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AAP
AAP
Environment
Jack Gramenz

Nature fixes 'futile' if government keeps enabling harm

Environmental fixes are futile when more is spent supporting harm, natural resource managers say. (Diego Fedele/AAP PHOTOS)

Australia's efforts to tackle climate change and fix environmental issues have been branded futile so long as repair programs are dwarfed by actions taking a sledgehammer to nature.

The warning comes on the back of a landmark report into climate risks facing the nation as the government promises to patch up a "broken" system.

Before his successor as agriculture minister trumpeted Australia's sustainable farming, Environment Minister Murray Watt told the Landcare Conference he wanted to reform environment frameworks within months.

The proposed changes stem from an almost five-year-old report that found national environmental laws were "fundamentally broken".

"Those laws are not working for the environment, which experiences ongoing decline," Mr Watt told the conference on Tuesday.

"They're not working for businesses because of cumbersome processes to get projects assessed and approved."

He said he hoped to emulate conservation group Landcare's success in building partnerships and attracting bipartisan support to achieve change.

But some question how much power Mr Watt and fellow cabinet minister Julie Collins have inside the Albanese government to prevent further harm.

Ms Collins picked up the agriculture portfolio formerly held by Mr Watt, when he was made environment minister in May.

"If they don't have the power when they walk into cabinet or expenditure review committee ... we're not going to get the scale of change that we need," peak body chief Kate Andrews told the conference.

Lamb
Australia spends more on programs that create problems than on those to fix them, a peak body says. (Lukas Coch/AAP PHOTOS)

Dr Andrews leads NRM Regions, a coalition of natural resource management groups dedicated to regenerating and sustaining Australia's biodiversity.

Amid a lukewarm response to the Albanese government's latest national adaptation plan and continued approvals for environmentally damaging activities, Dr Andrews demanded better.

Environmental issues will take vast funds to solve but there are other categories of spending to draw on, she said.

"Another reason why we need Treasury and others at the table is that less money is spent on fixing the environment than in subsidising harmful activities to the environment," the NRM Regions boss said, drawing applause.

"You can keep distracting us over here where we're pissing into the wind, playing these games about getting more money.

"But meanwhile all of this is being spent creating the problems we're trying to fix.

"We're never going to win if that keeps happening."

Environment Minister Murray Watt
Environment Minister Murray Watt says restoring Australia's environment remains a really key focus. (AAP PHOTOS)

Mr Watt promised improved environmental standards, more efficient approval processes and a new environmental protection agency "with real teeth".

"I'm very keen to make sure that the need to not just manage the decline of our natural environment, but to turn it around and restore it, remains a really key focus," he told the conference.

"These reforms have the potential to be a watershed moment for the protection of our environment for generations to come."

Ms Collins said Australia's agriculture sector was working to lessen its environmental impact to ensure sustainability, and was among world leaders, producing more food with fewer emissions than almost any other nation.

"A basket of agricultural goods in Australia produces 42 per cent less emissions than in the United States, 29 per cent less than in the EU and 12 per cent less than in New Zealand.

"Whilst this success is something we should be rightly proud of, our government understands that we cannot afford to stand still."

Adapting to climate change will be an important element of the national food security strategy currently under development, Ms Collins said.

This AAP article was made possible by support from Landcare Australia and the National Farmers' Federation.

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