Forests

Our beautiful SouthWest forests are under threat from shocking new plans to increase karri logging!

Join us in saying – Protect our Forests, Stop Logging Now!

2011 is the United Nations international year of the forests.

Western Australia has forests that are globally significant biodiversity hotspots, containing a unique diversity of plant and animal species found nowhere else in the world. Forests are natural carbon stores, water filters and rain makers, but above all else are vital for a healthy eco-system and community.

The Conservation Council is working with local communities and other groups to save precious forests including Chester (near Margaret River), Helms (near Nannup), Mundlimup (near Jarrahdale) and Warrup (near Bridgetown) from imminent logging.

Forests in world biodiversity hotspot!

Western Australia’s south-west forests lie within an internationally recognised biodiversity hotspot, one of only 34 in the world and the only one in Australia.  Visit www.biodiversityhotspots.org/

Since the arrival of Europeans, about half the forests have been permanently removed for farms, towns, roads, power lines and dams, and this destruction continues.  Of the remaining half, only about 15 per cent is in its pre-European condition.  This is the old growth forest.  The rest has been logged, most of it several times.  And the logging continues.

Forests help regulate climate and moderate weather. They give us clean air and fresh water. They hold soil in place, prevent salt from rising and cycle nutrients.  They are places where we can enjoy a beautiful natural environment, engage in recreational activities and find spiritual comfort.  They are under threat from mining, housing, logging and burning and, increasingly, climate change.

Forests store very large amounts of carbon.  This is released into the atmosphere when the forests are logged and burnt and not recaptured for decades, possibly centuries.  Protecting and restoring forests to maintain their carbon stores is a cheap and easy and practical way to help address climate change.

Save our high conservation value forests!

The Conservation Council is working with local communities and groups to save precious forests like Chester (near Margaret River) www.chester.org.au/ , Helms (near Nannup), Mundlimup (near Jarrahdale) www.saveourjarrah.com.au/and Warrup (near Bridgetown) www.bgff.org.au /.  These and other high conservation value (HCV) forests are listed for logging in the near future.  The first step in the transition out of native forests is a moratorium on logging these HCV forests.  Conservationists can then negotiate with the major sawmillers, unions and government to develop and implement an exit strategy with the goal of ending native forest logging.

Stop forest decline!

Our south-west forests are in decline.  Jarrah, karri, marri, tuart and wandoo are sick and dying across their range.  Some of the causes are known.  A range of fungi, both local and introduced, attack the trees and can eventually kill them.  Plagues of insects eat the leaves or bore holes in the wood, which weakens the trees and makes them sick. 

The water table has dropped in many places, depriving trees of water during the dry summer months.  Rainfall has decreased significantly, and trees are dying from drought stress.  On top of this, intensive logging and unscientific burning make matters worse.  These are pressures that we can control.  By ending logging and burning, we can help restore our forests to good health. It’s time to stop all logging of native forests.

The forests of the south-west are a living heritage of great value and must be protected and carefully managed to retain their diversity, amenity and beauty. 

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Biomass:Forest Furnaces

forestnotfurnacesForests aren’t furnace fodder

The use of native forest wood as biomass to be burnt to produce electricity is an increasing threat.  The Forest Products Commission has prepared a contract to sell up to 400,000 tonnes a year of jarrah and marri logs to a power station.  Just as woodchipping was foisted on an unsuspecting public in the 1970s on the pretext of using ‘waste’, the proponents of native forest biomass are spreading the same misinformation. If there was no logging, there would be no ‘waste’. 

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BRL

BRL flyerBauxite mining threatens forests

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What's happening to WA's rare and endangered black cockatoos?

The first Environment Matters of 2012 was a massive success. More than 150 concerned citizens attended the meeting, proving once again that the protection of our endemic and iconic Cockatoo species is of utmost importance to West Australians.

For those who missed all the action on the night (or just want to see it again!) we have uploaded the slideshow presentations given by all four speakers:

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