Skip to content
Environment, Immigration

World Environment Day Tokenistic in a World of Endless Growth

Sustainable Population Australia 3 mins read

 

In response to the approval of the Northwest Shelf gas extension, Sustainable Population Australia (SPA) argues that World Environment Day (WED), which falls on June 5th,  is tokenistic unless the environmental movement addresses the cause of our environmental issues, rather than the symptoms.

SPA Spokesperson Michael Bayliss says that while the theme of the 2025 WED, ‘Beat Plastic Pollution’ is a noble goal, “unfortunately, changes in consumer behaviour are offset by the fact that the global population is growing by 70 million per year.”

The Northwest Shelf is already Australia's third-highest emitting facility in the country, producing about 6 million tonnes each year.  This is the first step towards a Burrup hub that has potential to emit more carbon than 12 coal-fired power plants.”

Meanwhile proposed bauxite mining in WA could have a disastrous impact on Perth’s drinking water” says Mr Bayliss. “One of the solutions proposed by WA’s state government is to supply citizens with bottled drinking water.

How are we going to make any progress on saving plastic when a fast growing metropolis of two million people may have to resort to bottled water, due to expanding mining operations?

Michael Bayliss,  SPA Communications Manager and Spokesperson,  is available for further comment at [email protected] or 0423 701 611 from 06:30am AWST (08:30am AEST)

 

SPA National President, Peter Strachan, says that the environmental movement will continue to fail in its mission unless there is more active recognition with limits to growth.

A population that’s growing at 2% per year will double in size in 35 years.  The same is true for economic growth.  Politicians tell us we must perpetuate economic growth but this simply isn’t sustainable.

Too many in the environmental movement believe that individual efforts to reduce waste will make a difference” says Mr Strachan.  “However, any efforts in Australia to reduce individual footprint deliver very little long-term difference while the nation adds population equivalent to a capacity crowd at the MCG every two months.

After years of efforts to ration household garden water use, we are still facing chronic water shortages, all due to population growth.”

 


Peter Strachan is National President of Sustainable Population Australia and is available for further comment at [email protected] or 0412 400 952 from 6am AWST (8am AEST).

Mr Strachan says that one justification from the Federal Government in extending operation of the North West Shelf is in building the resource capacity to upscale production of renewable energy generation.  “Regardless of how true this is, this goes to show that the production of renewable energy is still resource intensive.  This is particularly true in a growth based society.  There is no such thing as ‘green growth’.

If a population does not stop growing, there will never be an end in demand for the earth’s finite resources.  There will be no place on earth that won’t be on the cards for extraction.  Only by stabilising our population will we make any progress for future World Environment Days”.

 


About us:

SPA is an independent not-for-profit organisation seeking to protect the environment and our quality of life by ending population growth in Australia and globally, while rejecting racism and involuntary population control. SPA is an environmental advocacy organisation, not a political party.


Contact details:

 

Michael Bayliss
Spokesperson/Communications Manager
0423 701 611
[email protected]

 

Peter Strachan
National President
0412 400 952
[email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Environment
  • 13/06/2025
  • 08:32
Australian Conservation Foundation

Kelly O’Shanassy to wrap up more than a decade as CEO of the Australian Conservation Foundation

Following more than a decade of outstanding service at the helm of Australia’s national environment organisation, trailblazing leader Kelly O’Shanassy has announced she will step down as CEO of the Australian Conservation Foundation at the end of 2025. “It’s been an honour to lead this powerhouse organisation and serve Australians who love nature and want climate action. It’s a hard decision to step away — but unlike solar and wind, CEO energy is not renewable, and it’s time for a break. “I leave knowing we have created so much impact for nature and people. Together we’ve protected ancient forests from…

  • Agriculture Farming Rural, Environment
  • 13/06/2025
  • 08:30
Monash University

Monash breakthrough to revolutionise agriculture with climate-resilient designer crops

A breakthrough by Monash University scientists could revolutionise agriculture with designer crops suited to the climate of individual regions. In a comprehensive review of plant biology research, published in Science, an international team of researchers has redefined previously held theories about how plants sense and respond to temperature and developed a new model for thermosensing plants. They found that plants sense and respond to temperature through decentralised genetic networks of proteins and biological processes, challenging the long-standing theory that plants, like humans, rely on a single internal ‘thermometer’ to sense temperature. Lead researcher Professor Sureshkumar Balasubramanian, from Monash School of…

  • Environment, General News
  • 13/06/2025
  • 06:00
Reflections Holidays

Pack light, drive light: 28 EV chargers installed at Reflections Holidays along the NSW coast

TWENTY-EIGHT electric vehicle chargers have been installed in Reflections Holidays parks on the New South Wales Coast, positioned between Byron Shire in the north…

  • Contains:

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.