STRATEGIC ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT OF URBAN PLANS IN AUSTRALIA: THE CASE STUDY OF MELBOURNE URBAN EXTENSION PLAN

This paper aims to understand the procedural effectiveness of strategic environmental assessment (SEA) of urban planning in Australia. The SEA has been practiced in Australia over the last two decades under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act of 1999. After the reform of EPBC Act in 2006, the application of SEA in urban sector has been widened. By evaluating the procedural practice of SEA of Melbourne Urban Extension Plan using a set of evaluation criteria, the study shows that most of the procedural requirements were confirmed by the SEA of the plan. There were some shortcomings including, among others, inadequate consideration of cumulative impacts, socio-economic impacts and the analysis of alternatives at different stages of SEA. The possible reasons behind these shortcomings were explained based on the context of SEA in Australia. Furthermore, this study explored some key features of SEA system in Australia those may influence the SEA practice. The findings of the study can be useful to the application of SEA of urban planning in addition to practitioners, academics and policy makers in Australia or elsewhere.

Format

Journal article

Geographic Coverage

Australia-wide

Journal citation

Impact Assessment and Project Appraisal, 38:5, 368-381

Notes

Abstract included in PLA’s Research Connections article in Parks and Leisure Australia Vol 24.1 Autumn 2021. ISBN 1446-5604
There is a cost of US$53 to obtain a copy of the article.

Copyright

Approval obtained from publisher to use abstracts only

Authors

Morgan , Richard (Author); Momtaz , Salim (Author); Kabir, Zobaidul (Author)

Source

Taylor and Francis: 2020