Skip to content
Animal Animal WelfareRights, Environment

New Environment Minister put on notice in front of 1,500 of the world’s best conservation biologists: “Do you have ‘Watt’ it takes to introduce a Koala Protection Act, or will you be responsible for the species’ demise?”

Australian Koala Foundation 2 mins read

Chair of the Australian Koala Foundation (AKF), Deborah Tabart OAM will today address the 32nd International Congress for Conservation Biology (ICCB 2025) in Brisbane, calling on the newly appointed Environment Minister, Senator the Hon Murray Watt, to urgently implement a Koala Protection Act, or accept responsibility for the demise of the species.

Today welcoming the 16th Environment Minister to serve throughout her tenure as Chair of the AKF, Tabart said a Koala Protection Act is the only legislative reform that stands a chance of saving Australia’s most beloved species. Yet, 15 consecutive Ministers have cowered to the stronghold of industry and refused to consider it as an option.

“A prerequisite for the position of Environment Minister has always been the ability to bury one’s head in the sand. 15 consecutive Ministers have ignored AKF’s science, refused to look at our world-leading habitat mapping, and in recent cases even denied a simple meeting,” Tabart said.

“Our democracy demands that our Ministers listen to the experts in their fields and face up to even the hardest of truths. So today, I ask the newly appointment Minister Watt to do what his predecessor refused to do - meet with me, talk about the science behind the plight of the Koala and implement real legislative reform to save it.”

Speaking today at the ICCB 2025, Tabart will make her plea to Minister Watt in front of the world’s best and brightest minds in the field of conservation biology. ICCB is a global forum for addressing conservation challenges and for presenting new research in conservation science and practice. It will be attended by over 1,500 conservation professionals and students from around the world.

In her address to the ICCB today, Tabart will also showcase AKF’s 30 year effort to map the entire geographical range of the Koala – spanning 1.5 million square kilometres across Australia. This world-leading science is a first-of-its-kind, yet offers no benefit in the hands of academics alone – it must be adopted by our political leaders and used as a catalyst to act.

“The Koala is the canary in the coal mine for the entire Australian ecosystem. If we can’t save the Koala, we can’t save anything. So, my question to Minister Watt is clear – will you be the reason the Koala survives, or the reason for its demise?”

The geographic range of the Koala covers 20% of Australia's stunning landscape, a habitat that also supports millions of other species, all of which could be preserved with a single signature from the new Environment Minister.

With Koalas now listed as Endangered in NSW, QLD and the ACT, AKF is calling on Minister Watt to enact a Koala Protection Act - a landmark piece of legislation that will enshrine the protection of Koala habitats and ensure a sustainable future for the species. 


Key Facts:

International Congress for Conservation Biology:

Date: Sunday 15 – Friday 19th June 2025

Venue: Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre

Deborah Tabart OAM will be addressing the Congress on Monday 16th June, but available for media interviews all week


About us:

The Australian Koala Foundation (AKF) is the principal non-profit, non-government organisation dedicated to the effective management and conservation of the Koala and its habitat. Our main goals are to refine and update the Koala Habitat Atlas mapping of all wild Koala habitat and to get the Koala Protection Act enacted to ensure Koalas and their habitat are protected.


Contact details:

[email protected]

Deborah Tabart OAM

0407 750 668

Media

More from this category

  • Environment, Transport Automotive
  • 12/12/2025
  • 14:27
NALSPA

Electric Car Discount review must drive clean energy transition and cost-of-living relief

The National Automotive Leasing and Salary Packaging Association (NALSPA) has today welcomed the federal government’s announcement of the statutory review of the Electric Car Discount, noting that the policy continues to be highly effective in encouraging Australians to make the switch to cleaner cars.The federal government announced today that next year it will review the Electric Car Discount, otherwise known as the EV FBT exemption which came into effect in July 2022.The review will consider the operation of the Electric Car Discount over the first three years it has been in place, as required by the legislation.“We will actively participate…

  • Banking, Environment
  • 12/12/2025
  • 10:38
Australian Conservation Foundation

NAB shareholders owning $9.74bn in shares call on the bank to do better on deforestation

Investors owning $9.74 billion of shares in Australia’s largest agribusiness bank have backed a resolution calling on NAB to disclose deforestation linked to its lending.* The resolution on disclosure of financed deforestation, facilitated by the Australian Conservation Foundation and co-filed by SIX, Australian Ethical, Melior Investment Management, was supported by 13.98% of shares voted at NAB’s AGM today. A second resolution, calling on the bank to set out a strategy to eliminate financed deforestation, was supported by 10.39% of NAB shares voted. Jolene George, head of corporate advocacy at the Australian Conservation Foundation, said: “The support for the resolution on…

  • Environment
  • 12/12/2025
  • 10:34
UNSW Sydney

Droughts lasting longer across Australia, study shows

A studytracking not only the forces that drive drought but the damage it leaves behind has revealed that droughts have lasted longer in Australia in recent decades, especially in areas with the most people and farms. UNSW researchers analysed drought trends across Australia between 1911 and 2020 based on rainfall shortages and falling river and dam levels. Their analysis showed that, since 1971, the time spent under drought conditions has increased across most of Australia, especially in the southeast and southwest, which are densely populated and key breadbaskets. The increasing dryness was especially felt during winter and spring, which are…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.