Hundreds protest across NSW for Save Our Koalas Day of Action

2020-08-17

Photos here.

Local residents, koala activists and environmental organisations, including the Bob Brown Foundation, Bellingen Environment Centre, Total Environment Centre, Extinction Rebellion and Save Sydney’s Koalas, today staged a statewide Day of Action this Sunday to Save our Koalas. 

“The recent NSW Parliamentary Inquiry into Koalas found that the koala will become extinct in NSW before 2050 without urgent government intervention and had 42 recommendations for actions that must be done now to save the koala,” said Greens MP and Chair of the Inquiry Cate Faehrmann.

“The Inquiry found that the biggest threat to the koala’s survival in NSW was the loss and fragmentation of habitat.

“The time has come for the government to draw and line in the sand and say enough is enough. We know that to save the koala we have to protect their habitat so that’s what we’re going to do.

“Instead we have developments being fast-tracked that will destroy hundreds of hectares of koala habitat and forests which have been identified as core koala habitat being clear felled by Forestry Corp.

“From the Brandy Hill Quarry in Port Stephens that will clear 52 hectares of Core Koala Habitat to Lend Lease’s Figtree Hill development in Sydney’s Southwest that threatens the last chlamydia free colony in our state, it’s extinction by a thousand cuts.  

“Instead of taking action the NSW Premier and Environment Minister are sitting on their hands. If the Environment Minister is serious about doubling koala numbers by 2050, then we can’t afford to lose anymore koala habitat.

“This Sunday hundreds of people across NSW will host COVID-safe pop-up and virtual protests to demand action from the Premier as well as her Planning Minister Rob Stokes and Environment Minister Matt Kean. 

“The Premier has said she wants to save the Koala. Well the world is watching Premier, and the only way to save them is to protect their habitat from further destruction now,” said Ms Faehrmann.


Contact: Ben Cronly, 0487 247 960