Murray Darling

Greens wary ahead of MDBA draft report

Media Release | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Saturday 5th November 2011, 12:20pm

The Australian Greens say it appears the environment will again be the loser when the Murray Darling Basin Authority's draft plan is finally released on November 28.

Sarah addresses the national water leadership summit in Canberra

Greencast | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Thursday 3rd November 2011, 11:53am

Sarah was a guest speaker at the Australian Water Assocation's 2nd annual national water leadership summit in Canberra this morning, 03/11/11.

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Murray-Darling Draft Plan Misses The Mark - Greens

Media Release | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Wednesday 5th October 2011, 12:00am

 The Australian Greens have joined ten of the nation's most influential environmental groups in condemning the proposal to reduce environmental flows in the Murray-Darling Basin Authority's draft plan.


"Any suggestion that 2,800GL of water is enough to save the river is absurd," said Senator Sarah Hanson-Young, the Greens' Water Spokesperson.


"We know that at  4,000GL to 7600 GL  is needed to save the environment. The Lower Lakes and Coorong in my home state of South Australia are particularly vulnerable."


"The Minister must ensure the science and the sustainable diversion limit is peer reviewed before the draft plan comes to Parliament."


"I share the concerns of environmental groups. The authority needs to stop changing the goal posts, and actually start considering how we can really safeguard the environment," said Senator Hanson-Young.

New Murray Darling Basin water limits inadequate

Media Release | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Thursday 15th September 2011, 4:11pm

The Australian Greens say reports that the Murray Darling Basin Authority's forthcoming draft plan will include a minimum 2,800 gigalitres in sustainable diversion limits shows there will not be enough water to save the system.

Asylum seeker debate out of proportion

Blog Post | Blog of Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 23rd August 2011, 10:00am

Yesterday the full bench of the High Court began hearing a challenge to the Malaysian solution.


The Greens hope David Manne and Debbie Mortimer, SC, and their legal team succeeds, not least because we do not want unaccompanied children to be expelled to a country where their rights cannot be guaranteed. It's not yet clear when the court will issue its ruling, but it could permanently derail the Gillard government's plans to export Australia's international obligations to give protection to countries including Malaysia and, possibly, Papua New Guinea.


The Greens and others, such as human rights groups, have for years lobbied against mandatory detention. We think there's a better way, one that's humane and compassionate, in handling some of the world's most vulnerable people. We do not support the policy of locking fragile people up as a first resort, when it clearly should the last thing we should do. Indeed, Australia is the only country in the world as signatory to the Refugee Convention that arbitrarily detains asylum seekers, contrary to what the convention suggests.


Whenever the major parties, or shock jocks for that matter, seek to attack asylum seekers and others who lack a voice, myself and the Greens will be there to stand up for them. We refuse to follow the ALP and Coalition in a race to the bottom.


I think the Australian electorate is sick of that competition. They're tired of both sides repeating the same mantras, using the same language - indeed the same policies - to confront what is a relatively small problem, compared with the volumes of people arriving on the EU's shores. The major parties' responses cost billions of dollars and damage lives unnecessarily.


Australians want alternatives to a policy of mandatory detention because it has failed to be a deterrent for people seeking our protection since it took effect in the early 1990s. They want their government to explore other paths, such as those outlined in the Centre for Policy Development's report A New Approach, Breaking the Stalemate on Refugees and Asylum Seekers released yesterday.


They want their elected representatives to show results for policies to deal with Australia's ageing population, how to provide more affordable child care options, and a national dental health scheme. In addition to finally ensuring the future of a healthy Murray Darling Basin, they'd also like to see their parliament amend the Marriage Act, so same-sex couples can get married and formally celebrate their commitment to each other.


Everyday Australians are eager to see their government deliver a mining tax that fairly redistributes the wealth from the present boom so it is invested here and not sent overseas. They fear the proceeds risk being squandered instead of funding essential public transport and other infrastructure. And what about a sovereign wealth fund, which Treasury has supported, to invest in future generations?


The major parties have created these problems with immigration and asylum seeker policy, which serve their interests. But we can solve them all with practical measures and confront other challenges that the community would prefer we concentrate on.


First published in The National Times on August 23, 2011.

Greens Leader’s statement on the Canberra convoy

Media Release | Spokesperson Bob Brown
Sunday 21st August 2011, 3:52pm

"Some might call the predicted thousands of trucks descending on Canberra ending up as hundreds (ABC, 21/8/11) a ‘flop', but these Australians have every right to a peaceful presence on the parliamentary lawns," Greens Leader Bob Brown said today.


"It seems like the prime qualification to be there is to be angry about something - these are Abbott's angry people," Senator Brown said.


"But it seems their views on some issues are fairly shorted sighted, very ‘me-now'."


"The number of angry people in Canberra tomorrow will increase much more than the numbers of truckers arriving in town," Senator Brown predicted.


 


 

Delay is the deadliest form of denial

Media Release | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Thursday 11th August 2011, 4:16pm

The Australian Greens say the Murray Darling Basin Authority's second delay in eight days to the draft report means there's less time for the parliament and public to assess its contents.

River to suffer from delays to Murray Darling plan

Media Release | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Wednesday 3rd August 2011, 1:28pm

The Australian Greens are concerned by yet another delay in releasing the draft report by the Murray Darling Basin Authority.