Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Photos from the Frankston Bipass

Sadly, it is unlikely that protesters will be able to save this last patch of wetlands in the path of the Frankston Bipass.
The fallen tree took a few minutes to cut down, just 20 minutes to survey for wildlife then a few minutes more to bundle into this pile.
The small trees adjacent to this fence had a family of ringtails.
Who will be reponsible for minimising the loss of wildlife here?
Was the cost of rehabilitating displaced or injured wildlife factored into the costings of the freeway project?

Here are my photos...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/39752210@N07/sets/72157624879247741/

Why?

The forests issue in East Gippsland, and in particular the Erinundra Plateau (spelt differently in Errinundra National Park), has been ongoing for decades, dividing the community in townships, in courts, in the media and in the forests themselves. Throw in broken promises, seemingly deliberate obfuscation and agreements stretched to breaking point, and it’s not surprising that environment groups feel unable to trust even proper process.

In the nineties the forests issue was the subject of student debates. News articles at the time spoke about conflicting perspectives, particularly relating to woodchipping and clear felling, but indirectly addressing the effectiveness of regeneration, sustainability both for the industry and for the environment, the economic value to state and to timber reliant communities, an agreed definition of forest, effects on biodiversity of habitat fragmentation, effectiveness of statistical evaluation and reporting, standards and methods of measurement, and the effects of deforestation on water catchments. Add to this now the threat of wood fired power stations, disease (phytophthora in particular), prescribed burns and fire salvage logging.

Curiously, these natural threats (disease, fire, drought) give vicforests added incentive to seek out additional logging coupes when, as David Lindenmeyer says, the forest is already under stress, adding clearfelling and prescribed burns is further weakening an already ailing ecosystem.

Forests considered diseased or economically unviable to the timber industry are selected for national parks and conservation areas – the richest and healthiest forests are selected for logging.

At stake is our state’s natural heritage, flora and fauna, and remnants of the state as it was before European settlement.

Stakeholders in the forests debate include local communities, timber communities, educational institutions, tourism, and future generations.

Everything points to the timber industry as being in decline. The Department of Agriculture, Forests and Fisheries 2008 report talks of labour shortages in all facets of the industry and the declining number of forestry graduates while timber industry primaries are squeezing contractors and smaller mills out of business.

According to Hansard 21st August 2007 (p 2485) there were then 525 people directly employed in harvesting and processing but 409 of these would lose their jobs as well as a $50million loss to the area if the 50ha of old growth forests reportedly harvested annually in east Gippsland were protected. Victoria’s state of the forests report 2008 indicates a similar number of employees (in public, private and joint owned forests) yet some industry reporters make the claim that nationally the industry employs 120,000 individuals, putting East Gippsland’s contribution at something less than 0.5% of the industry.

In the timber industry are the state government operated Vicforests (established 2002 to “ensure the Government’s commercial forest operations are open and accountable”), the Victorian Association of Forest Industries (VAFI), the National Association of Forest Industries (NAFI), the Institute of Foresters of Australia, the Timber Communities Australia (TIA) with 14 branches in Victoria (2007), the Australian Forest Contractors Association to name just a few.
Internationally there is the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FOA) established in 1958, the UNFF (supporting 2011 year of forests), IUCN (see below).

Meanwhile the potential growth the areas of tourism, eco tourism in particular, and environmental employment opportunities, are recognised by tertiary institutions offering tertiary places in all manner of subjects from research and fire ecology to outdoor education environmental science, yet overlooked in the consideration of Victoria's Public Native Forests.
Wading through just a fraction of the reports available, leaves one confused about the multiplicity of the evidence and astounded that it is being ignored.

Federal and state reports are lost in reshuffles and name changes. DPI, DPIE, DAFF, DSE, LCC, DEWHA, DEST, DNRE, EPA, Environment Australia, Environment Victoria and within these departments multitudes of reports are also to be found containing recommendations and warnings, many in conflict with other reports or Government activities.

Recommendations are adopted in part. For example, in 1986 the LCC made recommendations as to the amount of sawlogs that could be removed to ensure sustainability. This recommendation was accepted but the accompanying recommendation on woodchipping was not. In 1992 the sawlog cut was reduced, but woodchip harvesting, claimed to be the byproduct of sawlog harvesting, has increased by extraordinary amounts.

Endless acts and agreements such as CARS 1997, Regional Forest Agreements 2000, Flora & Fauna Guarantee Act 1988, National Parks Act, Annual reporting Act, … reports on performance indicators and sustainability controls such as Monitoring Annual Harvesting Performance (DSE 2008) and the Joint Sustainable Harvest Level statement (DSE 2008) … and State of the Forests reports that repeatedly warn of logging at unsustainable levels both to the environment and to the industry.

And in 2009, the Victorian Government’s Timber Industry Strategy...

The more I read the more I want to ask WHY?

Why are our state owned forests being turned into fence palings and woodchips?

Why is the responsibility for protecting and monitoring our endangered species left to
community groups and volunteers who take time out of work and study, funding their activities from donations?

Why is monitoring not carried out as prescribed by government legislation?

Why has the quantity of sawlogs produced annually fallen since 1992, while the quantity of woodchips has risen markedly from native forest timber supplied by Vicforests?

Why are some departmental warnings ignored and laws changed retrospectively favouring the timber industry?

Why does 26ha of Victorian State Forests felled per day on average not ring alarm bells?

Why, when 2010 is the year of biodiversity, are statistics on our endangered species non-existent or approaching 20 years old?

Why aren’t other nature based industries encouraged and/or promoted for regional areas?

Why aren’t recommendations and research into fire regimes considered in determining prescribed burns?

Why has the timber industry taken precedence over the obvious potential for tourism and education, and principles of conservation in the area?

Why is the recent decision to add protection measures citing the Precautionary Principle, overshadowed by the history of retrospective legislation changes in this debate?

Why, when the protection of old growth forests is an ongoing issue, are governments so reluctant to adequately address it?

Why aren’t effective methods of control for

Why are the 50ha publicly owned old growth forest Vicforest says it harvests annually, so important to the industry given the community resentment of this activity?

These are just a few of the questions I’d like answered.

The most comprehensive knowledge bank on the debate is with Jill Redwood at EEG and Luke Chamberlain at The Wilderness Society.

The economy is but a subset of the ecosystem...

Further reading:
EEG http://www.eastgippsland.net.au/
Environment Victoria http://www.environmentvictoria.org.au/
VicParks reports to the 2007 Bushfire Royal Commission http://vnpa.org.au/admin/library/attachments/SubmissionsNEW/VNPA%20FOPs%20submission+attachments.pdf
Forest Stewardship Council http://www.fscaustralia.org/
Flawed promises Environmental Organisations’ Investigation of Labor’s 2006 Election Old Growth Forest Commitments by TWS, VNPA & ACF 2009 http://vnpa.org.au/admin/library/attachments/PDFs/Reports/Flawed%20promises.pdf
United Nations Forum on Forests (UNFF) http://www.un.org/esa/forests/index.html
IUCN, the International Union for Conservation of Nature http://www.iucn.org/
IUCN RedList of Endangered Species http://www.iucnredlist.org/
David Lindenmeyer, On Borrowed Time, Penguin, Australia, 2007
Judith Ajani, The Forest Wars, Melbourne University Press 2007
See also http://www.delicious.com/bimbimbi/eeg

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Logging Victoria's Forests

ABS 2008 data on Native Forest Areas gives Victoria'a area of public owned forests set aside for wood production at 3,163,000ha, with a similar amount in Nature Conservation Areas, and 1,1025,000ha of native forests in private hands.

Vicforests clears 9,470ha (0.3%) annually - 26ha per day (the MCG arena is 2ha).
This figure has not changed significantly since sustainability levels were reduced in 1992.
So, in 18 years we have lost 5.4% of public owned state forest.

This annual harvest is accumulative - different hectares are logged every year.

The trees regenerating from forests harvested today will mature, develop hollows, and begin to support our threatened species sometime during the 23rd century. At current rates, by 2200
62% of publis native forest will be regenerating forest. But the logging will say it is still only logging 0.8% of the remaing forest area pa, even if held at today's 9470ha per annum.

That's the reality hidden in the statistics - forest data must be considered long term.

*********************

DSE's 2008 State of the Forests figures states that of 34,000ha in Victoria subject to regeneration between 1996-97 and 200-2001, 30,000 ha are successfully regenerating. In contrast, another DSE report, Monitoring Annual Harvesting Performance (MAHP) 2006-7, states that 7,191ha require additional effort for successful regeneration and 19,000ha are overdue for regeneration surveys. (Effects of 2006/7 fires were not included.)

Can both reports be correct?

?????????????????????!!!

Thinning is carried out approximately 20 years after logging.

The MAHP reports on the damage from thinning operations.

In this report it reveals that Vicforests provided damage reports from just 26 of the 52 couples thinned, and data supplied from those 26 was insufficient for effective assessments of the risks associated with excessive thinning.

Hmmmmm ...

Monday, September 13, 2010

Smallest seahorse discovered but bad news for bees

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Confirmed sighting of Humpback Whale and Eastern Grey Squirrel in Ringwood

Museum Victoria has a BioInformatics site at http://museumvictoria.museum/bioinformatics/

If you click on 'Mammals' you get to a very impressive web page.

Now go to the bottom right corner and under 'Map searches in Victoria' click on 'Compare'...

I chose regions 8623 'Bendoc' and 7922 'Ringwood' and discovered that not only had there been confirmed sightings of the Humpback Whale, Bottlenose Dolphin and Southern Bottlenose Whale, but also the Spot-tailed Quoll, the Brush-tailed Phascogale, Fat-tailed Marsupial Mouse, Eastern Pygmy-possum, New Zealand Fur Seal and also the Eastern Grey Squirrel, but sadly not the Long-footed Potoroo. See the Biodiversity report ...

http://flyaqis.museum.vic.gov.au/cgi-bin/texhtml?form=bio_mammalp2.sum&qrybutt=mammals&qrymaploc=v8623&&qrymaploc=v7922

Admittedly, the page is maintained by DNRE which was disbanded in 2002 but even so...

Where does this information come from and more importantly, where does it go?