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Talking Point: Defeat of Gunns’ pulp mill led to a climate solution

Tasmania’s emissions have fallen below net zero emissions, with the community victory that stopped a pulp mill being built a huge part of the ‘heroic result’ for the planet, a former Greens leader says.

<s1 id="U702356086542aiE" style="font-size:9;font-stretch:9;">SUCCESS: Falling emissions shows ending logging works for the climate. Pictured, Peg Putt. Picture: PETER MATHEW</s1>
SUCCESS: Falling emissions shows ending logging works for the climate. Pictured, Peg Putt. Picture: PETER MATHEW

THE community victory that stopped Gunns’ devastating pulp mill from being built in 2011 has some years later produced a stunning climate result.

Tasmania’s emissions have fallen just below net zero emissions to a total of -2.2 Mt CO2-e in 2018. That’s a heroic result for any jurisdiction on the planet.

How did it happen? The official Greenhouse Gas Inventory report is clear: “Net emissions have declined by 111.2 per cent on emission levels in 2005 due to reductions in emissions from the land sector, mainly resulting from reductions in native forest harvesting.”

Other emissions sources remained stable.

Stationary energy is mostly generated from renewables (hydro and wind), and doesn’t figure prominently as a source of emissions compared to most places.

Forestry emissions were by far our primary emissions source until the reduction in native forest logging.

Tasmania’s unique emissions profile has given an unambiguous picture of how ending logging contributes initially to emissions reduction, and then allowing forests to keep growing contributes further through ongoing sequestration of carbon from the atmosphere.

Called “nature-based solutions” in the climate world, the theoretical impacts of such changes have been published. Now Tasmania shows a stark real-life example of what can be achieved.

Cable logging in Tasmania. Picture: ROB BLAKERS
Cable logging in Tasmania. Picture: ROB BLAKERS

Why did logging stop so suddenly in 2011?

It wasn’t a policy decision of governments. It was that Australia’s largest woodchipper had overreached, pressing ahead with the unpopular and ultimately unsustainable push to build a pulp mill while its overseas markets were in revolt over our destruction of high conservation value forests.

It had also embarked on the ill-advised Gunns 20 SLAPP suit, targeting prominent conservationists and non-government organisations to try to stifle opposition to the odious pulp mill.

When its remaining major customer in Japan dropped contracts, Gunns was without enough income, overextended on the pulp project, and liable to cover costs of its failing court actions against environmentalists.

Rally against the pulp mill, City Park, Launceston, August 23, 2008.
Rally against the pulp mill, City Park, Launceston, August 23, 2008.

It stopped taking native forest pulpwood and before long the company went into receivership.

It didn’t end there. Gunns had a virtual monopoly on woodchipping, having progressively bought out its competitors.

The loss of the huge export woodchip trade demolished the major source of income for native forest logging, making it uneconomic and exposing the rest of the industry to drastically reduced supply. The entire industry was going under.

The lie that the industry was “sawlog-driven” was exposed.

Woodchipping had been introduced in the 1970s as an “efficiency” measure to “clean up waste in the forest”.

It drove a transition from selective logging to clear-felling. By the turn of the century up to 7 million tonnes of woodchip exports left Tasmania for Japan each year.

An average of 80-95 per cent of product from clear-felling operations was so-called waste wood, the actual mainstay and driver of native forest logging destruction.

Tamar Valley pulp mill site. Picture: Wilderness Society
Tamar Valley pulp mill site. Picture: Wilderness Society

The collapse of the forest industry brought an immediate, massive reduction in emissions. So much for the claims of the forest industry that their logging regimes somehow contribute to the fight against climate change!

The Tasmanian Forest Agreement formalised the reduction in logging across almost 500,000ha of Tasmania’s native production forests.

World Heritage listing eventually secured 120,000ha from logging, most in reserves. The remaining 350,000ha was placed in a holding pattern pending future reservation. Those forests continued growing and drawing carbon out of the atmosphere.

The Tasmanian government is quick to take credit for Tasmania’s great emissions result, but will not acknowledge how it has been achieved. They’ve put those future reserves back on the chopping block.

The industry has substantially moved on, transitioning production and jobs into existing plantations.

Such large and important gains in the fight against climate change should not be squandered. We must hold the line and now do work on reducing emissions from other sectors, like industry and transport.

Further climate contributions can be made by protecting forests where destruction of threatened species and old growth has twice prevented Forest Stewardship Council certification. It could even be a good little earner.

Our official greenhouse accounts hold the evidence that ending logging works for the climate, despite rhetorical claims of loggers to the contrary.

This is not simply a great outcome for climate and nature in Tasmania, it is inspiration and evidence for the rest of Australia and the world.

Peg Putt works on forests and climate, co-ordinating 150 environment groups in 32 countries opposing burning forest biomass for electricity production. She is a former leader of the Tasmanian Greens.

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Original URL: https://www.themercury.com.au/news/opinion/talking-point-defeat-of-gunns-pulp-mill-led-to-a-climate-solution/news-story/0005c17a8fd6a496260e068b6b13b3a7