Extent and rate of change of remnant native vegetation
Information portal
This report outlines the extent and recent changes in Queensland’s remnant native vegetation, highlighting key bioregions and vegetation groups affected by clearing.
- Queensland retained 138 million hectares of remnant native vegetation in 2021
- Clearing peaked in 1999–2000, with 0.4% lost in one year
- Clearing reduced to 82,000 hectares in 2019–2021
- Main reason for clearing is pasture improvement
- Three bioregions retain less than half of their original vegetation
- Two vegetation groups have less than 60% of their pre-clearing extent
How this may be relevant to you
This content helps mining stakeholders understand vegetation trends and clearing impacts relevant to land access and biodiversity compliance.
- Supports land use planning and environmental approvals
- Informs biodiversity offset strategies
- Highlights vegetation groups vulnerable to disturbance
- Provides data for ESG reporting and risk assessments
- Useful for rehabilitation and closure planning
- Supports alignment with SDG and biodiversity targets
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