Koala park is welcome and needed, but 2025 is already a terrible year for koala habitat destruction

As the NSW government announces the proposed boundary for a Great Koala National Park, a new study by the Australian Conservation Foundation reveals more koala habitat has been approved for destruction under the national nature law in 2025 than in any other year.

This is despite the koala being listed as an endangered species and the federal government recognising habitat destruction and fragmentation as a ‘major’ and ‘increasing’ threat to the iconic marsupial (see page 15 and page 18 of the Conservation Advice for the Koala).

The Albanese government is currently reforming the national nature law.

Released for National Threatened Species Day, 7 September, the ACF study reveals:

2025 is already the worst year on record for federally-approved destruction of koala habitat. Almost 4,000 hectares has been approved to be bulldozed for eight projects.
Since 2011, an area larger than two Royal National Parks has been approved for destruction. Almost 38,000 hectares of koala habitat has been approved to be bulldozed under Australia’s failing nature ‘protection’ law, the EPBC Act – more than for any other threatened species in Australia.
98% of destroyed koala habitat has been flattened without assessment by Australia’s national nature law. Agriculture is the biggest driver of koala habitat destruction.
Native forest logging continues to destroy koala habitat, particularly in NSW.
“ACF welcomes the NSW government’s announcement of details of the long-promised and much needed Great Koala National Park,” said ACF nature campaigner Darcie Carruthers.

“Despite its commitment to ‘zero new extinctions’, the Albanese government has already approved the destruction of 3,958 hectares, or four Sydney Airports’ worth of koala habitat, so far this year.

“Even worse, 98% of koala habitat has been bulldozed without even being assessed under the national law. The very law meant to protect nature is so poorly enforced that it has failed to stop nearly 2.3 million hectares of likely koala habitat from being bulldozed and cut down.

“Given that the koala has been recognised as threatened with extinction since 2012 and therefore should be protected from harm, this underscores the total failure of the current laws to keep trees in the ground and prevent the further decline of the species.

“In its revision of Australia’s national nature law, the Albanese government must set clear rules to protect habitat for threatened species like the koala, close loopholes that enable rogue bulldozers and establish an independent watchdog to enforce the law.

“Congratulations, and thank you, to all the groups and community members who have fought hard for the Great Koala National Park.”

Associate Professor Desley Whisson from Deakin University said:

“To prevent koala extinction, we must stop the broadscale destruction of their habitat. Our current environmental laws are doing nothing to protect this iconic species.

“We know habitat loss is the leading cause of koala decline, yet deforestation continues unchecked. If we are serious about preventing extinction of this iconic species, our national laws must be strengthened to keep trees standing.

“Preventing koala extinction isn’t complicated. We need to stop deforestation by strengthening our national laws.”

Dr Kita Ashman, Adjunct Professor at Charles Sturt University, said:

“The way Regional Forests Agreements operate under the EPBC Act is effectively as a backdoor for destructive practices like logging to continue with very little scrutiny.

“If we remove this loophole, it will mean climate refuges and places that are critical for the survival of the species will remain intact.”

Critical incident declared after teen dies following pursuit, crash – Hunter Valley

A critical incident investigation is underway after a teenage boy died and four people were taken to hospital following the pursuit and crash of a stolen car in the state’s Hunter overnight.

Officers attached to Traffic and Highway Patrol Command first attempted to stop a vehicle travelling on the New England Highway at Aberdeen, about 11.55pm yesterday (Saturday 6 September 2025), due to the speed at which the vehicle was being driven.

When the driver allegedly failed to stop when directed, a pursuit was initiated which continued north along the highway until it crashed about 100m north of Makybe Diva Street at Scone.

The 14-year-old boy driving the vehicle and his 17-year-old male front-seat passenger were initially trapped.

Once released, they were treated on-site by NSW Ambulance paramedics, but the front-seat passenger died at the scene.

The driver was airlifted to John Hunter Hospital where he and the three back-seat passengers – two boys aged 14 and 17 and a 25-year-old woman – are all being treated for non-life threatening injuries.

Initial information indicates all boys are from the Tamworth area while the woman is from the Newcastle area.

It’s believed vehicle was stolen from a business in Walford Street, Wallsend, sometime after 5pm yesterday (Saturday 6 September 2025).

A crime scene has now been established, with specialist officers from Crash Investigation Unit examining the scene.

A critical incident investigation team from Tuggerah Lakes Police District will investigate the circumstances surrounding the incident under Strike Force Willgoyne.

The investigation will be subject of an independent review by the Professional Standards Command and oversighted by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission.

Appeal to locate boy missing from Maitland

Police are appealing for public assistance to locate a boy missing from the state’s Hunter region.

Matei Ernst, aged 14, was last seen on Marlborough Street, Rutherford, about 8am yesterday (Thursday 4 September 2025).

When he was unable to be contacted, officers attached to Port Stephens-Hunter Police District were notified and commenced inquiries into his whereabouts.

Police have concerns for Matei’s welfare due to his young age.

Matei is described as being of Pacific Islander/Maori appearance, of thin build and between 150cm – 160cm tall.

He was last seen wearing a school uniform – white shirt, black shorts and a black Nike backpack.

Matei is known to frequent the Maitland, Rutherford, Greenhills areas and local shopping centres in those areas.

Project of Concern Summit held in Canberra

A Project of Concern Summit has been held in Canberra to discuss the Civil Military Air Traffic Management System (CMATS) project.

Minister for Defence Industry the Hon Pat Conroy MP hosted senior Defence and Airservices Australia officials and industry representatives. 

This Summit was an important milestone that provided representatives the opportunity to discuss the progress made on the remediation plan since the last Project of Concern Summit in November 2024. 

The Summit allowed stakeholders to come together, share updates and strengthen collaboration, supporting the ongoing work to deliver this important capability and ensure it meets operational needs.

Minister for Defence Industry, the Hon Pat Conroy MP:

“I would like to thank all representatives for their attendance as we focus on the progress we have made on remediating project performance.

“Project of Concern Summits provide a valuable forum for Defence and industry to engage on projects requiring high-level intervention to achieve successful delivery. Participating parties identify remediation methods, commit to working together and review project progress. 

“These summits are an important part of the Albanese Government’s efforts to actively monitor high-priority projects and maintain momentum on the delivery of capabilities for the Australian Defence Force.” 

Universities & Government must heed historic student referendum on Gaza

Australian Greens Deputy Leader and Higher Education spokesperson, Senator Mehreen Faruqi, has called on universities to respect the overwhelming mandate of their students and end all partnerships with weapons companies, following the results of a historic national referendum on Palestine.

More than 5,000 students across roughly 20 campuses voted in the first National Union of Students (NUS) referendum in the union’s four-decade history. The grassroots referendum passed two motions almost unanimously: censuring the Australian government for its complicity in the genocide in Gaza, and demanding universities cut ties with weapons manufacturers.

In February, Senator Mehreen Faruqi introduced a Bill requiring universities to disclose and divest from any partnerships with dirty industries, including weapons manufacturers, gambling, fossil fuel and tobacco companies.

Senator Faruqi, Deputy Leader of the Greens and Spokesperson for Tertiary Education:

“For the first time in decades, thousands of students have spoken with one voice, demanding that their universities stop profiting from war, militarism and the machinery of genocide. University leadership cannot ignore this.

“Students have given their universities a clear, democratic instruction: end the dirty partnerships with the weapons companies profiting from Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

“Universities exist to serve the public interest. They shouldn’t be getting into bed with arms companies and helping to sanitize their reputations.

“History will not be kind to those who ignored this moment — University Vice-Chancellors must cut the bloody ties now or forever wear the shame.

“Students across the country have issued a historic censure of the Albanese Government for its complicity in the genocide in Gaza. This is a wake-up call from the next generation, and the message is clear: sanction Israel, stop the two-way arms trade, and end the complicity.

“When thousands of students, in the first national referendum of its kind, vote almost unanimously to condemn the Government’s role in war crimes, it cannot be ignored.

“In light of this historic result, the Albanese government must back the Greens’ bill forcing universities to be transparent and cut ties with dirty industries—whether weapons, fossil fuels, or gambling—so our institutions serve the public good, not corporate profiteers.”

$2.5 billion to force people to Nauru and denial of natural justice in new Labor law

The Home Affairs (2025 Measures No. 1) Bill 2025 was rammed through today by the Liberals and Labor, following revelations that the secret agreement with Nauru signed by the Albanese Government will cost $2.5 billion. 

In a rushed hearing last night, it was made clear that this Bill would impact tens of thousands of people, denying them natural justice, and the secret Nauru Memorandum of Understanding signed last week will cost billions. 

The Department of Home Affairs could not even confirm if the Nauru MOU made reference to the Refugee Convention. This is despite the Nauru President David Adeang saying that Nauru’s long-term goal is to remove people back to the country they fled, in clear breach of the Convention. 

Under this law, the Minister can direct a woman who is escaping domestic violence to get a passport. When she rightfully is fearful that doing this would require her to meet her abuser, this law prevents her from even informing the government of this fact. Instead, she either puts herself in danger by obeying the Minister or goes to jail for trying to protect herself.

This law also allows the Government to forcibly remove people to Nauru (and any other third country with which there is an agreement) with no natural justice considerations. 

Labor refused to allow submissions from the public at the hearing into the Bill last night. However, the Greens tabled a series of submissions from the public to ensure they are on the record, which can be accessed here

Senator David Shoebridge, Greens Spokesperson for Immigration, said: “There are no depths Labor won’t explore to outflank the Coalition on the right on immigration. 

“The cornerstone of our entire legal system, natural justice, has just been smashed by the Albanese Government.

“Mandatory detention, offshore detention, preventing people who sought asylum by sea from resettling, a Trump-style travel ban and now laws that can deny natural justice, this is Labor’s legacy. It’s a legacy that deliberately undermines multiculturalism and fairness. 

“When Labor makes laws that say some people who were not born here are denied basic legal rights, that feeds the far-right extremism we saw at anti-immigration rallies over the last weekend. 

“Australia should be treating our neighbours with respect, not bribing them to become a 21st-century penal colony. 
“The Pacific can see how Australia bullies and bribes its neighbours. 

“Failing to treat our neighbours as friends and equals comes at a cost, and is a long-term threat to Australia’s political and moral leadership in the Pacific.”

Robodebt compo welcome but Labor must stop ignoring welfare law and harming poor people

The Greens have reacted to the government’s announcement regarding compensation for Robodebt victims, warning of future pain and cost unless Labor takes their obligations under social welfare law seriously and stops punching down on poor people.

The Targeted Compliance Framework, which operationalises the Government’s enforcement of mutual obligations, has been subject to inquiry by the Commonwealth Ombudsman and a commissioned report by Deloitte due to widespread issues with payment cancellation and IT issues. 

The damning Commonwealth Ombudsman’s report last month found over 1,000 welfare recipients had their welfare payments unlawfully cancelled by the automated system over two years.

As the Anti-Poverty Center has identified, nearly 350,000 payment suspensions were issued just in the first quarter of 2025, affecting more than 280,000 people out of the roughly 800,000 who had requirements during the period. 

Last week, the Greens and crossbenchers joined in Parliament to introduce a bill to force the Government to implement the outstanding recommendations from the Robodebt Royal Commission, including a six year limit on debt recovery. The Department currently holds welfare debts dating back to the 1970s.

Senator Penny Allman-Payne, Greens spokesperson for Social Services:

“It’s good news that Robodebt victims will be getting more compensation, but it sure would be cheaper and easier for everyone if the government would stop ignoring the law and punching down on poor people.”

“No amount of compensation can undo the pain and the harm caused by cruel treatment of  poor people that sends them into crises and in some cases to take their own lives.

“The last time the Greens asked in Estimates, neither the Minister nor the Department could confirm the current welfare compliance system is lawful. Millions of payments are suspended every year under this potentially unlawful system, with little process or oversight. 

“The Greens have a Bill in parliament right now.  Labor could implement the outstanding Robodebt recommendations including the six year limit on debt recoveries, and to stop the rampant suspension of welfare payments which takes life-saving funds out of the hands of over a hundred thousand people each month. History will repeat itself until they do.”

Aged Care woes continue for older Australians, new Royal Commission report smashes Labor’s reforms

Just one day after Labor was spectacularly forced into a backflip by the Greens, Opposition and the crossbench over its stubborn refusal to address the aged care waitlist, a new independent report has smashed Labor’s aged care reforms and calls the entire system into question.

The Inspector-General of Aged Care report has unequivocally said that the Government’s aged care reforms will not deliver the change recommended by the Aged Care Royal Commission four years ago.

The report has sounded the alarm on growing fees and co-payments, raising the prospect of older Australians being forced to forgo the care that they need due to cost. 

The Greens have long supported an end to the ‘rationing’ of aged care, which has led to the current aged care waitlist.

Greens spokesperson for older people Senator Penny Allman-Payne has called on the government to come clean on how much older people will pay under the new system; and as the report has called for, to immediately commission independent modelling on the impact of aged care fees and co-payments on the ability of older people to access the care they need.

Senator Penny Allman-Payne, Greens spokesperson for Older People:

“This is a shocking wake up call for supporters of the new Act. This report has warned of a two-tiered system, where aged care increasingly becomes about the care you can afford rather than the care you need. 

“I am scared stiff for older people under this new system. 

“We have just managed to drag the Government to deliver more home care packages, but this report shows that there is a co-payment tsunami about to break on the older people in this country. 

“The financialisation of aged care is terrifying.

“Labor needs to come clean about how much older people will pay under this new system and whether they will be able to access care.

“As the report calls for, the Government must immediately commission further independent modelling of the impact of co-payments on wait times, hospital bed block, and access to care, and they must not hide the findings like they have done throughout this entire process. 

“Now more than ever, we need transparency for older people.”

“The inquiry I chaired had to fight tooth and nail for every scrap of information. I am warning the Government now that the Greens will do the same again if we have to, to expose this aged care debacle.”

Extracts from the Aged Care Royal Commission Implementation Report 2025

“The Royal Commission recommended the government create an entitlement to aged care. The government chose not to accept this recommendation and therefore the new Act retains a rationed system: the new Support at Home program will eventually aim to achieve average waiting periods of 3 months. This is not the model of timely access to care that the Commissioners called for.” – page 7

“However, in this report, the Inspector-General queries whether particular reforms will have the inadvertent effect of both prejudicing access for those who need it most and potentially creating unnecessary expenditure at the tertiary level of aged care.” – page 7

“The Inspector-General shares the fears of stakeholders that the manner in which co-payments and other aspects of the reforms have been structured, could potentially both prejudice equity of access to care and create inadvertent cost blow in other areas.” – page 28 

“It must be said that co-payments are contrary to the Royal Commission’s intent. While the Inspector-General understands the reality of the budget constraints, she holds genuine fears that the manner of implementing co-payments may set up a scenario where vulnerable older Australians will forego care: either because they cannot afford it or because they are worried about the cost. This will be a keen area of monitoring for the Inspector-General going forward.” – page 8

“…the current government funding model sees funding primarily focussed on clinical care, with ‘non-clinical care’ subject to significant co-payments. This leaves open the possibility that those with the least means will end up receiving the lowest level of care due to their inability to fund the co-payments, despite their entitlement to high quality care under the Act.” – page 8

“However, from the primary legislation alone, there is a clear case for some concern. Outstanding recommendations from the Royal Commission are not being delivered. The transformational change Commissioners envisaged has not been delivered to date and will not be delivered by the Act. As outlined in Chapter 4, stakeholders and the Inspector-General are anticipating a range of unintended, and intended but undesirable, consequences to become evident following the Act’s commencement.” – page 51

“Stakeholder dissatisfaction and uncertainty with the new co-payment requirements has been one of the most striking features of the consultation process for this report. As one submission put it, co-payments will result in the Act ‘establishing, if not outright endorsing, a system where continuity of care is increasingly tied to one’s ability to cover out-of-pocket costs and co-payments. Rather than ensuring equitable access, such a framework risks marginalising those who cannot afford to bridge the financial gaps’. Such a notion was ‘never part of the Royal Commission’s vision.’ – page 29

Finishing touches added to program as excitement builds for New Annual festival

The countdown is on to this year’s New Annual festival, with City of Newcastle revealing the final additions to the 2025 program three weeks out from the opening weekend.

The expanded Newcastle Art Gallery will welcome visitors for the first time as part of the New Annual program, with pre-booked free guided sessions opening for registrations tomorrow.

Erth's underwater diversOtherworldly deep sea divers, created by renowned puppetry-based theatrical producers Erth Visual & Physical Inc, will delight audiences with roving performances on Laman Street during the First Night Art Party.

First Nations artist talks, drop-in art sessions and guided tours will be among the highlights as the community takes its first look inside the building.

The Gallery will also celebrate a pre-sale preview of its inaugural book featuring 165 works of art from the $145 million collection, with insights provided by art historians, academics and curators alongside contributions by poet Jazz Money, climate scientist Joëlle Gergis, historian Santilla Chingaipe and futurist Ana Tiquia.

Tickets for these free events are expected to be snapped up by art lovers keen to explore three of the new gallery spaces and experience the significant new First Nations commissions and acquisitions.

There will be plenty to see outside the Gallery as well, as New Annual kicks off with the First Night Art Party on 26 September featuring free, family-friendly entertainment for all ages.

Towering underwater divers will bring a sense of otherworldly excitement with roving performances along Laman Street, while drop-in workshops will allow families to create their own unique fish necklace inspired by the vibrant and colourful world of artist Rosie Deacon.

Jellyfish-themed light installations will illuminate Laman Street’s fabulous fig trees while the Gallery’s façade will come to life with immersive digital art projections co-created by Art Thinking and local school students, inspired by the saltwater stories of the First Nations commissions.

The free night of music, movement and art will also feature high-energy pop sets from Haiku Hands, Kira Puru and Devaura, while families can enjoy a range of hands-on ocean-themed creative activities inside Newcastle City Library.

Councillor Jenny Barrie, Chair of City of Newcastle’s Community and Culture Strategic Advisory Committee, said New Annual is a festival for the entire community.

“City of Newcastle is committed to ensuring everyone in our community can access free, family-friendly arts and cultural experiences,” Cr Barrie said.

“Events like New Annual play a vital role in strengthening community pride and celebrating local identity. 

“With a strong focus on free and low-cost programming, the festival makes art and culture more inclusive and accessible, giving families and individuals from all walks of life the chance to connect, participate, enjoy and have fun.”

New Annual Festival Director Tory Loudon said there was so much to see and do during New Annual.

“These finishing touches round out a really exciting and diverse program, which features the best of international and Australian live music, theatre and art, and champions local stories and talent,” Ms Loudon said.

“We want people to find a new artist they love, explore the city in new and unexpected ways and celebrate our incredible local artists and performers. I can’t wait for it to begin.”

University of Newcastle Interim Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Engagement and Equity, Nathan Towney said the University was proud to be a presenting partner of the New Annual festival and looked forward to experiencing its diverse program later this month. 

“We’re proud to be a presenting partner for the New Annual festival and help to bring art, culture and creativity to our region,” Mr Towney said. 

“New Annual is also a great opportunity for our students to gain unique behind the scenes experience, whether that be as performers or through our career-ready placement program and volunteering experiences in the arts, tourism and event management sector.”

While the 10-day festival doesn’t kick off until 26 September, Novocastrians will get an early taste of its program with popular touring productions starting their extended seasons this weekend.

The highly acclaimed multi-sensory collection, DARKFIELD, will make its Newcastle debut tomorrow in specially designed shipping containers set up in Wheeler Place.

Its most popular experiences SÉANCE and FLIGHT will engulf audiences in immersive 360-degree audio experiences from 5 September and run through until 12 October.

Novocastrians will also welcome the return of the Spiegeltent to Civic Park, where its new circus sensation La Ronde will dazzle audiences from 5 September and run throughout the New Annual festival until 5 October. 

New Annual is proudly funded by the NSW Government in association with Transport for NSW Open Streets and Permit/Plug/Play Pilot programs, Multicultural NSW Stronger Together grant, Create NSW and the Destination NSW Regional Event Fund.

This includes an additional funding allocation of $130,000 each year for two years from the NSW Government’s Create NSW program, which was announced last week. 

The University of Newcastle, Equip Multimedia and Newcastle Art Gallery are presenting partners of the 2025 event. 

For more information and to stay up-to-date with the latest New Annual news visit https://newannual.com/ 

Tickets for the Newcastle Art Gallery events including the free guided tours can be booked from Friday 5 September via www.newcastleartgallery.nsw.gov.au

New Office to drive safe adoption of AI in NSW Government

Groundbreaking technology which will help improve the way services are delivered for people across NSW will be enabled through a new Office for Artificial Intelligence (AI).

The Office for AI within Digital NSW in the Department of Customer Service will help drive and coordinate the safe, strategic adoption of AI across the NSW Government.

It will set robust standards and provide expert advice to support best practice use of AI in helping to enhance public sector productivity and ensure the technology and its use are trustworthy for the community.

The new office will also build AI literacy across the public service to ensure agencies feel confident to incorporate the technology into solutions with tangible outcomes, like a recent trial of smart school zone signs in the Hunter which respond to vehicle behaviour in busy pedestrian areas.

Building on a strong foundation of data governance and compliance, NSW is taking a significant step forward in harnessing AI and its transformative capabilities.

While Generative AI (GenAI) is expected to contribute around $115 billion to the Australian economy by 2030, the dedicated office will help identify and limit risk in order to maximise potential benefits.           

The Government also plans to release an updated AI Assessment Framework later this year, following a partnership with the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO).

The Office for AI has been established for an initial two-year period, reflecting the rapid changes in this evolving technology area. Its work will complement the role of the existing AI Review Committee which reviews high-risk AI projects being proposed by the NSW Government.

From 3 September, the AI Review Committee will be chaired by an independent member, Edward Santow,  Co-Director, UTS Human Technology Institute and Former Human Rights Commissioner for Australia.

The Government has also appointed seven new committee members:

  • Dr Alex Antic (Faculty Head of AI Strategy at UNSW Canberra)
  • Professor Nicholas Davis (Co-Director, UTS Human Technology Institute)
  • Dr Kylie de Boer (Board Chair and Non-Executive Director Westmead Fertility Centre)
  • Howard Elliott (litigation strategy advisor and expert witness)
  • Ajoy Ghosh (Non-Executive Director, Amnesty International Australia)
  • Lisa Schonstein (Group Chief Privacy Officer for QBE Insurance)
  • Rodney Smith (Assistant Commissioner, State Intelligence Command, NSW Police).

To see the full list of AIRC members visit: www.digital.nsw.gov.au/policy/digital-assurance/ai-review-committee

Minister for Customer Service and Digital Government Jihad Dib said:

“Artificial intelligence is increasingly part of our everyday lives and as a government we need to make sure it is used responsibly and provides clear benefits for the community.”

“The new Office for AI will not only lead NSW’s use of AI but will set the roadmap on how to safely and responsibly incorporate and manage emerging technologies for more effective delivery of government services in the future.”

Government Chief Information and Digital Officer Laura Christie said:

“This new function within Digital NSW positions the NSW public sector to drive use of AI and harness its benefits across departments and agencies and for the people of NSW.”

“We are building on our strong foundations to drive the trustworthiness and use of these new technologies which will change the way we support customers across the state.”

Chair of the AI Review Committee Edward Santow said:

“I welcome the opportunity to serve as independent chair of the NSW Government’s AI Review Committee, which plays a key role as part of the guardrails for the use of AI across the public sector.”

“I look forward to working with the new members who bring a wealth of experience and help ensure the Committee is well positioned to advise on how to deliver safe, responsible and effective AI projects across NSW.”