Australia is overrun by invasive species that hunt, trample, disease and outcompete native wildlife. They degrade ecosystems, erode Indigenous culture, cost farmers many billions of dollars a year, sabotage climate goals by fueling intense fires, endanger public health, and damage the environmental values underpinning our nature tourism industry. The annual measurable cost of invasive species already exceeds $24.5 billion (a CSIRO compilation of published costs).
The funding proposals in this submission – to eliminate and suppress invasive species – would deliver benefits that meet all the priorities articulated by the Treasurer in his National Press Club address.
They will drive methodical, collaborative, ambitious reforms for nature – that are also of enormous benefit for people. They will ensure a better standard of living for current and future generations.
Living with fire ants would mean painful, sometimes deadly, encounters with stinging swarms; dead pets; billions in annual costs. Eradicating them should therefore be a standard-of-living, sustainability and productivity imperative for multiple government agencies. The same is true for rabbits, which will ravage landscapes and farm incomes unless we re-invest in biocontrol efficacy.
Nothing could be more progressive and patriotic than saving Australian wildlife from extinction and protecting precious places such as national parks and islands from exotic invaders. To improve our capacity to do all this, we need to invest in Australians’ talent for solving difficult problems by supporting collaborative and ambitious innovation from lab to landscape.

Some proposals build on existing programs of proven effectiveness – a new round of the flagship Saving Native Species program is essential to meet government targets. Others propose new programs, recognising that environmental spending, including on invasive species, has been far too low for far too long.
This submission is guided by 5 principles for effective environmental investments, focused on ensuring that public money is invested wisely to achieve the most beneficial long-term outcomes.