In recent times, environmental groups have wielded significant influence over Australian politics, achieving substantial victories in conservation and enjoying widespread public approval. However recent legislation to allow recreational hunting in NSW National Parks, has been followed by renewed calls to reintroduce bounties for the culling of feral animals. Environmental regulations are being reviewed with an emphasis on ‘slashing green tape’, and organisations such as the Environmental Defender’s Office (EDO), the Environmental Protection Authority (EPA), and National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) have incurred savage budget cuts and ministerial criticism.
Environmental groups, and many academics, have expressed outrage at the direction of Government policy. However, this opposition appears to have been unsuccessful in influencing Government, or in generating widespread community concern. It would appear that the environmental zeitgeist is shifting, and the meaning of conservation is being re-invented. So is ‘environmentalism’ as we know it dead? Is this a good thing, allowing the environmental movement to re-invent itself as a more traditional conservation movement? Or is this something we will come to regret? And where did the environmental movement go wrong?