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Have your say: help shape the Standard that protects nature from damaging developments

Baudin's black cockatoo is only found in the extreme south-west of WA and is threatened by ongoing mining and logging operations. Image: dandm22 / iNaturalist CC BY-NC

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11 May 2026

The new National Environmental Standard for Matters of National Environmental Significance, or MNES, is not adequate to halt the decline of our most precious species and places.

We have identified four key flaws that must be addressed for this important regulation to fulfill its purpose of protecting threatened plants, animals and important World Heritage Areas, like the Great Barrier Reef, from harmful developments.

The Standard must:

  • Focus on outcomes for MNES not just procedures, which can be gamed by developers.
  • Protect all areas important for long-term survival, like wildlife corridors, climate refuges and areas needed for new and recovering populations, not just "irreplaceable" habitat.
  • Address the cumulative impacts of individual projects on species survival to prevent developments from whittling away threatened species habitat.
  • Incorporate monitoring, evaluation, reporting and adaptive improvement to keep pace with changing environments, especially under climate change.

Nature matters; it underpins our culture, economy, health, food security, water quality, and climate resilience.

Please join us in sending a message to your local members of parliament that this Standard needs to be improved, so that it works for nature.

Send the letter as is or personalise for added impact.

We will be publishing our submission soon if you would like to comment on the MNES Standard through the Government's public consultation survey.

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The Biodiversity Council is a registered Australian not-for-profit charity, recognised by the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC), meeting national standards for integrity, transparency and accountability.

Acknowledgements

The Biodiversity Council acknowledges the First Peoples of the lands and waters of Australia, and pays respect to their Elders, past, present and future and expresses gratitude for long and ongoing custodianship of Country.

The Biodiversity Council is an independent expert group founded by 11 Australian universities to promote evidence-based solutions to Australia’s biodiversity crisis. It receives funding from 11 university partners and The Ian Potter Foundation, The Ross Trust, Trawalla Foundation, The Rendere Trust, Isaacson Davis Foundation, Coniston Charitable Trust and Angela Whitbread.


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