Skip to content
Environment, Government VIC

Victoria must step up to protect precious wetlands after federal decision

Victorian National Parks Association, Save Westernport and Western Port Biosphere 2 mins read

Leading conservationists have welcomed the decision to declare the Victorian Renewable Energy Terminal (VRET) at Western Port Bay a "controlled action" under federal nature laws.

Following Friday's decision by Federal Environment Minister Murray Watt, the project will now undergo a comprehensive environmental assessment to determine whether it can proceed without damaging  endangered wildlife and habitats in the Ramsar-listed wetlands.

The terminal, proposed for the state-owned Port of Hastings, would involve dredging and land reclamation of habitats of threatened migratory birds, seagrass meadows, fish nurseries and rare marine life.

While the newly reduced scope of dredging and wetland loss represents an improvement on the rejected 2023 plan, questions remain why an internationally recognised wetland is the right location for the terminal.

The Victorian National Parks Association (VNPA) and the Western Port Biosphere welcome the reduced scope but are seeking assurance that alternative locations were genuinely considered and compared on environmental grounds.

"We are still yet to be presented with convincing rationale for why this terminal must be built in the heart of a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve and Ramsar-listed wetland," said VNPA marine campaigner Shannon Hurley.

"We want certainty that the project can be done in a way that doesn’t cause unacceptable harm to the Western Port wetlands, and we aren't confident that's been achieved yet."

VNPA, community groups, tourism businesses, and local councils are calling for a more strategic and science-based approach to managing Western Port's future from the Allan Government.

"The impacts of this project are likely to extend well beyond its immediate footprint. Marine life and water don't recognise boundaries – they move throughout the bay, and so do the consequences," Hurley said.

"When you consider these impacts alongside declining water quality and pressures from other industries, the cumulative effect could be devastating for the health of the bay.

"That's why we urgently need a whole-of-bay marine spatial plan to take a coordinated, sustainable approach to looking after the bay and protecting nature and the community’s future."

Read more about the community plan to protect Western Port Bay here.

We support the statements released by Environment Victoria and the Australian Conservation Foundation.  

 


Contact details:

Shannon Hurley, Victorian National Parks Association: 0433481346

Mel Barker, CEO, Western Port Biosphere: 0466235611

 

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.