coast, VIC
Port Adelaide SA
Port Curtis and Hinterland QLD
Port Douglas – Mossman QLD
Port Kembla NSW
Port Macquarie NSW
Port of Brisbane QLD
Prahran VIC
Preston VIC
Prospect NSW
Pumicestone West, QLD
Pyrmont Ultimo NSW
Quakers Hill and District NSW
Queanbeyan NSW
Randwick North NSW
Reid FEC, NSW
Richmond VIC
Ringwood VIC
Ripon / Ararat VIC
Ripon – Creswick – Clunes VIC
Rising Sun, QLD
Riverstone-The Ponds NSW
Rowville , VIC
Runcorn – Kuraby, QLD
Ryde NSW
Salisbury QLD
Sanderson Karama NT
Sapphire Coast (Eden – Merimbula) NSW
Scarborough WA
Schubert SA
Seven Hills NSW
Snowy-Monaro, NSW
South Barwon VIC
South Brisbane QLD
South Gippsland VIC
South Toowoomba QLD
Southern Highlands NSW
Spence FEC
Springwood Qld
Springwood-Faulconbridge NSW
St Peters / Tempe NSW
Stanmore-Camperdown NSW
Stanthorpe-Wallangarra QLD
Stockton NSW
Strathfield NSW
Stretton QLD
Sturt FEC SA
Summer Hill NSW
Sunbury VIC
Sunshine Coast Hinterland
Surry Hills NSW
Sutherland NSW
Sydenham VIC
Sydney FEC NSW
Tamworth NSW
Tathra, NSW
Telopea/South Canberra ACT
The Gap QLD
The Hills NSW
The Warren NSW
Thirroul NSW
Thomastown VIC
Tomaree Peninsula NSW
Toongabbie NSW
Toowong – St Lucia QLD
Toronto NSW
Toukley – Warnervale NSW
Townsville QLD
Townsville Local Policy Conference QLD
Trevor Davies Branch (Darlington/Newtown) NSW
Tuggeranong ACT
Tugun QLD
Tweed Heads NSW
Umina-Ettalong NSW
Unley SA
WA Labor for Arts WA
WA Rainbow Labor WA
Waite SA
Wallsend NSW
Walter Taylor QLD
Warrandyte VIC
Warringah FEC
Wentworth FEC
Wentworthville NSW
Werribee VIC
West Leederville, WA
West Perth WA
West Torrens SA
Westmead NSW
Weston Creek Molonglo ACT
Williamstown VIC
Woden ACT
Woodford QLD
Wynnum Manly QLD
Yarrawarrah – Shire South NSW
Yokine WA
Young, NSW
Young Labor ACT 
Young Labor National Conference 
Young Labor NSW
Young Labor Queensland 
Young Labor South Australia 
Young Labor WA
Yunbenun-Magnetic Island QLD

400 delegates at the 49th Labor National Conference in Brisbane vote on the Party’s policy agenda.

See also: NSW Forestry Corp have a fight on their hands to Save Bulga Forest

Midcoast Council Votes to Save Bulga Forest on Biripi Country

Lola Koala’s tree-sit in Bulga Forest continues a tradition of forest protest

Forest defenders and climate activists arrested in Bulga State Forest

Locals protest NSW Forestry logging in Bulga Forest

Flawed habitat maps could derail government plans to save the Koala

Knitting Nanna blocks saw mill & stops logging trucks

Editor in Chief
Editor in Chief
Webmaster responsible for all editorial content & website management at 1EarthMedia.

Popular Articles

error: Content is protected !!