House debates
Tuesday, 22 October 2019
Questions without Notice
Environment
2:46 pm
Sussan Ley (Farrer, Liberal Party, Minister for the Environment) Share this | Hansard source
Our key policies include a $100 million Environment Restoration Fund to support major environmental projects complemented by our community's environment program, available to members opposite as well as this side of the House, in individual electorates for individual groups and organisations. We have put the work into developing new long-term strategies for Antarctica and threatened species and marine park management. It continues to be world leading.
We have a $167 million Recycling Investment Fund, increasing recycling rates, tackling plastic and halving food waste. The leadership shown by the Prime Minister on ending exports of paper, glass, tyres and plastic is providing certainty to businesses who want to be proactive in this space. As the assistant minister and I conduct roundtables around the country, we're finding the private sector ready and willing to step up and participate in this major microeconomic reform because they see economic opportunity in the circular economy. Why? Well, there are more than nine new Australian jobs created for every 10,000 tonnes of waste that is recycled correctly. We are laying the groundwork to continue our 36 months of continuous job growth well into the future. Recycling and remanufacturing brings jobs wherever you see it.
This certainty and engagement does give business the confidence to continue to invest and grow in this vital circular economy. It is in total contrast to the lack of policy from those opposite, because, unfortunately, since the election what we have seen from Labor is nothing close to an environment policy—just empty press releases and the panicked parliamentary stunt that we saw in this place. We don't know Labor's policy on waste and recycling, we don't know Labor's stance on threatened species management, we don't know Labor's Antarctic position, we don't know Labor's plan for the reef, and we don't know Labor's plan for Indigenous protected areas, land care, marine park management or soils. But every Australian does know what we are doing in this incredibly important space.
Australians care deeply about the environment. They want to see practical policies and stable leadership, rather than thought bubbles that appear one minute and disappear the next. Confidence, building real change and doing things better is a Liberal government.
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