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Recent environmental cases in Australia

Two recent cases involving environmental actions provide some guidance on how the law and Ministerial decision making can apply.  


Recently two judicial review proceedings were dismissed by the Federal Court. The case was brought by Environmental Justice Australia and has been called the Living Wonders case. The case sought to challenge the Federal Environment Minister’s failure to adequately consider climate change risk when assessing two coal mine expansions under s78 of the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999.  

Recent environmental cases in Australia

Two recent cases involving environmental actions provide some guidance on how the law and Ministerial decision making can apply.    

Living Wonders Case

Recently two judicial review proceedings were dismissed by the Federal Court. The case was brought by Environmental Justice Australia and has been called the Living Wonders case. The case sought to challenge the Federal Environment Minister’s failure to adequately consider climate change risk when assessing two coal mine expansions under s78 of the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999.  

The Minister received 19 requests to reconsider the first stage assessment of coal gas proposals under the Act for climate and environmental reasons. This was accompanied by a long list of scientific evidence on both the direct and indirect impacts of climate change on Matters of National and Environmental Significance. The Minister did reconsider the requests and opened them to public comment and submissions. Following this review the Minister approved three of the projects on the basis that the climate harms posed by those mines did not change her risk assessment under the Act. This decision was then challenged in the Federal Court with Environmental Justice Australia claiming the Minister didn’t consider the climate and environmental risk of the mines. 

While the Minister didn’t dispute that the extraction and burning of coal have contributed to climate change, they argued that it was legally within her powers to make this decision. 

In his ruling, McElwaine J ruled that the Minister lawfully weighed and assessed the evidence of the impacts of coal and gas projects on climate change but didn’t have to take it into account when assessing the risks of the proposed mines. Essentially, this means that the Minister for Environment doesn’t need to consider climate change when assessing new coal and gas projects. While McElwaine J did acknowledge the public interest, he said it was only up to the Court to interpret the law rather than consider the merits of the Minister’s decision. 

This case leaves open the possibility of further new mines being approved despite the risk of climate change, however the government has indicated that they may seek to amend the Act in the future. 

Vista case

Under the Victorian Environment Protection Act 2017 there is a General Environmental Duty (GED) that requires a person engaging in an activity that may give rise to risks of harm to human health or the environment from pollution or waste to minimise those risks so far as reasonably practicable. The GED was the subject of the recent case between Vista Estate Pty Ltd (Vista) and the Environmental Protection Authority (EPA). 

The EPA argued that Vista had breached its GED as well as specific environmental duties under s25 of the Act. Vista sought to strike out some of the Statement of Claim on the basis that the EPA hadn’t specifically addressed the matters set out under s6(2) of the Act including:

  • The likelihood of those risks eventuating
  • The degree of harm that would result if those risks eventuated
  • What the person concerned knows, or ought reasonably to know, about the harm or risks of harm and any ways of eliminating or reducing those risks
  • The availability and suitability of ways to eliminate or reduce those risks 
  • The cost of eliminating or reducing those risks. 

However, the EPA argued that s6(2) was an explanatory function and didn’t need to be specifically addressed to prove a breach of the GED and the Supreme Court agreed. The Court also considered whether case law relating to occupational health and safety legislation applied to the Act and this was rejected. That case law required authorities to address specific details or requirements of duties that had been alleged to be in breach.  

The Supreme Court also differentiated between criminal liability under occupational health and safety legislation and civil declaratory relief and penalty under the Act, where the level of specificity required is governed by the Rules of the Court and civil pleading requirements. 

This case provides significant clarity on pleading and defending breaches of the Act and the GED more specifically. 

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