More parks, please

| February 12, 2025

New research shows that three-quarters of Australians support the establishment of new national parks to protect natural and cultural values, and only 5% are opposed to establishing new parks.

Monash University’s BehaviourWorks Australia conducted the research for the Biodiversity Council. It asked 3,500 people if they support the establishment of new national parks.

The study found that per every 100 people in the Australian community, 72 are in favour of new national parks and only 5 are against them. A further 23 per cent of people identified as neither supporting nor opposing.

The results show that an angry backlash on social media against a beer maker for supporting national parks is at odds with the views held by the vast majority of the community.

Carlton and United Breweries, the maker of Great Northern beer, was aggressively attacked on social media for launching a fundraising campaign for national parks, and subsequently cancelled the campaign.

The people behind the attack characterised national parks as ‘woke’ and shared videos of driving over Great Northern beer cans with four-wheel drives and smashing them with bats.

People opposing national parks say they are an attempt to lock people out of the bush and restrict their ability to freely shoot, four-wheel drive, take dogs, and collect wood in state forests.

In contrast, supporters of national parks value their role in conservation and the higher level of community infrastructure available, such as toilets, picnic areas, accessible walking tracks and signage.

Despite the social media attack on Carlton and United Breweries, the new research shows that only a very small proportion of the population hold anti-national-park views.

Biodiversity Council Lead Councillor Professor Liam Smith from Monash University said that understanding the community’s views on national parks is of keen interest because Australian governments have committed to increasing the amount of land in conservation areas.

“In response to the biodiversity loss crisis, Australia has joined other countries in committing to increase the amount of land in conservation areas to 30 per cent of the country by 2030.

“Meeting that target will require increasing the existing amount of conservation areas by 26 per cent.

“Our results show that the vast majority of Australians support establishing new national parks.

“In fact, Australians are 14 times more likely to support new national parks than to oppose them. This should give governments the confidence to progress new parks.

“As this is an election year, we also examined whether support varied with voting patterns. We found that people are far more likely to support new national parks than to oppose them, no matter who they vote for.

“National Party and One Nation voters had lower levels of support than other parties, but support was still high among those groups, with people six-times more likely to support new national parks than to oppose them.”

Participants in the survey were selected to fairly represent the range of ages, genders, regions and urban and rural areas in the Australian community in line with Australian Bureau of Statistics census data.

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