Queensland environment groups call for moratorium on growth in SEQ (JUN)

16 February 2009

Media Releases 2009

Thursday, 14 June 2007

Environment groups meeting at Coolum Beach on the Sunshine Coast last

Sunday, 10th June, called for a moratorium on Local Growth Management

Strategies (LGMS’s) under the South East Queensland Regional Plan until after

the local government elections in 2008, when local residents would have the

chance to vote for candidates based on their views regarding growth.

One of Australia’s leading scientists and finalist for Queenslander of the Year,

Professor Ian Lowe, speaker at the weekend conference, said that the existing

SEQ Regional Plan accepts the irreversible destruction of SEQ’s lifestyle and

biodiversity.  “Our unique local natural assets are being destroyed by over-

development,” said Professor Lowe.

The State Government’s SEQ Regional Plan is requiring 60,000 hectares of

farmland, open space and bushland to be bulldozed and concreted to

accommodate over 550,000 new homes.

According to Sunshine Coast Environment Council spokesperson Keryn Jones,

environment groups reject the irresponsible population growth targets set for the

region through the SEQ Regional Plan and call upon the State and local

governments to immediately halt further progress on their respective Local Growth

Management Strategies until communities are better informed.

“The LGMS’s are the most important planning documents we will see in our lifetime

as they will open up new suburban developments in areas previously inaccessible

to developers, lead to high rise in suburban areas, and tie the region into

irreversible growth,” said Ms Jones.  “Injurious affection laws, unique to

Queensland, mean that once land uses have been given the green light it can

never turn to orange or red without attracting compensation payouts of many

millions of dollars.”

Simon Baltais, President of Sustainable Population Australia SEQ Branch said that

the fundamental weakness of the SEQ Plan is that it doesn’t recognise SEQ’s

limits to growth. “SEQ will become very ugly and crowded,” he said.  “Naturally,

many are opposed to these strategies going ahead until the numbers are

reconsidered in light of recent carrying capacity studies.”

Simon Baltais: mob: 0412-075-445

Keryn Jones: mob: 0418-982-158

Background paper attached: appeal for moratorium on LGMS

Re: 5thJune 2007 World Environment Day

Appeal to the Queensland Government

Take Action on Climate Change and Coastal Development

BACKGROUND

The South East Queensland Regional Plan prepared by the Queensland

Government has a population target of 3.96 million people for the region by 2026,

up by almost 1.2 million from the 2.78 million current residents. In effect, this

represents an average growth rate of 50%, although Beaudesert and Ipswich face

100% growth, and several other areas (notably the Gold and Sunshine Coasts)

also face extremely high growth rates.

Research conducted by Queensland University in 1996 and on-going studies since

indicate that the population of South East Queensland already exceeds the area’s

sustainable carrying capacity. The current and likely to be chronic shortage of

water is the blatant and most pressing indicator, but there are others equally

important, such as 75km² of bushland and agricultural land being converted into

housing and other urban purposes each year.

ISSUES

The SEQ Regional Plan even acknowledges that at least an additional 60,000

hectares of land – approximately 12.6% of the total area of SEQ – will be

converted to urban use by 2026.  We will build more roads but they will be more

congested and more public monies will be spent on trying to maintain basic

services diverting funds away from services that actually enhance our

communities. Currently, infrastructure grids, like those for water, are being set up

to support floundering infrastructure and services in other communities at the

expense of diluting the quality of life in others.

In the Gold Coast alone there are predicted to be an additional 116,900 dwellings

over the next 20 years, accommodating a projected additional 244,000 persons by

2026, over 40% in Greenfield, previously undeveloped, sites.

There is widespread and genuine community fear that these high population

targets will soon push ecosystems to that tipping point.  We recognise that many of

our most profitable and sustainable industries and the health of our communities

are underpinned by these natural systems.

The escalating level of public disquiet over population growth in South East

Queensland and the fact that consultation during preparation of the SEQ Regional

Plan did not include consultation on population levels, should trigger a total

reconsideration of the South East Queensland Regional Plan and its population

targets.

The number of residents to be accommodated needs to be reconsidered in light of

the  SEQ Regional Nature Conservation Strategy, biodiversity mapping, climate

change predictions of increased drought, bushfire and flood, and ecological

services mapping.

Further, supporters of continued growth must be required to provide evidence that

such growth is not having a negative impact upon SEQ residents and the

environment upon which it relies.

Once gazetted, the Local Growth Management Strategies (LGMS) which Councils

are currently required to prepare under the South East Queensland Regional Plan

will open up new areas for development and lock in the high population growth.

REQUESTS

Our organisations reject the irresponsible and unsustainable population growth

targets set for the region through the South East Queensland Regional Plan.

Accordingly we the undersigned, representing our respective memberships, call

upon the State and local governments to halt immediately further progress on their

respective Local Growth Management Strategies until after:

1. an extensive review of the figures to be accommodated, considering: the

impacts of climate change on the Region (reduced rainfall, increased extremes

of risk of bushfire and flooding); the value and extent of the Region’s

biodiversity and other nature conservation values; the ecological services

provided by natural areas; and, the requirement for open space for both

residents and visitors.

2. an extensive community education campaign has taken place throughout 2007-

2008 to provide residents and ratepayers full disclosure and understanding of

the social, environmental and economic impacts that overpopulation has

already caused, and will continue to cause into the future;

3. the people of Queensland have had the opportunity to assess candidates on

their position on the population issue and the March 2008 local government

elections and Council amalgamations have occurred; and,

4. legislation is enacted to allow local governments to prohibit development and to

remove injurious affection from the development process.

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