Sunday, 19 August 2018
The first unintended consequence of Malcolm Turnbull's perverse $487M grant to the small Great Barrier Reef Foundation surfaces
The
Sydney Morning Herald,
15 August 2018:
The Turnbull
government's claim its $444 million grant to the Great Barrier Reef Foundation
would spur private donations has been disputed by a leading coral scientist who
says funding for his own venture has dried up in the wake of the cash splash.
Charlie Veron, a marine
biologist dubbed "the godfather of coral" for discovering more than
one-fifth the world's coral species, said US donors to his Corals of the World website
dropped plans to donate $60,000 once they saw "the Australian government
was going to pour a fortune" into reef projects.
"My source of
funding has completely stopped," Dr Veron said.
Dr Veron said his
website, a decade in the making, would be crucial for any future recovery work
on the reef, such as the $100 million reef restoration and adaptation program
that will now be under the foundation's stewardship.
Dr Veron said he met
last week the foundation head, Anna Marsden, who said she "didn't have any
money that could go" to his project despite it needing $200,000, or
one-quarter of 1 per cent of the government's largesse, to survive.
"The whole thing is
just a mystery to me," he said. "It's a drop in the bucket if ever
there was one."....
A
foundation spokeswoman said Dr Veron had been one of "a number of
organisations [that] have expressed an interest" in seeking funds.
"At a recent
meeting, we advised Dr Veron that a process was being established to consider
proposals under the Reef Trust Partnership," she said. "We will
consider proposals for funding once the governance and advisory framework is
established and a process for applications has been approved."
Fairfax Media approached
Josh Frydenberg, the environment and energy minister, for comment.
"Perverse outcomes
are going to be part of a process that wasn't thought through," Tony
Burke, Labor's environment spokesman, said. "The due diligence [into the
Foundation before the grant was made] was a joke."
Mr Burke said it was
possible that less private funding would available for reef projects than
before as a result of "decision making with almost no formal
process".
The foundation
spokeswoman said that the non-profit will continue to make the raising of
private funds "a focus and responsibility, so we can amplify the impact of
the government’s investment".....
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