Skip to content
Animal Animal WelfareRights, Indigenous

Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan ignores drought, fires, low bird numbers and Indigenous culture by calling a 2026 recreational duck shooting season.

Coalition Against Duck Shooting 2 mins read

Premier Jacinta Allan is commended for initiating the First Nations Treaty, but calling a 2026 recreational
duck shooting season shows a profound disregard for Victoria’s First Nations peoples and their waterbirds
by allowing a small number of thrill-seeking duck shooters (only 0.2% of the Victorian population) to blast
their birds out of the sky for fun.

Victoria is in debt to the tune of around $188 billion yet this Premier prefers to waste $11 million of our
taxes on propping up a dying duck shooting activity rather than investing in a First Nations cultural, nature-
based wetlands tourism industry. In NSW (where duck shooting is banned) 3.2 billion in cultural tourism is
generated and overseas birdwatchers across Australia, spend $2.6 billion annually.

Yet in Victoria we destroy our native bird assets. Hundreds of thousands of sentient native waterbirds
(including threatened and protected species) are shot during recreational duck shooting seasons. More
than 25% suffer after being wounded rather than killed outright and shooters routinely pollute our
wetlands, leaving behind bird remains, rubbish, unburied toilets and spent plastic cartridges.

The handling and consumption of native waterbirds poses risks of PFAS and/or lead exposure, as well as
viral infections (bird flu). Today EPA signs on several wetlands around Sale advise the shooters not to
consume birds due to PFAS contamination. How then can shooting be allowed on those wetlands?

Prof Richard Kingsford’s latest aerial survey of waterbird numbers across eastern Australia was undertaken
last October, prior to the Victorian bushfires and scorching hot weather. He recorded that total waterbird
abundance, number of species breeding and wetland areas continued to show significant declines and that
five out of the eight game species also continued to show significant long-term declines.

Today Campaign Director, Laurie Levy, said: “Last year Premier Jacinta Allan, a long-time supporter of duck
shooting, was responsible for the suffering and killing of around half a million of our native waterbirds just
so 9,950 active duck shooters (Game Management Authority figure) could enjoy themselves. The same will
happen this year. How does this show respect for First Nations peoples by first introducing a treaty and
then allowing half a million birds to be slaughtered by duck shooters, especially after Labor’s 2003
Parliamentary Inquiry called for duck shooting to be banned.


Contact details:

Laurie Levy
Campaign Director
0418 392 826
[email protected]

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Indigenous
  • 05/03/2026
  • 15:21
Centre for Indigenous People and Work (CIPW)

Parliamentary Inquiry should look at workplace racism

Racism against First Nations people in the workplace should feature in the parliamentary inquiry into racism, hate and violence directed at Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people announced today, according to UTS Sydney’sCentre for Indigenous People and Work (CIPW). Director ofCIPW,Prof Nareen Young,welcomed the Inquiry as an important mechanism to explore the extent of workplace racism and recommend strategies to eradicate this. “Our research has found that racism against First Nations people in the workplace remains stubbornly prevalent,” Prof Young said. “At the current rate of progress, without further policy or legislative change, it could take another 118 years for…

  • Government Federal, Indigenous
  • 05/03/2026
  • 14:32
Australian Human Rights Commission

Commissioners welcome Senate Inquiry into racism against First Peoples

The Australian Human Rights Commission welcomes the Federal Government’s announcement of a Senate Inquiry into racism against First Peoples, to be conducted by the Joint Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs. TheInquiry was announced by Indigenous Affairs Minister Malarndirri McCarthyandwill examine the forms, impacts and drivers of racism experienced by First Peoples, and the changes needed to address it. Social Justice Commissioner Katie Kiss and Race Discrimination Commissioner Giridharan Sivaraman said the inquirycannot be another exercise in diagnosis.This new Inquiry must drive action - not replace it. Decades of evidence For decades, national processes have documented the…

  • Environment, Indigenous
  • 05/03/2026
  • 00:01
RMIT University

Australia’s carbon markets risk penalising Indigenous stewardship

Carbon markets rewarding the recovery of degraded environments risk penalising long-term Indigenous stewardship, according to a coalition of experts writing inNature Climate Change. The…

  • 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.