Skip navigation

Budget boost for threatened wildlife, but underlying habitat destruction unchecked

MEDIA RELEASE  

23 June 2026 

New funding to help prevent the extinction of threatened and endangered wildlife in the budget is a much-needed investment, but stopping critical habitat destruction in the first place should be the priority, according to the Nature Conservation Council of New South Wales (NCC). 

Today, NSW Treasurer Daniel Mookhey announced the NSW Budget 2026-27, including threatened species protection and funding to upgrade and repair infrastructure in NSW National Parks.  

The state’s leading environmental advocacy organisation, the NCC, says any increased spending for wildlife and protected areas is welcomed, but funding for nature needs to go further and preventing habitat destruction must be put on the priority list. 

Quotes attributed to NCC CEO Jacqui Mumford: 

“The $221 million to deliver a new era of threatened species protection is a commendable investment in conservation. 

This funding boost reflects the huge and growing challenge to save our beloved biodiversity, with over one thousand species now threatened with extinction in NSW. 

"But while funding feral animal control, landscape restoration, weeding and tree planting is good, it must be underpinned by stronger laws because broadscale habitat clearing and forest logging is out of control.

“The obvious place to start protecting habitat is to end native forest logging, an industry so unviable it cost the budget $32m in subsidies last year. 

"The NSW Government also needs to address the laws that have allowed land clearing to double over the past decade, otherwise our native species don’t stand a chance. 

“We welcome any money toward restoring landscapes for at-risk species, but what we really want to see is protection of these landscapes before they are destroyed.  

“An end to native forest logging and law reform to rein in broadscale habitat clearing is what is truly needed to protect our growing list of threatened species in NSW. 

“We know habitat clearing is the biggest threat to biodiversity loss in NSW, and yet it remains out of control. 

“Prevention is better than a cure.” 

Other measures: 

  • The lion's share of the $561m Transport Affordability Package is unfortunately directed to private vehicles, while public transport users miss out on most of the funding, despite the fare freeze.  

  • The $6.5bn electric bus and depot funding shows the government is serious about reaching its targets to electrify NSW’s bus fleet (by 2035 in Sydney and 2050 statewide). 

  • The Home Energy Saver scheme is a great help for households to cut energy bills and help the climate. Energy standards for rental properties remains a crucial gap. 

  • Continued funding to roll out the state’s renewable energy zones is welcome, with another $225m released from the rolling $2.5bn Transmission Acceleration Facility helping to meet climate targets, keep the lights on, and bring down electricity prices as coal power stations retire. 

ENDS 

Media contact: Ellie Chamberlain 
[email protected] (02) 9516 0135 

Spokespeople available on request. 

Continue Reading

Read More

New analysis proves habitat clearing laws need urgent reform

June 18, 2026

MEDIA RELEASE June 18, 2026  A new report by Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists, released this morning, has confirmed what we already know: Habitat clearing in NSW has spiralled since changes to the law in 2017. Nature Conservation Council of NSW (NCC) says the group’s analysis highlights the failure of our current nature laws and the...

Read more

NSW fails key test to protect communities from climate harm from dirty coal

June 12, 2026

MEDIA RELEASE  June 12, 2026 The Nature Conservation Council of NSW (NCC) is disappointed the NSW government has failed to rule out mega-polluting coal mine expansions in its response to a key Net Zero Commission report, leaving the door open to assessment of the biggest expansion in the state’s history. The NSW Government response to the Net Zero...

Read more