The Forum > Article Comments > Australia from 1949 and into the future > Comments
Australia from 1949 and into the future : Comments
By Brendan Nelson, published 22/4/2005Brendan Nelson examines Australia's place in the present and the future.
- Pages:
-
- Page 1
-
- All
- Pages:
-
- Page 1
-
- All
It paints a forlorn and bleak future.
That is assuming, probably correctly, that this political document charts the course for Australia for many years ahead.
One of the great pities in relation to it is the fact that, had it been prepared by an opposite number of his in the Australian Labor Party, there would have been far too little difference in fundamental philosophy.
Like the curate's egg, it is not all bad. But mostly so. There are so many contestable (to be polite) statements, conclusions, and omissions that it is hard to know where to start. But, to respect response limits, it might be appropriate to concentrate on one: the omission of concern for population pressure in Australia.
It is not contestible that the Australian continent's capability to provide the necessities for comfortably civilised society is rapidly going down the gurgler. Evidence is not in short supply: State of the Environment Reports; the Land and Water Audit; continuing information relating to salinity problems almost everywhere; and to the Murray-Darling Basin problems; Pressures on the eastern seaboard, and upon the south-west corner of Western Australia. There are heaps more, perhaps most disturbing is predicted increase of dessication. And the efforts to address them are running slow behind the rapidly advancing problems.
We are not like Singapore. We depend upon our own environment to sustain our people, wherever they live. Sydney imports grain, vegetables, and meat, from between Balranald and Dubbo - and beyond; energy and building materials from outside city limits. The cities are helping to beggar the bush.
Yet the retail and housing sectors tremble at the thought of consumption decline. And the government provides more consumers by increasing the immigration program; even though last year population was increasing at the rate of a million per four years. And the program is not helping the desperate in UN refugee camps throughout the world - but poaching trained professionals from overseas.
Into the future indeed!