On 3 July
2018 Liberal MP for Warringah and former sacked Australian prime minister Tony Abbott gave the 2018 Bob Carter
Commemorative Lecture titled “Time
to pull out of Paris” at an Australian Environment Foundation event
at CQ Functions in Melbourne.
So who and
what is the Australian Environment Foundation
(AEF)?
AEF is registered as a charity and its current board comprises:
AEF is registered as a charity and its current board comprises:
BOSTOCK, THOMAS Chairperson
HILL, JOANNA Director
MORAN, ALAN Director
OXLEY, ALAN Director
QUIRK, THOMAS Director
RAE, JEFFREY Director
RHEESE, WILLIAM Director
RIDD, PETER Director
Its address is 19 Robinson Rd, Hawthorn, VIC 3122.
According to the Australian Business Register as at 4 July 2018, AEF business names are Murray Darling Alliance, Listentous and Australian Climate Science Coalition and its trading name is Australian Environment Foundation Ltd.
The foundation has no employees and is allegedly run by up to 10 volunteers.
AEF has no income except donations and in the 2016 financial year these donations totalled $1,175.
The AEF reported to the charity commission that its charity work consisted of updating the AEF website, sending out regular newsletters to AEF members on current environment issues, and on consequent benefits or costs of these issues, as well as holding public meeting with highly qualified speakers. However, although it spent $8,929 on these activities in 2013-14, it spent a mere $667 in 2014-15 and no money at all in 2015-16.
One has to suspect that the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) may now be picking up the tab for any outlays on newsletters, given AEF's close association with this far-right pressure group.
Venue hire and other expenses related to its "public meetings" appear to be picked up by corporate sponsors such as Bayer Crop Science and Monsanto in the past.
Venue hire and other expenses related to its "public meetings" appear to be picked up by corporate sponsors such as Bayer Crop Science and Monsanto in the past.
The original AEF website can be found at https://web.archive.org/web/20170620125239/http://aefweb.info/ where its right wing ratbaggery was on full view.
According to
the latest version of its website:
The Australian
Environment Foundation (AEF) is a non-profit, membership-based
organisation that seeks to protect the environment, while preserving the rule
of law, property rights, and the freedom of the individual.
We take an
evidence-based, solution-focused approach to environmental
issues.
While it may be true
that "We are all environmentalists now", the great majority of
Australians have little or no say in the environmental policies being put to
governments – federal, state or local. These policies are almost
exclusively the domain of a tight network of conservation groups ensuring one
view, and one view only, is put forward.
The AEF is a different
kind of environment group, caring for both Australia &
Australians.
So what is
this difference it speaks about?
Here is part
of the answer.
Source
Watch as at 4
July 2018:
The Australian
Environment Foundation is a front
group founded by the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA),
a conservative Melbourne-based think
tank.
The director of the
environment unit of the IPA, Jennifer Marohasy was the founding
Chairwoman and is listed as a Director in the organisation's documents with the
Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC). Mahorasy is also the
listed registrant of the group's website, although the address and phone number
for the website registration are identical to the address and phone number for
the Victorian office of the logging industry front
group, Timber Communities Australia. [1] [2]
In July 2005, the month
after AEF's official launch, it was announced that former television
celebrity Don Burke had been appointed chairman. [3]
ASIC documents also
listed Mike Nahan, the former Executive Director of the IPA, as
one of the other founding directors. The documents also listed AEF's registered
place of business as the IPA office. (Nahan was ED of the IPA until
mid-2005). Pdf copy of ASIC
registration - 11kb
In a column by Nahan in
the Herald-Sun, he described AEF as "pro-biotechnology, pro-nuclear
power, pro-modern farming, pro-economic growth, pro-business and
pro-environment." [4]
AEF managed to jump the
queue for Deductible Gift Recipient (DGR) Status awarded to not for profit
charities who’s purpose is to help save the environment. This status was
awarded by the Department of Environment and Heritage (DEH) and approved by the
Federal Liberal Environment Minister. DGR Status entitles donors to a tax
deduction at their marginal rate of tax for every dollar donated. The head of
the AEF admitted that it is a group set up to protect timber interests and stop
resources being taken away from the industry in an interview on ABC
Radio station Triple J's Hack program.
History
The AEF was formally
launched on World Environment Day (June 5 2005) in the northern New South Wales
town of Tenterfield. "This new group will be vastly different to the
established environment organisations that have had the ear of governments for
some time. The AEF’s focus will be on making decisions based on science and
what is good for both the environment and for people," the group stated in
its press release.[5]
The formation of the AEF
was first mooted at the 'The Institute of Public
Affairs Eureka Forum' organised in December 2004 by the Institute of Public Affairs.
The Australian Environment
Foundation was registered by Australian Securities and Investment Commission
(ASIC)as a business in February, 2005. Its formation was also announced during
the May 2005 Annual conference in Launceston of Timber Communities Australia, a timber
industry front group.
AEF was officially
launched on World Environment Day, 5th June, 2005. Jennifer Marohasy, who is the IPA's environment
director, is a key player. On her blog Marohasy boasted that "The
Australian Environment Foundation (AEF) has just formed and embraced the
following 6 values based on my five principles." [6]
Reporting on the AEF's
launch, the Melbourne broadsheet newspaper, 'The Age' reported that Marohasy is
the group’s chairwoman. "Dr Marohasy said she acted as the group's leader
as an individual and not part of the IPA," the Age reported. [7]
The launch was covered
on Michael Duffy's conservative ABC radio show,
‘Counterpoint’ on the 6th of June in a story called ‘Putting People First’.
Ironically, this phrase was the name of a (now defunct) wise-use group that operated in the US. The
piece is on the ABC website. [8]
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| via @simonahac, 3 July 2018
According to one of the original AEF directors Max Rheese; AEF and IPA members
share common values.
The AEF inaugural board members were drawn from the Institute of Public Affairs, Landholders Institute, Timber Communities Australia and the Bush Users Group.
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