Long-awaited environment laws might get Australia sued. Here’s why

Jacqueline Peel, Julia Dehm & Nicole Rogers for The Conversation

Australia is rewriting its national environment laws, and Environment Minister Murray Watt has vowed the legislation will pass the parliament this week, despite not yet reaching agreement with either the Coalition or the Greens. But the current draft bill leaves the country exposed to significant legal, environmental and political risk.

This is because the proposed changes to Australia’s environment legislation, the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act, do not require the government to assess the climate impacts of new fossil-fuel projects. Minister Watt has already ruled out changing this.

Yet international and domestic courts are increasingly clear: governments have a legal duty to consider the greenhouse gas emissions released by the projects they approve. Will the federal government create new laws that expose it to more domestic and international court action?

Visit article
Previous
Previous

Jackie Peel’s 2025 - 2026 Climate Highlights

Next
Next

Professor Jackie Peel speaks with ABC Radio post-COP30