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The Australian government is taking steps to strip five shark species of 'protection status' in a move described by conservationists as an "unprecedented act of domestic and international environmental vandalism".
This isn't the first time Prime Minister Tony Abbott's government has been subject to international criticism for its controversial environmental policies.
In last months of last year Australia was singled out by politicians from around the world as disruptive and obstinate following its refusal to engage with global climate change talks, and for damage done to the Great Barrier Reef.
From energy to conservation and biodiversity, here are seven ways in which Tony Abbott and his government are damaging the environment.
1. Refuses to talk about climate change
Last year, as he hosted the G20 conference in Brisbane, Abbott came under fire for refusing to contribute to the UN's Green Climate Fund — in which developed countries provide clean energy and climate change aid to developing nations.
France, China and the US were among the countries to rebuke Australia for its abstention from global climate change policy.
The reason for Australia's place as a climate change outcast is Abbott's decision to double-down on carbon-heavy coal as the cornerstone of Australia's economy.
Falling energy prices, however, may be taking their toll on Australia's chief export.
3. Scraps clean energy targets
The main victim of the Australia's recarbonisation policy is the country's nascent clean energy sector.
In October the government reduced its renewable energy targets, which the Clean Energy Council says will "equate to a 64% reduction in future investment and effectively devastate" the industry.
But while Abbott dismisses the connection between the climate change and the fires as "hogwash", the Australian Academy of Sciences says there "a clear observed association between extreme heat and catastrophic bushfires".
5. Logging at Tasmanian Forest
Just last week, the state government made plans to begin tourist development in the 1.5m hectare Tasmanian forest, a World Heritage site previously off-limits.
Under the policy plan, the region would become wilderness in name only.
Last year scientists claimed Australia's plan to preserve the Great Barriet Reef doesn't do nearly enough.
The underwater ecosystem is home to 1,500 species - including many endangered - and is already feeling the affects of the warming climate.
US President Obama last year made pointed comments about the Great Barrier Reef's vulnerability, to which Australia's foreign minister Julie Bishop said he "overlooked" all that the country is doing.
It is thought that Australia's development of ports nearby has done a lot of damage, and major US banks have vowed to not fund Abbott Point's proposed coal port.
Environmental group WWF has also hit out against the country for dumping sediment and water in the delicate wetlands nearby, claiming that it's contaminating the coral reef.
Marine scientist Dr Charlie Veron said the Great Barriet Reef Authority's decision to permit said sediment dumping is akin to "committing suicide".
7. Won't protect sharks
This brings us back to the recent shark protection plan.
Abbott and his government, having agreed in November to granting conservation status to three thresher shark species and two hammerhead sharks, is trying to back out.
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Under the protection agreement, due to come into effect on February 8, killing one of these sharks would be a criminal offence.
Though Australia says it already has protections in place, the Humane Society International called the move an “unprecedented act of domestic and international environmental vandalism”.
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