Disputed Tassie pulpmill to go federal again?

Disputed Tassie pulpmill to go federal again?
Image: The environmental organisations did not speak for communities hit by aerial spraying, jobs lost in food production, depleted water supplies, and other impacts from the way forestry is practised.

Community-based grassroots pulp mill campaigners Tasmanians Against the Pulp Mill (TAP) report that they have been shut out of negotiations between major players, as the pulp mill debacle enters its next phase under a Gunns devoid of former chair John Gay. 

Meanwhile, ramped up federal involvement may be on the pre-election horizon.

Concerns and community anger over the proposed, approved and stalled  pulp mill are inherently tied to broader concerns about the practice of forestry in Tasmania.

A broadly inclusive forestry roundtable was proposed to thrash out points of contention and consternation between industry and communities, but, according to TAP was sidelined in favour of private talks between environmentalists and the timber sector.

TAP spokesperson John Day said the environmental organisations did not speak for communities hit by aerial spraying, jobs lost in food production, depleted water supplies, and other impacts from the way forestry is practised.

“The fibre plantation wood supply for the proposed pulp mill is a major land use and imposes a huge burden on many for the benefit of a few,” Day said.

TAP is calling for an independent risk assessment taking into account the impact of government subsidies to forestry directing funds away from essential services, and the impact of plantations on Tasmania generally.

Community resentment of supposedly green NGOs has been steadily rising in Tasmania as local residents and businesses find their needs and concerns absent from negotiations.

According to activists close to the new process, three closed-door meetings have been held. Both factions of the internally divided Wilderness Society (TWS) have been involved, as well as state and federal Greens representatives, local NGO Environment Tasmania and Barry Chipman, frontman of the industry lobby group Timber Communities Australia.

TWS have been canvassing an approach that suggests a new federal push to resolve the issue of Tasmanian forestry once and for all.

The group has been showcasing a proposal to lock up native forests in return for a growth in plantation-based forestry.

Activist sources in Tasmania claim federal Labor is looking for a solution with hopes to make headline-grabbing announcement backed by big money in the coming weeks.

This, however, was before other headline-grabbing announcements were made.

Labor premier David Bartlett may have been tapped on the shoulder and urged to produce a federally acceptable solution as part of a push to shore up support in the bellweather seats of Bass, Braddon, and Lyons.

If there is substance to the speculation, one can safely bet that federal Labor won’t be revisiting Mark Latham’s billion-dollar industry restructure package, which was intended to save Tassie old growth but only succeeded in seeing Tasmania’s CFMEU campaign for John Howard.

You May Also Like

Comments are closed.