Will the North Coast of NSW become such an industrial plastic wrapped landscape?
This ‘country’ has had 229 years of 
extractive industries. The extraction and export of natural resources in colonial times and now leads to conflicts with residential areas.
Small scale rural landholdings populate the coast and the hinterland. The commons protects National Parks and reserves to afford biodiversity a home. The interface of nature reserves, human settlement and industrial production is that of conflict. “Residents and council do not know about a blueberry farm development until they are there”. (
source)
The high rainfall area has been also ‘discovered’ by multinational agribusiness. Once, some of the Coffs Harbour area was know as the ‘Big Banana’, it seems now the North Coast is being developed into the BIG BLUEBERRY.
The cash crop is grown for 
export. After the land is cleared (
image) and all Australian flora and fauna have been made homeless, the crops are grown with agri-chemicals (
pesticide, fungicide etc). Runoff impacts the surrounding areas. The berries and the incorporated water and soil are sent overseas. The legacy remains.
Increased machine noise and 
traffic impact on residents and remaining 
wildlife.
The promise of ‘
jobs’ reads more like ’
The Grapes of Wrath’. It has been found that 
backpackers and non-English speaking background workers from o.s. are underpaid and 
exploited. (
here, 
here, 
here)
The farm workers go, but residents are stuck in a neighbourhood that is becoming an industrial site. The conflict between locals and large corporate agribusiness interests needs attention by the regulatory bodies.
As coastal urbanisation increases, the space and resources shrink. The horticultural industry expands in 
Bellingen, Boambee Valley, Coffs Coast, 
Corindi, 
Crossmaglen, 
Woolgoolga, 
Repton, Valla, Valery and 
Nambucca. At 
Bruxner Park the views towards Coffs Harbour and the ocean are starting to look like the above 
plastic netting landscape, white plastic nets are gobbling up the green coastal landscape.
The 21st century could offer a chance to refrain from treating ‘country’ as a BIG QUARRY. A future beyond extraction and exploitation. Care for the commons, the water bodies, soil and biodiversity.
Authorities can regulate and monitor ‘land use’ and prevent abuse in the interest of all.
Quotes:
- A meeting at the CWA on Monday, March 13 at 7pm
“Intensive Horticulture is creeping into the Bellinger Valley by stealth and residents across the Shire will gather to discuss largely
 unmonitored and unregulated development of intensive horticulture as a new plantation has now become evident to worried neighbours from Valery,” Bellingen Environment Centre spokesperson Caroline Joseph said. (
source)
- Valla: “There is 
no visual flow in Deep Creek and still pumping continues" (
source)
- Repton: “A key feature of the village is the 
natural setting, surrounded by the Bongil Bongil National Park and Pine Creek State Forest. The conversion of land zoned R5 to provide for an agricultural development is wholly at odds with the primary objective of the zone.”
“
Thirty-Two separate chemicals are listed in the NSW Department of Primary Industry’s Blueberry Plant protection Guide 2015-2016 for use on blueberries in NSW to control disease and pests...Of the 32 chemicals approved one third of the chemicals are identified as likely to have a long-lasting, negative off-target impact … most disturbing is that pesticides can have both immediate (acute) effects and long term (chronic) effects on the health of people who are exposed to them. ... (The) main concern is 
spray drift over to nearby houses whose only 
water is collected in tanks and consequently we will drink.” (
source)
- Woolgoolga: “The development of a blueberry farm near his property further west on Newmans Rd resulted in a 
reduction of kangaroos in that area.” (
source)
Links:
Repton resistance  Bellingen Courier, 29.11.2015 
Australian agriculture safeguarding against climate change. 
Structures for larger-scale growers to 
cover whole paddocks or orchards.
 abc 04.03.2017
Updates:
 
 
Calls for royal commission as report details allegations blueberry farmers pay workers $3 an hour 
3.12.2020
 Concerned residents want blueberry farms to need a DA 
“We were shocked to learn that there is no monitoring or compliance required at a local (council) level to clear privately owned,forested land or to establish intensive horticulture plantations and that this concern about 
unregulated development is being shared across the region,” Bellingen Environment Centre’s Caroline Joseph said... 
Pine Creek is dying ..." 
Bellingen Courier, 14.03.2017
Deregulate, deregulate - "Productivity Commission recommends a wide slash of farm red tape, except biosecurity and food safety. It also recommends 
agricultural land should be used for its highest value, even if that means resource development." 
abc rural 29.03.2017 
"Europe's Dirty Little Secret: Moroccan Slaves and a 'Sea of Plastic' " or 
landscapes a perennial plastic greenhouses, 
Ecowatch 2015 
Marine scientists fingerprint sources of 
nitrogen on the Coffs coast. Nearly all creeks with agriculture (blueberry, macadamia) and urban land use have (sewage) water quality issues. 
Bellingen Courier, 16.09.2020 
Images:
Greenhouses of the Campo de Dalías, Almería Province, Spain , 
NASA’s Earth Observatory
Organic blueberries
The March of Business, Bellingen graffiti 
  
More images:
Mar del Plastico, Bernhard Lang