Federal environmental reform: recasting the EPBC Act

National EPA

A new, independent National Environmental Protection Agency. The CEO of the NEPA will be a statutory appointment and not subject to direction by the Minister. The CEO of the NEPA will be given a number of responsibilities under the Act, including compliance and enforcement functions, assurance of accreditation arrangements and the issuing of new enforcement tools such as environment protection orders.

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The EPR Bill, in combination with the National Environmental Protection Agency Bill 2025 (NEPA Bill), contains the following provisions:

  • Role of the NEPA & CEO: a new independent environmental regulator—the National Environmental Protection Agency—is to be established. NEPA is to be charged with regulatory powers including:
    • undertaking compliance and enforcement activities
    • issuing permits and licences
    • undertaking other delegated activities, which may include assessments and decisions about development proposals.
  • CEO Appointment: the NEPA Bill confirms that the CEO would be an independent statutory position for a fixed term of five years, with the ability to be re-appointed once (ie for a maximum of 10 years).
  • Minister's Statement of Expectations: the Minister would have the ability to issue a Statement of Expectations to the CEO of NEPA about their expectations for the CEO / NEPA, to which the CEO is required to provide a Statement of Intent, but is not compelled to follow.

The NEPA Bill is an evolution from the previous attempt at reform in the Nature Positive (Environment Protection Australia) Bill 2024.

How we got there

What did the Samuel Review identify for reform?

A key focus of the Samuel Review and throughout consultation has been how to achieve effective implementation and enforcement of the new National Environment Standards (NES) and compliance with EPBC Act approvals. The Samuel Review recommended a restructure so that:

  • compliance and enforcement powers are assigned to the Secretary of DCCEEW and consolidated into a new 'Office of Compliance and Enforcement' (OCE) within DCCEEW; and
  • a new independent statutory position of 'Environmental Assurance Commissioner' (EAC) be established to monitor and report on the implementation of the NES.

The OCE was to be granted modern regulatory powers and tools to enable delivery of compliance and enforcement of federal approvals, consistent with a draft NES developed by the Samuel Review for Compliance and Enforcement.

Meanwhile, the EAC role would report publicly to the Minster on the performance of the federal and accredited state / territory governments in implementing the NES, with a requirement for the Minister to respond publicly to any EAC recommendations.

What did the Nature Positive package propose?

The Nature Positive Plan departed significantly from the Samuel Review recommendations on this topic. The NPP proposed the creation of a new National EPA as a separate statutory entity, independent from the Minister and DCCEEW, with its own budget and statutorily appointed CEO.

Under the NPP, the EPA would be responsible for:

  • compliance and enforcement functions, with the intention that it be a 'tough cop on the beat'.
  • publication of mandatory guidelines to inform proponents of referral and assessment information requirements.
  • decisions on project assessments, approvals and post-approvals steps (where not taken by another accredited decision-maker), subject to a ministerial 'call-in power'.
  • assurance functions to ensure state / territory governments' adherence to accreditation arrangements for devolved decision-making using the NES.
  • a range of other legislative functions relating to wildlife trade, sea dumping, ozone and synthetic greenhouse gas management, hazard wastes and emissions standards, among others.
How did the nature positive position evolve over the consultation phase?

The proposed role and functions of the National EPA evolved during consultation.

Initially, the EPA was intended to be the core decision-making and regulatory body, with the DCCEEW taking a policy role. The EPA's primary decision-making responsibility was to be subject to a ministerial 'call-in power' to decided selected applications. However, the EPA's proposed role was significantly reduced in the revised consultation package released in mid-2024, with the EPA's functions limited primarily to enforcement and compliance. Responsibility for assessment and approvals would remain with the Minister.

This revised approach was incorporated into the Nature Positive (Environment Protection Australia) Bill 2024 introduced to Parliament in May 2024, which faced opposition in the Senate. By February 2025, the Bill was shelved after failing to be passed. It is commonly cited that the Bill was withdrawn due to pre‑election tensions with the Western Australian Government.

In their new Parliamentary term, the Federal Government identified the Nature Positive reforms as a priority. Minister Watt confirmed he would like to win broad support for reforms, including the creation of a federal environment watchdog. Beyond compliance and enforcement, any role for the EPA in assessment and approval decisions has remained unclear.

Key policy questions
The roles and functions of the NEPA

 A key consideration was whether the NEPA's functions should be confined to just compliance and enforcement, with decision-making remaining with the Minister (subject to delegation and accredited assessment arrangements), or broadened to the scope originally proposed in the Nature Positive package.

Some key policy questions included:

  • The scope of any role for the NEPA in the EPBC Act approval process, eg via the assessment of controlled actions before their referral to the Minister for determination, or via delegation of approval power from the Minister for the least contentious proposals (potentially reflecting the current balance of delegations made by the Minister to officers of the DCCEEW).
  • Whether the NEPA would be given all of the available compliance and enforcement functions, or only a subset of those functions, with the DCCEEW or the Minister retaining some involvement.
Structure and governance of the NEPA

The structure and governance of the proposed NEPA remained a core concern for stakeholders, and a key policy area that challenged the Government's reforms in both the previous and current terms of Parliament.

Issues for confirmation included:

  • Whether the CEO will be appointed on the advice of Minister, or whether a board will be appointed that would then appoint the CEO.
  • Whether all powers will be vested in the CEO rather than the NEPA itself.
  • How the CEO (and/or NEPA and board) will be held to account for regulatory and enforcement decisions and actions, and the degree of transparency required for those decisions.  

Read more on headline issues

National EPA (NEPA)

A new, independent National Environmental Protection Agency. The CEO of the NEPA will be a statutory appointment and not subject to direction by the Minister. The CEO of the NEPA will be given a number of responsibilities under the Act, including compliance and enforcement functions, assurance of accreditation arrangements and the issuing of new enforcement tools such as environment protection orders.

Environment Information Australia (EIA)

A new function within the Department is to be headed by an independent statutory officer and is to be focused on the management of environmental data. The EIA would provide national leadership for the improvement of the availability and accessibility of high-quality, national environmental data and information, and ensure there is independent reporting and accountability for the state of the environment. 

National Environmental Standards (NES)

A framework to establish legally enforceable National Environmental Standards that are intended to set the boundaries for decision-making to deliver the minimum protections to be achieved under the Act. These are intended to be subordinate legislation and will initially relate to matters such as the existing Matters of National Environmental Significance and environmental offsets.

Streamlined assessments and approvals

To remove certain lower-tier assessment pathways (such as assessment on referral information and public environment reports) and replace them with a 'streamlined assessment' pathway, intended to result in faster approvals timeframes. The bills also introduce a number of new tools to enable the Minister to ensure the protection of the environment, including 'Rulings' and 'Protection Statements' about how the Act should be interpreted and protections implemented. 

Strategic assessments

Strategic assessments under Part 10 are retained, with new flexibility proposed, including to allow for the relevant policy, plan or program to evolve without necessarily requiring a new strategic assessment to be undertaken.

Bioregional plans

A new concept of bioregional assessments, allowing for broad-scale assessments to be undertaken to establish 'development' and 'conservation' zones, with 'priority actions' in development zones not to require further assessment and approval.

Biodiversity offsets and net gain

A new concept of passing the 'net gain' test will apply to compensate for significant residual impacts on protected matters. This can be achieved either by the proponent compensating for damage by securing an environmental offset, or by paying a restoration contribution charge in respect of the residual significant impact (unless the Minister has declared that a restoration contribution charge is not available for the relevant MNES).

First Nations engagement

Requirements for consultation with First Nations peoples are not included in the Bills, however new requirements are to be proposed through a National Environmental Standard consistent with the approach recommended in the Samuel Review.  

Climate change

No 'climate trigger' is included. Instead, the EPR Bill requires certain proponents to disclose greenhouse gas emission information and reduction plans—this is anticipated to apply at least to facilities covered by the Safeguard Mechanism. This information is intended to be made available for transparency purposes only and will not inform decisions under the Act. 

Penalties, merits review and third-party enforcement

Increased enforcement powers and, for certain large turnover body corporates, much higher maximum penalties for certain civil penalty provisions apply up to $825 million. 

Unacceptable impacts

A redefined concept of an 'unacceptable impact', which varies for each protected matter. If an action has an unacceptable impact, the Minister must not approve it. Similar restrictions apply to other decisions made under the Act (eg to approve a regional plan, or when accrediting states/territories' assessment and approval powers). 

Accreditation of states/territories for approval decisions

Various changes to the existing accreditation processes, placing a greater emphasis on the role of accredited state and territory processes to issue 'one-touch' approvals without the need for duplicative assessment by the Government. 

National interest proposals and exemptions

The reforms introduce a strengthened national interest pathway, giving the Minister broad discretion to approve projects that serve Australia’s strategic priorities (noting that these exemptions are not available for fossil fuel actions). Under this approach, a project may proceed even if it conflicts with NES, has unacceptable impacts or fails the net gain test, where it is deemed critical to Australia’s defence, security or international obligations. At the same time, refinements to the existing exemption mechanism allow the Minister to dis-apply certain controlling provisions for protected matters, while imposing conditions and prescribing requirements to limit adverse impacts. Together, these changes create a more flexible framework for projects of national significance, balancing strategic imperatives with environmental safeguards.

Restoration fund

Proponents will be able to discharge their offset compensation liability (including under the new 'net gain' framework) by paying a restoration contribution charge to the Government. The money provided under this charge will be spent by a new independent Restoration Contributions Holder, supported by an expert advisory committee.

'Minor or preparatory' works

Authorisation to commence minor or preparatory works for an action after referral and before an approval has been issued. The Minister may also provide written agreement for other works that may commence.

Lapsing of not controlled action decisions

NCA and NCA-PM decisions will lapse after five years if the action has not 'substantially commenced'. The five-year period may be extended once by the Minister for a further period of up to five years (the total maximum being 10 years, lapsing from the date of the initial decision).

'Grandfathering' arrangements

Actions that are a lawful continuation of a use will no longer be exempt from approval if they involve clearing of vegetation from land within 50 metres of a watercourse, wetland or drainage line in a catchment area of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park or the land has not been cleared of vegetation for at least 15 years (and the action is not a forestry operation).

Regional Forest Agreements

The exemption from approval for actions undertaken in accordance with an RFA will sunset on 1 July 2027.