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Open letter to Premier & Tasmanian state parliamentarians โ Doctors for Health, Business & Jobs, 4 May 2020
Signatories
Dr Christine Barstad Dr Darren Briggs
General Practitioner Emergency Doctor
Ulverstone Latrobe
Dr Nerrelie Cann Dr Debra Chandler
General Practitioner General Practitioner
Ulverstone Burnie
Dr George Chandler Dr Justin Chipman.
General Practitioner General Paractioner
Burnie Penguin.
Dr Stefan Delitzsch Dr Emil Djakic
General Practitioner General Practitioner
Ulverstone Ulverstone
Dr David Dry Dr Ian Emmett
General Practitioner General Practitioner
Ulverstone Ulverstone.
Dr Bruno Fernandini Dr John Fisher
General Practice Registrar General Practitioner
Burnie Ulverstone
impacts of native and old growth forest logging on health, business, jobs and environment
Logging and associated industries have long served a purpose. Harvesting of plantation timber is an important part of our economy. However, we feel it is now time to stop the logging of high conservation value forest (old growth and native forests).
In 2014, 356 000 hectares of Tasmanian forest known as โfuture reserve landโ (potentially to be designated as a world heritage area and/or National Park) were reclassified as โFuture Potential Production Forestโ.
This means that with effect of April 2020, 356 000 hectares can be released for logging, a huge part of which is in the Tarkine.
The Tarkine is one of the most pristine forests in the world and is the largest temperate rainforest in Australia. Many areas have not seen fire for hundreds of years as they are high in moisture content, making them relatively fire-resistant.
We oppose further logging of high conservation value forest for the following reasons:
It jeopardises the health of Tasmanians as it will increase the risk of bushfires (โwetโ rainforest is replaced by โdryโ forest). The scale of bushfires in Australia caused significant health problems around the country this year: exacerbations of lung and heart diseases, depression and other mental health problems caused by loss of human life, property, livestock, etc. Forests like the Tarkine have an intrinsic value for recreation, health and for wildlife.
It is bad for business. As we recently saw with bushfires on the mainland, it is difficult to trade if roads are closed, your workplace is destroyed by fire and the production of goods comes to a stand-still.
Jobs will be lost because sustainable industries such as nature-based tourism and bee keeping (leatherwood honey) will be compromised.
Logging in the Tarkine has negative consequences for the environment as it increases greenhouse gas emissions due to fire and reduces carbon storage. Huge amounts of carbon are stored in the forest ground with root and plant systems that have evolved over centuries. Regeneration of such logged areas will take many, many decades.
Forestry provides only about 1.5% of jobs in Tasmania but comes at an enormous cost to tax payers, who pay millions of dollars to make up for losses made by forestry every year. According to accountant John Lawrence, Forestry Tasmania has logged at a big loss for many years (with an average of $65 million in losses every year; see https://www.theguardian.com/profile/john-lawrence).
This money subsidising an economically unsustainable industry could be used to retrain people for new jobs. There would be plenty of new job opportunities (e.g. in tourism, adventure sports, renewable energies, flow-on businesses such as hospitality and retail, weed management, National Park management etc.).
An excellent example of this is Derby, an ex-mining town in North Eastern Tasmania that was completely revived by mountain biking. Derby is now a mountain biking mecca, and business has boomed to accommodate the influx of sports enthusiasts from all over the country.
Nobody working in forestry should lose their job if there is the political will for change. The Tarkine should be our equivalent to Kakadu or the Daintree and would be a remarkable asset if we properly protect it as a national park. The potential for jobs and business well into the future would be huge.
One could say we have what the rest of the world has lost but wants to see. We can make it work for our economy, create jobs in profitable sustainable industries and benefit our health and the environment.
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