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Quarterly Essay #48

Quarterly Essay 48 After the Future: Australia's New Extinction Crisis

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When it comes to the natural world, Australia is home to a disproportionately large share of the world's riches. That means we Australians are caretakers of a unique natural heritage in a land which tolerates few mistakes. So how are we doing? In Quarterly Essay 48 Tim Flannery we're often failing nature. In the clash between money and conservation, money usually wins. State governments have begun allowing mining and other incursions into national parks. A new wave of extinctions is taking place. Politically, conservationists and conservatives are at odds. But why? Surely conservatives and conservationists should be able to find common cause when it comes to preserving our natural heritage? And given that we have never known more about how to protect biodiversity, shouldn't it be possible to halt the march of extinctions? This essay is both a wake-up call to the consequences of unrestrained development, and an examination of the underlying thinking - the view of the natural world that sees it as something either to be put to use or traded off. By contrast, Flannery asks, how might we best understand, conserve and co-exist with the natural world?

133 pages, Kindle Edition

First published November 1, 2012

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About the author

Tim Flannery

132 books393 followers
Tim Flannery is one of Australia's leading thinkers and writers.

An internationally acclaimed scientist, explorer and conservationist, he has published more than 130 peer-reviewed scientific papers and many books. His books include the landmark works The Future Eaters and The Weather Makers, which has been translated into more than 20 languages and in 2006 won the NSW Premiers Literary Prizes for Best Critical Writing and Book of the Year.

He received a Centenary of Federation Medal for his services to Australian science and in 2002 delivered the Australia Day address. In 2005 he was named Australian Humanist of the Year, and in 2007 honoured as Australian of the Year.

He spent a year teaching at Harvard, and is a founding member of the Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists, a director of the Australian Wildlife Conservancy, and the National Geographic Society's representative in Australasia. He serves on the board of WWF International (London and Gland) and on the sustainability advisory councils of Siemens (Munich) and Tata Power (Mumbai).

In 2007 he co-founded and was appointed Chair of the Copenhagen Climate Council, a coalition of community, business, and political leaders who came together to confront climate change.

Tim Flannery is currently Professor of Science at Maquarie University, Sydney.

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Kostan.
62 reviews
February 4, 2018
A somber account of Australia's inaction and poor decision making in the realm of biodiversity conservation and retention. We're in a dire climate for species preservation but Flannery provides a little light when talking about some of the NGO's going against the grain, and defying inept governments to protect some of our current threatened species.
Profile Image for Kim.
1,125 reviews100 followers
March 7, 2020
Listening to these Qrtly Essays on audiobook are a great way to access them when I can't pick up a book, such as when the drudgery of housework can't be ignored any longer.
Unfortunately, as a nation, we still seem to be ignoring the extinction of many unique species despite warnings such as this essay that was first published in 2012.
This will become even more important after the extensive fires that have devastated vast tracks of native bushland, some beyond recovery because of the intensity of those catastrophic fires in the summer of 2019/2020.
While confronting, there is just over 2 hours of important information in this essay that could help us towards greater understanding of the necessity of action, that is, unless we want our natural heritage to disappear for good.
This essay is more confronting than Tim Flannery's most recent book, Europe, where he seems more resigned to what has already occurred and what can be done. An interesting contrast.
Profile Image for Terry Savill.
14 reviews19 followers
December 4, 2012
We live in times where children are nurtured and protected more than ever before, and for a longer and longer period, to ensure they will eventually move on safely into the world.
But what of the world they are moving in to.
Tim Flannery's essay "After the Future: Australia's new extinction crisis" is an essay of despair for our country and its collective flora and fauna, but it is also a cry for the sake of the planet.
Tim laments over the impotence of our politicians - what was the line Peter Garrett? 'It's better to die on you feet that live on your knees" - and barely contains his anger at all levels of Australian government, in the shameful way they fail to support programs they put in place, because that way there is less focus than if a program is funded and fails. Failure without assistance is deemed acceptable to these corridor cruisers.
What is wrong with the nation's community that it cannot find the means to look beyond it's selfish and egocentric needs, and realize that all life is interconnected, and the loss of just one more species may be the beginning of our own end?
If the bees are no longer around to pollinate the crops, and the crops fail........it's all too late then!!
Profile Image for Andrew Saul.
139 reviews8 followers
January 6, 2014
A passionate but reasoned call to action for the survival of our biodiversity for future generations. The animals are lucky to have such a spectacular person on their side as they have in Tim Flannery. Hopefully others will follow.
Profile Image for A.M..
Author 7 books57 followers
November 5, 2020
Ooh Australian mega-fauna was my favourite. Giant marsupial lions for the win.
An interesting concept that the keystone species in the Australian environment is man after tens of thousands of years of intervention by the Native people. As he points out, white man arrived three lifetimes ago, give or take.
Tragically, the hatred of everything marked ‘green’ he mentions here is still in place eight years later and our current political leaders have zero invested in climate science, even after we all nearly burnt to a crisp last summer.
4 despairing stars
Profile Image for Robert Watson.
697 reviews4 followers
July 21, 2021
Building on his previous landmark work " the future eaters " this essay presents a sad documentation of the extinction crisis continuing today and what might be done to preserve some habitat and species with carefully considered action. Unfortunately this action appears destined to be reliant on NGO's rather than our inert governments both state and federal.
Profile Image for Lauren Sims.
30 reviews
February 3, 2026
From ancient to modern habitat change in Australia, to an expansive focus on biodiversity in modern Australia. Eye opening, especially in how low the cost is to save our native species. I have read this one quite a while after its publication and am curious to hear an update, so if you know a good source for one, please let me know.
Profile Image for a*s*h.
391 reviews1 follower
June 25, 2022
Got me interested in ecology and conservation. Also wanna know more Australian natural history — specifically indigenous fire stick farming.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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