BIODIVERSITY FUND HELPS AUSTRALIA'S LAND
MANAGERS STORE CARBON AND PROTECT BIODIVERSITY

Environmental Panorama
International
May of 2012


4 May 2012 - 317 projects around the country will benefit from the first round of the Gillard Government’s Biodiversity Fund.

The Biodiversity Fund is a key component of the Gillard Government’s strategy to enhance biodiverse carbon stores and secure a clean energy future for Australia.

Announcing the first round of Biodiversity Fund grants, Minister for the Environment, Tony Burke and Minister for Climate Change, Greg Combet said the 317 projects would help to revegetate, rehabilitate and restore around 18 million hectares of the Australian landscape over the next six years.

Collectively these projects have real potential to advance the reversal of biodiversity decline and establish significant areas of carbon storage. They are an important first step in connecting our landscapes and making them more resilient to climate change.

Minister Burke said the Biodiversity Fund would provide much needed long-term commitment to biodiversity conservation and restoration with almost half the projects announced today running over a six year period.

“Providing long-term support to land managers leads to enduring results for our environment and for the community,” Mr Burke said.

“Across Australia, farmers and other land managers already do a great job through Landcare work and the Biodiversity Fund will build on this work.

“A number of projects announced in this first round also align with the intent of the draft National Wildlife Corridors Plan helping to improve connectivity in the landscape through the establishment of landscape scale wildlife corridors.

“This program has received overwhelming support from land managers right across the country with the Biodiversity Fund encouraging an additional $207 million in in-kind or financial contributions.”

In Queensland the Biodiversity Fund will support a project to restore the Condamine catchment landscape in collaboration with the local community.

In South Australia, the Fund will provide $2.6 million to rehabilitate South Australia’s remnant coastal corridor, the Samphire Coast, over the next six years.

The Fund will also support a project to protect Victoria’s iconic River Red Gums and restore native vegetation along the Hopkins River.

Minister Combet said just over a third of the Biodiversity Fund projects indicated that they may go on to participate in the Carbon Farming Initiative.

“These policies will help to protect biodiversity on the land, boost carbon storage opportunities and improve the resilience of unique species against the impacts of climate change,” Mr Combet said.

“The Biodiversity Fund is an important part of the Government’s Clean Energy Future plan and is supported by revenue from the carbon price. It focuses directly on taking action on-ground to maintain the productive capacity of our landscape and natural ecosystem.”

+ More

United States shipwrecks from Battle of the Coral Sea now protected under Australian law

4 May 2012 - Heritage Minister, Tony Burke, today declared the United States warships the USS Lexington, USS Sims and USS Neosho sunk during the Battle of the Coral Sea as protected historic shipwrecks.

Mr Burke said the remains of these warships are a poignant reminder of the service and sacrifice of Australian and US serviceman who fought during the battle and are, for some, their last resting place.

“It is a great honour to be making this declaration today, the 70th anniversary of one of the most fiercely fought days of the battle, and I hope in some way it conveys the gratitude and condolences of all Australians to Coral Sea veterans and their families,” Mr Burke said.

“These shipwrecks are a tangible link to one of the most dramatic events in Australian and US military history and one of the most defining moments of World War Two - the Battle of the Coral Sea.

“To protect and preserve their exceptional heritage value these shipwrecks are now protected under Australia’s Historic Shipwrecks Act 1976 and any actions that may result in damage, interference, removal or destruction of these shipwrecks or their associated relics are now illegal.”

On 7 May 1942 aircraft from the USS Yorktown and the Lexington sunk the Japanese aircraft carrier Shoho just before noon. At about the same time, and in a separate engagement, dive bombers from the Japanese carriers Shokaku and Zuikaku sunk the destroyer USS Sims and left the US fleet oiler Neosho a crippled wreck.

Later that day a support group including the HMAS Hobart and HMAS Australia were attacked by another force of bombers, which were based at Rabaul in New Guinea. The battle continued on 8 May, when the two main carrier forces engaged directly for the first time, resulting in the loss of the Lexington with 216 members of her crew.

“In early 1942 Japanese control of south east Asia and the northern Pacific was virtually unchallenged and for many Australians, who kept an ever watchful eye on events as they unfolded in the Pacific, it would have been easy to believe Australia was next,” Mr Burke said.

“Victory in the Coral Sea was the first major defeat for Japanese forces and the beginnings of the long and difficult road towards victory.

“The significance of the battle is not only that it marked a turning point and the emerging importance of aircraft carriers in the Pacific war, but also that it was the first joint military action between Australian and US forces.

“The sacrifice of those who took part in the battle lives on in the strength and vitality of the US-Australian alliance, that has grown and developed into a firm friendship over the last 70 years and continues today.

“In making the declaration today the Australian government recognises and acknowledges the exceptional heritage significance of the shipwrecks of the USS Lexington, USS Sims andUSS Neosho and is ensuring their remarkable legacy is protected forever under Australian law.”

 
 

Source: Australian - Department of the Environment and Heritage
Australian Alps National Park
Australian Antarctic Division
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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