Apr 30, 2026 | News
Plant Conservation Australia has put together a submission on the consultation for the NEBRA review.
In it, we argued that there needs to be more consultation with relevant stakeholders in the not-for-profit, volunteer or NRM sector when an incursion takes place, despite these interested parties often having to bear the brunt of much of the response once a pest has become established. We also pointed out the inadequacy of the current arrangements where the EADRA, EPPRD take preference over NEBRA as soon as there is any impacts on industry. This in our view does not provide a suitable model for when there are plant pest incursions which primarily impact the natural environment, with some industry impacts, as has occurred in the past. We also argue that the current maximum dollar value response limit of $5 mil to incursions of environmental pest incursions is insufficient when compared to industry wide responses under different arrangements.
Read the full Plant Conservation Australia submission here (pdf link).
We have also endorsed the Invasive Species Council’s submission on the review, which applies many similar critiques of NEBRA. You can read their submission here: https://invasives.org.au/publications/national-environmental-biosecurity-response-agreement-5-year-review/
Apr 23, 2026 | News
Last month, Plant Conservation Australia provided a submission to the ACT Government on their Draft Nature Conservation Strategy. In it, we commended the Nature Positive and cross-tenure approach set out by the Strategy, but expressed concerns over some of the timeframes set out, as well as a few instances where ambiguous language and targets could give opportunity for justification of a lack of conservation action. We also argued for this strategy to be fully resourced, pointing to the decline in many indicators for the health of our ecosystems noted in the 2023 State of the Environment Report.
You can read the submission here.
Image: View of Canberra city from Mt Ainslie – Credit: Richie Southerton
Apr 17, 2026 | Events Category, News
Early bird registration for Australasia’s premier plant conservation conference, APCC15, is now open! To register fill in the form here: https://www.anpc.asn.au/apcc15-early-bird-registration-form/
The conference will be held at the Port Douglas Community Hall in the stunning Queensland Wet Tropics from 24-28 August 2026.
With the overall theme ‘Plant Conservation: Culture, Collaboration and Change’ APCC15 will explore these three spheres of native plant recovery through rainforest restoration partnerships, collaborations with Traditional Owner groups, impacts of climate change induced natural disasters, management of threatened species and communities, and biosecurity threats such as Myrtle Rust.
The conference will bring together from across the continent, people researching, working, or volunteering in plant conservation to address the challenges facing Australasia’s spectacular and diverse plant life, through information exchange and sharing best practice approaches. There will also be numerous workshops, social events and field trip options, which you can find more by clicking here to visit the conference webpage.
The early bird discount ends 29 May.
Abstract submission is also open! The themes are: Sustaining Diversity, Restoring Balance, Collaborations and Culture and Biosecurity, Invasive Threats and Post-invasion Challenges
The abstract submission form can be found here (word doc). The submission deadline is 1 May.
We’re looking forward to seeing you there!