Innovative conservation solutions for Australia — and beyond

 
 
 

The successful conservation and restoration of nature in Australia is of paramount importance. Not only because of Australia’s astounding ecosystems, ‘megadiverse’ status and capacity to contribute to global climate targets, but also because of Australia’s role in supporting the conservation and restoration ambitions of our neighbors in the Asia-Pacific and beyond.

Virginia Simpson
Senior Country Manager, Australia

 
 

Founded in 2020, Conservation International-Australia is one of our newest country offices, supporting innovative financing and science to drive conservation locally and throughout the region.

In Australia, Our team is working to draw more attention, funding and opportunities to the country’s coastal ecosystems — areas that, despite years of poor development planning, are rich in biodiversity, store vital carbon, and hold immense cultural and economic value. We are supporting the participation of Indigenous Peoples and unlocking funding streams for the long-term care of Australia's "sea country."

We also operate as a key fundraising arm for Conservation International's Asia-Pacific and global programs. Via partnerships with the private sector, government and individuals, we actively support the protection of nature in Asia-Pacific — from revitalizing ocean custodianship among Samoa’s schoolchildren to helping improve conservation planning in Indonesia by funding tiger monitoring.

Our mission is to provide urgent and innovative conservation solutions that support both people and nature.

 

Highlight project

© Tidal Moon

Partnering to restore seagrass in Shark Bay

Remote, vast and wildly beautiful, Shark Bay is a UNESCO World Heritage Area on the western-most tip of Australia. The region was granted World Heritage status in part due to the significance of its seagrass meadows, which shelter a huge diversity of marine life and lock vast stores of ancient carbon beneath their roots. This is the home of the Malgana people, who have a 30,000-year connection to this, their "sea country."

Conservation International is partnering with Tidal Moon, a Malgana-owned and crewed company, to restore seagrass lost in a huge heatwave in 2011. An estimated 25 percent of Shark Bay's seagrass meadows perished in the heatwave — much of which has not recovered — directly impacting biodiversity. Of additional concern is the release of carbon as the seafloor erodes without the seagrass to hold it in place.

Tidal Moon is integrating seagrass replanting with their budding sea-cucumber business, partly in recognition of the co-dependent relationship between seagrass and sea cucumbers. The restoration is of global importance, but it is an expensive undertaking. Conservation International-Australia is working with Tidal Moon to build their scale and capacity to the point where they may be able to sell carbon and biodiversity credits to the market to fund their restoration work well into the future.

Success in Shark Bay will be a national win from a climate and biodiversity standpoint. Equally importantly, it will blaze a trail with a new, nature-positive business model for other communities and Indigenous-led projects to follow.

 

Where we work in Australia

 

News from Australia

News spotlight: Australia aims to end extinctions — critics see a plan that picks ‘winners’

© Donald Hobern

Editor's note: News about conservation and the environment is made every day, but some of it can fly under the radar. In a recurring feature, Conservation News shares a recent news story that you should know about.

Australia has lost more mammals to extinction than any other continent.

That bleak statistic is behind the country’s new strategy to protect 110 species over the next decade — and squash its reputation as “the mammal extinction capital of the world,” according to Australia’s Environment and Water Minister, Tanya Plibersek.

The Threatened Species Action Plan aims to prevent new extinctions; it comes on the heels of a five-year survey that found Australia’s wildlife and ecosystems face a much greater challenge from climate change than previously thought. The 2019-2020 bushfires alone, which were exacerbated by climate change, are responsible for the deaths and displacements of billions of animals.

While some conservationists are encouraged by the plan’s commitments, it has raised questions about what species are worth protecting in a high-stakes situation, Lisa Cox reported for The Guardian.

In identifying just 110 priority species out of the nearly 2,000 listed as threatened in the country, critics say the strategy picks “winners” — such as the koala, the brush-tailed rock wallaby and the Australian sea lion.

They warn the plan doesn’t go far enough in addressing the underlying causes of Australia’s environmental decline — land clearing, invasive species and the continued reliance on fossil fuels — and falls short of investments needed to combat the biodiversity and extinction crisis, including new environmental laws and more funding.

Australia spends about around 7 percent of the targeted 1.6 billion Australian dollars ($1 billion) per year required to halt species loss and recover nationally listed threatened species, according to economic analyses.

Australian authorities say prioritizing certain species doesn’t equate to ignoring others. Rather, the priority species are key to entire ecosystems.

“And if we focus on those species, we create a kind of halo effect for the whole ecosystem the plant or animal is part of,” Plibersek told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Radio National.

While it’s the first time Australia has set a zero-extinction target, the plan builds on the country’s commitment to protect 30 percent of its land and sea by 2030 — up from the current 22 percent that’s protected.

The Threatened Species Action Plan includes protecting 50 million hectares (123 million acres) of land and sea by 2027. And there’s plenty of research showing that well-managed protected areas are a powerful tool for conserving wildlife.

A recent study, which Conservation International contributed to, examined mammal diversity in protected and non-protected areas — and found that diversity in protected areas outperformed non-protected areas by 66 percent.

Another study led by Lee Hannah, Conservation International’s senior climate change scientist, found that limiting temperature increase to 2 degrees Celsius while conserving 30 percent of tropical lands could cut species extinction risk in half. 

And protecting land “isn’t just about creating national parks or protected areas (although that’s a good start for many places),” Hannah told Conservation News. “There is a whole suite of possible conservation tools that a government can implement to protect biodiversity while benefiting from the land, including community conservancies, Indigenous-managed conservation areas and land-use zoning.”

“The most important thing to do is figure out which conservation system is the best option for a local setting based on social environments, land uses, development needs, the species you are trying to protect and more,” he added.  

Read the full story here.

Mary Kate McCoy is a staff writer at Conservation International. Want to read more stories like this? Sign up for email updates. Also, please consider supporting our critical work.

 

Learn more

Hear directly from Conservation International employees on the ground in Australia.

 

References

  1. Conservation International (2021, November). Irrecoverable Carbon. Retrieved January 2025, from https://www.conservation.org/projects/irrecoverable-carbon
  2. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. (2024). Table 8a: Total, threatened, and EX & EW endemic species in each country [Fact sheet]. https://www.iucnredlist.org/resources/summary-statistics#Summary%20Tables
  3. 30x30 SkyTruth. (2024, October). Marine Conservation Coverage. https://30x30.skytruth.org/progress-tracker?layers=6,144,7,145&settings=%7B%2522bbox%2522:%5B-167.96,-61.4,167.96,61.4%5D,%2522labels%2522:true%7D