News | National
31 Mar 2025 13:32
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    The 2025 federal budget fails the millions of voters who want action on Australia’s struggling environment

    As the federal election looms, Labor is running out of time to show it cares about Australia’s precious natural environment.

    Timothy Neal, Senior lecturer in Economics / Institute for Climate Risk and Response, UNSW Sydney
    The Conversation


    Commentators have branded last night’s federal budget as an attempt to win over typical Australian voters concerned about the cost of living, ahead of what is expected to be a tightly fought federal election.

    The budget’s big-ticket items included tax cuts and energy bill relief, plus measures to make childcare and healthcare cheaper.

    There was little in the budget dedicated to stemming Australia’s environmental crises. Given this, one might assume the average voter cares little for action on conservation and curbing climate change. But is this true?

    Polling suggests the clear answer is “no”. Voters consistently say they want more government action on both conservation and climate change. As the federal election looms, Labor is running out of time to show it cares about Australia’s precious natural environment.

    What environmental spending was in the budget?

    The main spending on the environment in last night’s budget had been announced in the weeks before. It includes:

    These measures are welcome. However, the overall environment spending is inadequate, given the scale of the challenges Australia faces.

    Australia’s protected areas, such as national parks, have suffered decades of poor funding, and the federal budget has not rectified this. It means these sensitive natural places will remain vulnerable to harms such as invasive species and bushfires.

    More broadly, Australia is failing to stem the drivers of biodiversity loss, such as land clearing and climate change. This means more native species become threatened with extinction each year.

    Experts say conserving Australia’s threatened species would cost an extra $2 billion a year. Clearly, the federal budget spending of an extra $50 million a year falls well short of this.

    And global greenhouse gas emissions continue to increase. This contributes to ever-worsening climate change, bringing heatwaves, more extreme fires, more variable rainfall and rising seas.

    Contrary to what the federal budget priorities might suggest, Australians are concerned about these issues.

    What does the average voter think about the environment?

    Results from reputable polling provide insight into what the average voters want when it comes to environmental policy and spending.

    When it comes to conservation, the evidence is clear. Polling by YouGov in October last year (commissioned by two environment groups) estimated that 70% of Australians think the Labor government should do more to “protect and restore nature”. The vast majority of voters (86%) supported stronger national nature laws.

    Essential Research polling in October 2023 found 53% of voters think the government is not doing enough to preserve endangered species. About the same proportion said more government action was needed to preserve native forests, and oceans and rivers.

    On climate change, the average voter appears to have views significantly out of step with both major parties. The Australia Institute’s Climate of the Nation report last year found 50% of voters believed the government was not doing enough to prepare for and adapt to climate impacts.

    The report also found 50% of voters supported a moratorium on new coal mines in Australia, 69% support charging companies a levy for each tonne of carbon pollution they emit, and 69% are concerned about climate change.

    Also in 2024, a Lowy Institute poll found 57% of Australians supported the statement that “global warming is a serious and pressing problem, and that we should take steps now to mitigate it even if it involves significant costs”.

    There’s a caveat here. As the cost-of-living crisis has worsened, the issue has edged out all others in terms of voter concerns at the upcoming election.

    For example, in January this year, Roy Morgan polling found 57% of voters considered cost of living one of their top-three issues of concern. Only 23% considered global warming a top-three issue.

    However, global warming was still more of a concern for voters than managing the economy (22%), keeping interest rates down (19%) and reducing taxes (15%). It was tied with reducing crime (23%).

    It’s also important to note that climate change and cost-of-living pressures are not separate issues. Research suggests that as climate change worsens, it will cause inflation to worsen.

    Labor’s unmet election promises

    The singular focus on the cost of living in last night’s federal budget means environmental spending has been neglected.

    Context matters here. Labor has utterly failed to deliver its 2022 election promise to rewrite federal environmental protection laws and create an environmental protection agency.

    The government could have used this budget to repair its environmental credentials going into the next election – but it didn’t. The many voters concerned about the environment might well wonder if Labor considers the environment a policy priority at all.

    The upcoming election result may show whether minor parties and independents better reflect the Australian electorate’s views on this important issue.

    The Conversation

    Timothy Neal does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     31 Mar: The Gore community's mourning a well-respected businessman who died in a plane crash in Otago
     31 Mar: Art for art’s sake? How NZ’s cultural organisations can maintain integrity and still make money
     31 Mar: Police struck a lucky chord in Auckland's Orakei yesterday - finding four firearms in a guitar case
     31 Mar: Uncertainty and pessimism abound. Will fear be enough to push Dutton into office?
     31 Mar: A person's died in a single-vehicle crash on Kawhia Road in Waikato's Oparau last night
     31 Mar: The battle for Khartoum: tracking Sudan’s war over two years
     31 Mar: An update on the state-of-play for Christchurch's historic Princess Margaret Hospital
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    More of New Zealand's top rugby talent is set to follow in Damian McKenzie's footsteps in inking contract extensions to stay on Kiwi shores More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    A recovery in red meat prices has come too late to aid Silver Fern Farms - whose revenue fell 144-million-dollars last year More...



     Today's News

    Business:
    A recovery in red meat prices has come too late to aid Silver Fern Farms - whose revenue fell 144-million-dollars last year 13:27

    Entertainment:
    Holly Madison has split from Zak Bagans "for good" 13:18

    Business:
    The Gore community's mourning a well-respected businessman who died in a plane crash in Otago 13:07

    Rugby League:
    Lydia Ko last-ditch attempt to get into a share of the lead late at the LPGA's event in Arizona has only narrowly failed 13:07

    National:
    Art for art’s sake? How NZ’s cultural organisations can maintain integrity and still make money 13:07

    Entertainment:
    Selena Gomez has asked Martin Short to give a speech at her wedding 12:48

    Rugby:
    More of New Zealand's top rugby talent is set to follow in Damian McKenzie's footsteps in inking contract extensions to stay on Kiwi shores 12:47

    Business:
    The Reserve Bank's announced it'll review its capital requirements, and assess them against regimes in other countries 12:37

    Law and Order:
    Police struck a lucky chord in Auckland's Orakei yesterday - finding four firearms in a guitar case 12:27

    Entertainment:
    Selena Quintanilla's killer has been denied early release from prison 12:18


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd