2019 Environmental Practitioner’s Forum: Sharing experiences in environmental practice

Leederville Function Centre 246 Vincent Street, Leederville, Western Australia, Australia

EIANZ WA Division and the Environmental Practitioners Network WA invite you to attend the full day forum: Sharing experiences in environmental practice. This event aims to be of interest to the entire environmental practitioner community including students, community conservation and land care groups, professionals from all industries, regulators, local government and the public sector. For…

Webinar – Re-examining the history of Aboriginal land management – Why this is important for environmental professionals

Re-examining the of history Aboriginal land management – Why this is important for environmental professionals Environmental practitioners know too well the damage that has been wrought on our environment over the last 240 years. In this webinar, Bruce will explain why our profession will need to better understand and draw on 65,000 years of Aboriginal…

Webinar | Disaster everywhere, barely time to think – Disaster Response and Practitioner Resilience

Online - Times in AEST

When we talk about climate change and natural disaster response and recovery, we talk about building resilient communities and infrastructure. But what about building resilient practitioners? Disaster management often relies on people with great skills and experience in their professional areas of practice, but with less experience in the day-to-day realities of intense and prolonged…

EIANZ Webinar – An update on climate change and its ecological impacts

Online , Australia

EIANZ invites you to attend an upcoming webinar presentation by David Karoly from the CSIRO Climate Science Centre, who will give an update on climate change and its ecological impacts. The latest assessment of climate change science from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change IPCC was released on Monday 9 August. Climate change is already…

Webinar | The Queensland floods of 2010/2011 – reflections and regeneration

Online - AWST

In January 2011 Queensland experienced flooding of historic proportions that impacted approximately 78% of the State. Sadly, thirty-three people died in the 2010/2011 floods and some 29 000 homes and businesses suffered some form of inundation. The scale of the disaster led to the establishment of a Commission of Inquiry. When the Commission’s final report…

National Biodiversity Offsets Conference 2.0

Canberra , Australia

In 2019, the EIANZ hosted the first national conference on biodiversity offsets. Since then, biodiversity offsets continue to play a central role in countering significant residual impacts from deleterious actions on matters of national, state or local environmental significance. The time is right to meet again for a national forum on biodiversity offsets to reflect…

EIANZ Environmental Practitioners Forum

Leederville Oval (Medibank Stadium) 246 Vincent St, Leederville, WA, Australia

EIANZ WA Division and the Environmental Practitioners Network WA invites you to attend the full day forum: Sharing experiences in environmental practice. This event aims to be of interest to the entire environmental practitioner community including students, not-for-profits and community groups, agribusiness, remote and rural organisations, professionals from all industries and the public sector. $250…

EIANZ 2022 Annual Conference – call for papers

Townsville, Queensland , Australia

This year’s annual conference will be held in Townsville, Queensland and comes at a time when environmental practitioners are returning to their workplaces after extended lockdowns. The theme for this year’s conference is ‘shaping the future of the environment profession’. This will provide the opportunity for practitioners to explore changes and emerging trends in technology,…

EIANZ Webinar │ The changing Antarctic and its global ecosystem services

Online - AWST

For most of humanity’s history in the Antarctic it has been viewed as cold, remote, and unchanging. Over the last decades strong evidence has been gathered to show that the last of these is now false. The Antarctic Ice Sheet has been losing land ice at a rate of about 150 billion tonnes per year…