Key aspects of the Plan
We summarise the key aspects of the Plan below.
A new independent federal EPA
As discussed in the August podcast, a key election promise of the Government was the establishment of an independent federal EPA.
The Plan provides further detail on its likely functions, which will include:
- Compliance and enforcement of federal environmental legislation, including regarding wildlife trade, sea dumping, ozone and synthetic greenhouse, gas management, hazardous waste, product emissions, recycling and waste reduction, and underwater cultural heritage acts;
- Project assessments and decisions;
- Environmental permits and licences issued by the federal Government; and
- Post-approval regulation.
A federal EPA, with a mandate to actively enforce and regulate federal environmental law compliance, will mean that businesses may need to update environment assessment frameworks or amend their operations or approvals to ensure that they avoid regulatory action for non-compliance
National Environmental Standards
New National Environmental Standards (NES) will be developed, which are intended to benchmark environmental outcomes. Standards will be developed for:
- Matters of national environmental significance under the EPBC Act;
- First Nations engagement and participation in decision-making;
- Community engagement and consultation;
- Regional planning; and
- Environmental offsets.
Existing bilateral agreements (between the federal Government and State/Territory Governments) are planned to be subject to the new NES.
Climate Change Disclosures and considerations
The new EPBC Act approvals will require proponents to publish estimates of their expected Scope 1 and 2 emissions over the life of the project and disclose how their project aligns with Australia’s national and international climate change obligations.
Environmental Offsets reform
The ‘National Environmental Offsets System’ is to be released imminently, and will track and report the use and delivery of environmental offsets. The offsets are proposed to not only offset environmental loss but aim to achieve overall net environmental gains.
‘Averted loss’ offsets (i.e. protecting one patch of existing habitat in exchange for clearing or loss of another) are earmarked to be largely discontinued. However, a new hierarchy for offsets is proposed to:
- Avoid harm to the environment;
- Reduce or mitigate environmental damage;
- Identify offsets within the region that deliver a net gain for the imperilled plants or animals; and
- Make a conservation payment to enable a net positive environmental outcome.
Expansion of the Water Trigger
The ‘water trigger’, which currently applies to large coal mining and coal seam gas activities under the EPBC Act, will be expanded to include all forms of unconventional gas such as shale and ‘tight’ gas (ie low permeability sandstone reserves producing primarily dry natural gas).
Nuclear Regulation Reform
Nuclear regulation will be reformed to create consistency across federal and state regulatory schemes.
Nature Repair Market
A ‘nature repair market’ will be established to facilitate investment in environmental restoration projects. This market will recognise landholders who restore or manage local habitat by granting them biodiversity certificates, which can then be sold to other parties.
Focus on environmental and climate change data
A new ‘Data Division’ is to be created, within the Department of Climate Change, Energy, Environment, and Water, to ensure the accuracy and accessibility of environmental data.
Regional Planning
Regional planning agreements are being proposed between State/Territory and federal Governments. These agreements will form the basis for any applicable Regional Planning Standard which must be complied with under a reformed EPBC Act.
Conservation Planning Reform
Conservation planning processes for listed threatened species and ecological communities under the EPBC Act will be streamlined. This may flag a ‘phasing out’ of the current conservation plans and conservation advices.
Merits review under the EPBC Act?
The Plan confirms that the Government will not adopt all of the Samuel Review recommendations. In particular, the recommendation to expand the standing for a limited merits review of decisions made under the EPBC Act has not been adopted.
This decision has drawn criticism from some environmental groups.