Connect with us

Published

on

CANBERRA, Thursday 16 October 2025 — Responding to the tawny frogmouth winning The Guardian’s Bird of the Year vote, the following statement can be attributed to Elle Lawless, senior campaigner at Greenpeace Australia Pacific:

“The much-loved tawny frogmouth is flying high as Australia’s Bird of the Year, but the win comes at a critical time as the Labor government prepares to reform Australia’s nature law, the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act. The tawny frogmouth and their homes needs protection under the new nature laws. 

“The tawny frogmouth is not just Australia’s favourite bird, it’s a sitting duck. Their woodland and forest homes are being bulldozed around Australia, and our broken nature law allows it to happen. The current Act allows unchecked bulldozing of native forest, including in the bushland home of the tawny frogmouth.

“Without a strong nature law, there will be more extinctions, and we risk losing our classic birdsong, like the gentle booming call of the tawny frogmouth, from our backyards and forests. As Environment Minister Murray Watt prepares to table legislation to reform our broken national nature law, he has the opportunity to recognise the nation’s love of birds by creating a strong new nature law that will stop nature destruction and end the extinction crisis.

“There’s nothing sweeter, or more Australian, than a tawny frogmouth perched peacefully up a tree with their massive eyes and fluffy feathers, but sadly, they will become a rarer sight as their tree-homes are relentlessly bulldozed across the country. Murray Watt himself voted for the tawny frogmouth, calling it ‘a fabulous bird’, so the minister should do everything in his power to protect it with strong nature law reforms.

“Every year, the Bird of the Year poll makes it clear that Australians love birds, wildlife and our wild places. If we want the tawny frogmouth to be around for many more votes to come, we need strong, robust nature laws to protect their homes and end deforestation.”

Greenpeace Australia Pacific is calling for the EPBC reforms to meet four key tests:

  1. Stronger upfront nature protection to guide better decisions on big projects, including National Environmental Standards.
  2. An independent Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to enforce the laws and make decisions about controversial projects at arm’s lengths from politics.
  3. Closing deforestation loopholes that allow for harmful industries to carry out mass bulldozing across Australia.
  4. Consideration of the climate impacts on nature from coal and gas mines when assessing projects for approvals.

—ENDS—

Bird of the Year Tawny Frogmouth ‘a sitting duck’ under current nature law

Continue Reading

Climate Change

Toxic Ocean Crisis in Papua New Guinea Sparks Mass Marine Die-Off and Public Health Emergency

Published

on

Thousands of dead fish are washing ashore and people are falling ill too, as officials investigate possible sources of contamination.

It started in December, when dead fish began washing ashore New Ireland—a mountainous island in Papua New Guinea’s New Ireland Province, flanked by the Pacific Ocean and the Bismarck Sea.

Toxic Ocean Crisis in Papua New Guinea Sparks Mass Marine Die-Off and Public Health Emergency

Continue Reading

Climate Change

Earth’s Energy Imbalance

Published

on

Go behind the scenes with senior editor Corey Mitchell and reporter Bob Berwyn as they discuss critical measures of the planet’s health.

“Earth is being pushed beyond its limits while every key climate indicator is flashing red,” warned U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres after the release of the latest State of the Global Climate report from the World Meteorological Organization.

Earth’s Energy Imbalance

Continue Reading

Climate Change

Summit Sold Its Midwest Pipeline as a Carbon Solution. Now, It’ll Be Used for Fossil Fuels.

Published

on

The pivot reveals a company adapting to Trump’s “drill, baby, drill” agenda and looking to cash in on recently boosted tax incentives for enhanced oil recovery.

For four years, battles over private property rights have gridlocked state legislatures across the Midwest and stalled plans for a pipeline to transport liquified carbon dioxide from ethanol plants in the region.

Summit Sold Its Midwest Pipeline as a Carbon Solution. Now, It’ll Be Used for Fossil Fuels.

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2022 BreakingClimateChange.com