The koala calls the North Coast forests of NSW its home. Coastal
sprawl and deforestation fragment and thin their habitat. The path to
the next yummy canopy becomes ever longer and more dangerous.
Settlers and their industry demand roads that bulldoze their way through
forests 'dripping with koalas'. Many animals are injured and killed by motorists in this process. Their packs of roaming dogs hunt and maul the
threatened species. Record-breaking temperatures, "extreme weather events, such as killer heat waves, devastating droughts and intense, flooding rains" unleashed by us will not enhance the life of the koala or any other being.
This
weekend it is time again to roar racing cars through Coffs Coast
subtropical hinterland. The wonder of 'sustainable' motor racing will
take place on forest roads between the Nambucca and the Orara river
valleys. Motor 'sport' "is a
glorious, lovely thing, all noise and violence and sliding sideways
between trees at 100 mph." (source) Dust and noise pollution is generated in abundance.
1400 people donate their free labour to showcase this motor spectacle over four days. Wardens "will use airhorns to scare" the marsupials up the trees. "The numbers of animals that get run over are very low" we are told. (source)
"Population numbers on the East Coast fell by 40% between 1990 and 2010,
and in other areas like the Pilliga Forest, the population has crashed
by 70% in 10 years." (source)
According to the criteria of the Office of Environment and Heritage, NSW this event does not seem to constitute an 'activity to assist a threatened species'.
Koala, threatened species profile
Car ploughs into spectators at Rally Championship
Staging Car Races in Nine State Forests of NSW 2014
Celebrating Fossil Fuel Culture on Forest Roads 2013
Update:
Racing drivers generated a lot of dust in a landscape cracked by drought. They complained that Valla was too hard “to navigate due to excessive dust and inadequate lighting.” Maybe they will refrain from driving with ‘impaired vision’. 16.09.2015
WRC on collision course in forest habitat : Norwegian rally driver, Mads Østberg was admitted to hospital after a collision with a logging truck. FOUR crashes during September's World Rally Championships have sparked calls for a re-think of next year's event. 17.10.2015 coffs coast advocate
Image:
Koala, Brehm's Life of Animals
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