Queensland Labor appoints ‘Minister for the Reef’

The newly sworn in Queensland Labor government has named Steven Miles – the “local dad” ALP candidate for Mount Coot-Tha – as the state’s first Minister for the Great Barrier Reef.

miles_steven
Steven Miles

The new role in the Queensland cabinet marks a distinct departure from the previous Campbell Newman-led Coalition government, whose singular focus on developing the state’s coal resource effectively wiped climate, the environment and clean energy off the policy map – and quite probably cost Newman the election.

And in light of the Abbott government’s failure to appoint either a climate change-dedicated minister, or a minister for science, the Queensland appointment offers a refreshing departure from federal politics, too.

“Having a Minister for the Reef is an important signal that saving our national icon is a priority for this new administration,” said WWF-Australia CEO Dermot O’Gorman in response to the news.

Also named in the new cabinet is newly-elected Mark Bailey, a former school teacher who will become minister for energy, as well as for roads and ports, thrusting him in the middle of the debate about the electricity markets, coal port expansions, and coal developments.

According to the WWF, Minister Miles will be responsible for delivering ALP environmental commitments including: a ban on dumping dredge spoil in the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area; an 80 per cent reduction in pollution run-off into the Reef by 2025; and the reinstatement of key legal safeguards.

Other commitments include providing an additional $100 million over five years towards water quality initiatives, scientific research and better environmental practices in the primary production and fishing industries.

“It is a matter of urgency that these commitments are included in Reef 2050 – the long-term plan to save the Reef that must be submitted to UNESCO in the next few weeks,” the WWF’s O’Gorman said.

At its annual meeting in June, the World Heritage Committee will consider whether to declare the Great Barrier Reef “World Heritage in danger.’

Indeed, Australia – and Queensland – has come under mounting global pressure to take better care of the world’s largest coral reef system, whose biggest threat, even beating global warming, was recently named as coal.

“Acidification (caused by global warming) is not the elephant in the room yet, it’s the elephant on the bus … due to get here any time now,” said University of Sydney professor Iain McCalman on The Conversation last October.

“Coal lies at the heart of current threats to the Great Barrier Reef, and symbolizes an economic mindset that reef lovers everywhere are up against.

“Our government has decided that Australia’s economic future lies in selling cheap coal to China and India,” McCalman said.

“Quite apart from discouraging investment in renewable energy by backing fossil fuels, this decision has fraught implications for the health of the Reef and its waters,” he added.

“To call this policy short-sighted is an understatement. It sacrifices one of the wonders of the world and a substantial economic asset for Australian tourism; and this at a time when even China is trying to wean itself from using polluting coal.”

Comments

12 responses to “Queensland Labor appoints ‘Minister for the Reef’”

  1. Alexander Dudley Avatar
    Alexander Dudley

    Wow, that really is an improvement. I wonder if wrecking-ball Tony will take note?

    1. Chris Fraser Avatar
      Chris Fraser

      Mm mm … doubt it. And maybe not the Minister for Supreme Arrogance, nor the Minister for Decisions by Fiat rather than Committee, or the other one, the Minister for Baseless Expressions of Confidence. Let’s put our hopes in people from the backbench.

  2. david_fta Avatar
    david_fta

    If there’s any environmentally negative activity east of the Divide, it ultimately affects the GBR – so making the GBR a “keystone” for environmental management makes sense.

    That said, I look forward to the new Minister acknowledging that coral – and hence GBR – extend a fair way south of the southern boundary of the Marine Park (presently between Bundaberg and Gladstone), down into Wide and Hervey Bays.

  3. disqus_3PLIicDhUu Avatar
    disqus_3PLIicDhUu

    Punch the air, finally sense wins over fascism.

  4. Ken Dyer Avatar
    Ken Dyer

    The first thing the minister should do is to tell Greg Hunt to cancel the environmental effects statement currently under consideration for Abbott Point. That would send a very powerful message to the fossil fuellers.

  5. Sana Avatar

    A dedicated Minister for the Great Barrier Reef is a promising move by the new government. I’m running an online study for my PhD research on the use of evidence in GBR conservation. If you are interested inreef management or evidence-based decision making, please help by taking part at http://bioqueries.com/sana/info.php. All are welcome to participate.

    1. john Avatar
      john

      Thank you Sana I will make sure I make a comment having some knowledge and experience in the subject.

  6. john Avatar
    john

    I note mention of China in the article.
    Well when the Australian has an article on Coal and the way they are reducing the use of it perhaps there is a new paradigm happening.
    We are moving into interesting times and the management of the shift from 1880 technology to perhaps 2000 technology is going to be very interesting.

  7. Roger Micheal Currie Avatar
    Roger Micheal Currie

    We actually need $100m a year , not $20m over 5 years , and we dont need this for mining impacts , which are not the key threat.

    Agriculture and climate change related impacts are the key threats. It suits WWF and the multinational green groups to blame mining.

  8. SydneySustainability Avatar
    SydneySustainability

    This is wonderful news!

  9. Glen S Avatar
    Glen S

    Awesome news, I am very relieved that the Newman government did not get back in!

  10. Raahul Kumar Avatar
    Raahul Kumar

    Don’t get too euphoric, GreenPeace gave him a scorecard, and only the Greens candidate actually did well on their assessment criteria. Mildly better for the Reef, at best.

    A lot of pressure will still need to be applied to see a better outcome, but he’s making good noises only so far. Where’s the action?

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