THE AGE
http://www.theage.com.au/news/20000407/A53716-2000Apr6.html

Anger at woodchip export approval

By CLAIRE MILLER
ENVIRONMENT REPORTER
WITH BRETT FOLEY
Friday 7 April 2000

The Federal Government has bypassed Parliament to allow the Japanese 
giant, Harris Daishowa (Australia), to export woodchips from southern 
New South Wales despite an expired licence.

In a last-minute move to prevent the exports becoming illegal under 
the system of regional forest agreements, the Government has amended 
export control regulations to approve single shipments on a 
case-by-case basis.

The amendment means the Forestry and Conservation Minister, Mr Wilson 
Tuckey, need not get Parliament's approval to extend Harris 
Daishowa's export licence, which expired last Friday.

All woodchip export licences expired on 31 March, the legislated 
deadline for signing all regional forest agreements. Woodchips can 
now only come from forests covered by the 20-year Commonwealth-state 
agreements. Licence extensions for other areas need parliamentary 
approval.

Southern NSW supplies about 12 per cent of Harris Daishowa's 
woodchips, but the forest agreement for this region was not signed 
last Friday because of a dispute between Mr Tuckey and NSW over 
conservation measures.

The woodchips from all three regions supplying Harris Daishowa are 
mingled in a stockpile. The ship Daishowa-Maru is due to leave port 
on Monday with about 70,000 tonnes from the stockpile. Harris 
Daishowa's corporate affairs manager, Mr Vince Phillips, said the 
Federal Government had told the company that it had as long as it 
complied with regulations, "we have nothing to worry about".

Mr Tuckey said in a statement yesterday that the company must ensure 
no export woodchips are sourced from potential conservation reserves 
in the southern NSW. He claimed there would be job losses if the 
company could not export from its stockpile.

He said Harris Daishowa, the only company exporting woodchips from 
southern NSW, was now eligible to apply for single shipment licences.

The regulations were amended after the Environmental Defender's 
Office, on behalf of the Wilderness Society, threatened a Federal 
Court injunction against Harris Daishowa on Wednesday.

A spokeswoman for the Wilderness Society, Ms Virginia Young, said Mr 
Tuckey and Harris Daishowa were thumbing their noses at the law.

Conservation groups have called for a government inquiry into alleged 
violence against environmentalists in Victoria's forests amid claims 
of inaction and bias by police and government departments.

Victoria Police are investigating the incident but say they are yet 
to receive a formal complaint from the injured protesters.


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