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Hansard
- Start of Business
- FAMILY LAW AMENDMENT (DE FACTO FINANCIAL MATTERS AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2008
- TELECOMMUNICATIONS INTERCEPTION LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2008
- COMMITTEES
- PROTECTION OF THE SEA LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2008
- FAMILIES, HOUSING, COMMUNITY SERVICES AND INDIGENOUS AFFAIRS AND OTHER LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (2008 BUDGET AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2008
- GREAT BARRIER REEF MARINE PARK AND OTHER LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2008
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- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
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QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
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Fuel Prices
(Truss, Warren, MP, Burke, Tony, MP) -
Climate Change
(Raguse, Brett, MP, Albanese, Anthony, MP) -
Climate Change
(Marino, Nola, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Climate Change
(Campbell, Jodie, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Budget Surplus
(Dutton, Peter, MP, Tanner, Lindsay, MP) -
Budget Surplus
(Bradbury, David, MP, Swan, Wayne, MP)
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Fuel Prices
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
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QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
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Alcopops
(Hockey, Joe, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Budget
(Jackson, Sharryn, MP, Macklin, Jenny, MP) -
Qantas
(Bishop, Julie, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Budget
(Symon, Mike, MP, Tanner, Lindsay, MP) -
Qantas
(Bishop, Julie, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Economy
(Burke, Anna, MP, Bowen, Chris, MP) -
Fuel Prices
(Windsor, Antony, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Skills Shortage
(Grierson, Sharon, MP, O’Connor, Brendan, MP) -
Murray-Darling
River Sysem
(Nelson, Dr Brendan, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Reform Agenda
(Rishworth, Amanda, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP)
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Alcopops
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DEFENCE HOME OWNERSHIP ASSISTANCE SCHEME BILL 2008
DEFENCE HOME OWNERSHIP ASSISTANCE SCHEME (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 2008
TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (PERSONAL INCOME TAX REDUCTION) BILL 2008
INCOME TAX (MANAGED INVESTMENT TRUST TRANSITIONAL) BILL 2008
INCOME TAX (MANAGED INVESTMENT TRUST WITHHOLDING TAX) BILL 2008
TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (ELECTION COMMITMENTS NO. 1) BILL 2008
EXPORT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS AMENDMENT BILL 2008
SUPERANNUATION LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (TRUSTEE BOARD AND OTHER MEASURES) (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 2008 -
PASSENGER MOVEMENT CHARGE AMENDMENT BILL 2008
TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (BUDGET MEASURES) BILL 2008 - COMMUNICATIONS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (MISCELLANEOUS MEASURES) BILL 2008
- STATUTE LAW REVISION BILL 2008
- GREAT BARRIER REEF MARINE PARK AND OTHER LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2008
- FAMILIES, HOUSING, COMMUNITY SERVICES AND INDIGENOUS AFFAIRS AND OTHER LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (2008 BUDGET AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2008
- GREAT BARRIER REEF MARINE PARK AND OTHER LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2008
- ADJOURNMENT
- Adjournment
- NOTICES
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Main Committee
- Start of Business
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STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS
- Herbert Electorate: BHP Billiton
- Port Adelaide Electorate: Mawson Lakes School
- Mr Arthur Edward Allenby Viney OAM
- Dobell Electorate: Water
- Cook Electorate: Endeavour Sports High School
- Solomon Electorate: Greek Glenti Festival
- Moncrieff Electorate: Gold Coast Infrastructure
- Bonner Electorate: Disability Support
- McMillan Electorate: Desalination Plant
- Blaxland Electorate: Homelessness
- MR MILIVOJ EMIL (MISHA) LAJOVIC
- COMMUNICATIONS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (MISCELLANEOUS MEASURES) BILL 2008
- STATUTE LAW REVISION BILL 2008
- COMMITTEES
- MRS JANE MCGRATH
- Adjournment
Page: 5998
Mr PERRETT (11:19 AM)
—I am honoured to follow the member for Hume in speaking to this report—More than honey: the future of the Australian honey bee and pollination industries. I will acknowledge up-front his work and his passion in this area. I do not get to go to the movies much anymore—to see movies that I want to see, anyway—but earlier this year I took my three-year-old son to see Jerry Seinfeld’s foray into animation called the Bee Movie. Not having been in the previous parliament, the Bee Movie is probably not the best place to start doing research for this, but I did go along—
Mr Schultz
—My grandsons have told me I have to go and see it.
Mr PERRETT
—You must see it, Member for Hume. I recommend that you go and see it. Obviously, a movie theatre filled with screaming kids is not the place one would expect to find insight for political commentary, but this children’s movie, the Bee Movie, opened my eyes to a world without bees. When Barry the Bee discovers that humans are stealing honey from the bees and selling it for profit, it leads to him take legal action against the honey industry—in fact, he leads a class action. A rather adventurous US court finds in favour of the bees, who then shut down production. Bees all around the world are free to stop working. This leads to unintended consequences because, without bees, as the member for Hume pointed out, there is no pollination, and without pollination millions of plant species would eventually disappear. Thankfully, however, most of our native flora in Australia are not reliant on European honey bees for pollination. Unfortunately, most of our commercial crops are not native to Australia. The Australian honey bee industry generates around $70-plus million of honey and related products each year. After having been on the Standing Committee on Primary Industries and Resources for this inquiry, like having seen the Bee Movie, I better understand how important bees are for all of Australia.
Honey bees are not just about honey. We need honey bees to pollinate our crops in order to produce fruits, vegetables and grains. If this shut down then the Brisbane markets, which are in my electorate, would be in dire straits. Other industries like wool, meat and dairy also rely heavily on honey bees. It is estimated that honey bees contribute up to $6 billion a year to our agricultural industry. Some figures suggest that every third bite we consume in our diet is dependant on a honey bee to pollinate that food. As the member for Hume stated, they are very hardworking little animals. So 30 per cent of our diet is dependant on honey bees. Honey bees are vital to Australian agriculture, and any threat to honey bees in Australia must be taken very seriously.
Earlier this year, over Easter, I went to a school reunion at my old school in St George and caught up with one of my class mates, David Moon, who now runs a million-dollar agricultural business where they grow rockmelons. His name is Moon, so it is actually called Moonrocks. He was saying that that whole industry is 100 per cent reliant on bees and beekeepers. Even though there are no beekeepers in St George, they drive out west to pollinate the crops. But, like the bee itself, there is a sting in this tail. In response to the biosecurity threats facing the bee industry and the importance of the industry to Australian agriculture, the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, Tony Burke, reactivated the inquiry into honey bees earlier this year at the request of the Standing Committee on Primary Industries and Resources. Exotic pests like the parasitic mite, very accurately called the Varroa destructor, loom as a major quarantine threat to our border security and to the honey bee industry. One bonus of being an island continent is that we are the only place in the world that does not have the Varroa destructor mite. However, submissions to the inquiry regarded the arrival of varroa in Australia as being a case of not really if but when. How we as a government respond to this threat and help the industry prepare for the future will be a major test.
As well as biosecurity threats the industry is facing lower profits due to international competition. The More than honey: the future of the Australian honey bee and pollination industries report offers a thorough commentary on the issues confronting the Australian honey bee industry. The government will closely consider each of the 25 recommendations made by the committee in this report. These recommendations range from improved research and training for pollination services to better biosecurity measures and a new labelling standard to reflect the composition and origin of honey bee products. As we have learned from the equine influenza disaster, biosecurity is something that we must get right and must reassess all the time. Anyone who has friends, family or neighbours who have worked in the horse industry knows how much they relied on our island status and how much they were betrayed by the shoddy standards that let the equine influenza into Australia. I commend the great work of the former High Court Judge Ian Callinan in terms of giving us some salutary lessons.
The Rudd government is committed to learning the equine influenza lesson and is also committed to a vibrant future for the honey bee industry. The Rudd government will closely consider the committee’s recommendations—including establishing guidelines for beekeeper access to public lands, maintaining and enhancing the National Sentinel Hive Program, establishing and funding a new honey bee quarantine facility and establishing and funding a national endemic pest and disease control program. I am also pleased to acknowledge that work is already underway on a number of these fronts. The government recently provided grants of around $660,000 for the industry to develop an environmental code of conduct that can be spread throughout the beekeeping industry. We are also committed to beekeeping training materials and to conducting strategic planning for the industry. That might be as simple as knowing where the hives are and who is responsible for the hives.
The government also provides assistance to the honey bee industry through quarantine services—including assessing import permit applications; screening imported bees and bee products; conducting surveillance activities on international vessels and ports of call; certifying exports, including providing export documentation; and developing export controls. A National Sentinel Hive Program at Australia’s 20 busiest ports has also been developed to assist in providing early warning of possible incursions of varroa mites. The government has also worked with the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation to establish a new cross-industry alliance to guide the development of a commercial pollination services industry. This alliance, called Pollination Australia, will support the honey bee industry and enable continued pollination of important food crops in Australia. Pollination Australia will help drive a strong working relationship between the honey bee industry and those industries that depend on honey bee pollination, be they rockmelon growers or the many others I have listed. I encourage industry and related stakeholders to continue to work with government as we advance ways to ensure the ongoing viability of the honey bee industry.
In closing I want to thank the committee chair, the member for Lyons, Dick Adams; and the deputy chair, the member for Hume, Alby Schultz, for their efforts in driving this inquiry, which has spanned two parliaments. I also want to thank the committee secretary, Janet Holmes, and the inquiry secretary, Dr Bill Pender, and all of their staff for the high standard of work that they pulled together. This report is a fine example of bipartisan common sense. Out of respect for the member for New England, Mr Tony Windsor, perhaps I should say tripartisan common sense.
Mr Windsor
—Very sweet comments you make!
Mr PERRETT
—I am not sure if it was this year or last year that we lost one of the world’s most famous beekeepers, Sir Edmund Hillary. What is in front of the honey industry is a bit like what faced him when he considered climbing the highest mountain in the world, Mount Everest. It took a lot of planning but also a lot of hard work. That is what Pollination Australia has in front of it. I commend this report to the House.
The DEPUTY SPEAKER
(Ms S Bird)—Does the member seek to ask a question?
Mr Laming
—I have a question that is relevant to the member’s speech. Will the member give way for a question?
The DEPUTY SPEAKER
—Is the member willing to take the question?
Mr PERRETT
—Definitely.
Mr Laming
—Would the member consider extending his support to beekeeping in national parks, given the threat to that in Queensland?
Mr PERRETT
—You are talking specifically about beekeeping in Queensland national parks and the moves to remove it. The committee did consider this. I commit to discussing this further with the state government. On the weekend I spoke to the Queensland Premier’s major adviser in this area, and I am going to consider it further. I was aware of that policy before coming to parliament. Having been on this committee, I am much more aware of how much work needs to be done to get it right. I do have a bit of hope that, like the horse-riding industry, you can come up with a compromise that will protect the bee industry but also do what is best for our national parks in Queensland. That is the commitment I can give you.