The Centre for Policy Development is running a series of articles looking at how we can move beyond our current impasse on environmental policy. This series will attempt to unearth the basic principles that Australia's policy makers need to uphold if true sustainability is to be achieved.
We invite you to contribute your ideas in response to the questions raised below.
Background
Given the various ‘report cards' on the state of Australia's environment it is clear that Australia's current environmental policies and programs are seriously flawed. Reforms that tinker at the edges of ‘business as usual' will not be enough to ensure our environment's capacity to support either current or future generations.
While there are isolated success stories, overall we are drawing down on our 'natural capital' rather than living within our environmental means. The Centre for Policy Development believes that it is time to consider a range of new approaches.
We are embarking on this series at a time when we no longer need to be distracted by arguments about whether climate change is happening, or whether human activity has contributed to it. Instead we can focus on the most effective ways of preventing a runaway greenhouse effect. There is a strong social, economic and moral case for early action. The challenge will be to take this action while the same factors that have stymied effective policy-making for the past two decades are still in operation.
The climate change debate illustrates many of the problems with environment policy in general. The need for sustainability poses a particular challenge for policy-makers, because election cycles providing strong incentives to ‘discount' the long-term costs of inaction and focus instead on the short term costs of action. Clearly, good policy ideas are not enough to solve environmental crises - we also need enough popular pressure to sustain the political and economic costs of addressing it.
This shift in political will needs to be based on the understanding that ‘environment' is neither a code word for something unimportant or optional, nor is it something that is ‘over there' and away from us. The environment is not disconnected from our every day social practices and lifestyles. Nor is it separate from our society or economy; its use (and often abuse) has made us a wealthy nation.
Questions to consider:
1. How can we balance regulation and market mechanisms, along with community and individual actions and responsibility?
2. Can economic growth ever be environmentally sustainable?
3. How should we deal with different sectors' and interest-groups' conflicting demands upon our common resources?
4. Can Australia and a handful of wealthy nations ‘go it alone' in attempts to achieve sustainability?
5. How can we reform our policy-making processes so that they are better suited to dealing with environmental problems?
In the first installment in this series, Centre for Policy Development environment co-convenor Geoff McAlpine outlined principles for better environmental policy-making, based on the values put forward in Reclaiming our Common Wealth. As with other papers published by the Centre for Policy Development, this is the first word in the discussion, not the last!
We are currently seeking submissions in response to question 1. For more information or to pitch or submit an article please contact editor@cpd.org.au or call CPD Director Miriam Lyons on (02) 9211 1635