The 2026 Victorian fires – which tragically claimed one life, burned over 400,000 hectares, and destroyed 900 buildings, including at least 250 homes – were driven by record heat and extreme fire conditions.1 As this submission will demonstrate, the threat of catastrophic fire is being compounded by climate change and invasive species, which are making Australian fires increasingly dangerous to our communities, environment, and economy. The Invasive Species Council welcomes the opportunity to present this submission on these critical issues and to offer practical recommendations for addressing them.
Fires have been a constant feature of the Australian landscape, but their often positive ecological role is being fundamentally disrupted. The Invasive Species Council’s submission outlines the real risks posed through the often synergistic threats of climate change, bushfires and invasive species: from buffel grass creating a dangerous ‘grass-fire cycle’ that fuels hotter, faster fires, to feral predators like cats and foxes capitalising on burnt landscapes to decimate vulnerable native wildlife. Ignoring these compounding threats will undermine Victoria’s capacity for long-term ecological and community resilience.