26 February 2025

After 15 years, construction finally began on Canberra Airport’s new road – but there are already calls to stop it

| James Coleman
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Canberra Grassland Earless Dragon protest at Canberra Airport. Photo: Conservation Council ACT Region.

The Canberra Airport has agreed to suspend construction work on part of a new road project in response to protests from environmentalists.

Diggers and dump trucks were beginning to carve out a new link road between Majura Road and Fairbairn, originally proposed way back in 2009 to make it easier to transport freight across the site.

But the Conservation Council ACT Region and Friends of Grasslands groups have long claimed the road would cut in two a natural habitat for the critically endangered Canberra Grassland Earless Dragon (Tympanocryptis lineata).

This small red-brown-coloured lizard, measuring less than 150 millimetres long and weighing 5 to 9 grams, is thought to only exist on up to 40 hectares of temperate grassland in the Majura and Jerrabomberra valleys.

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Conservation Council ACT Region CEO Dr Simon Copland says construction is now underway on the southern end of the road “in the area that’s least sensitive [and] obviously they have the intention to finish [the road]”.

The council and Friends of Grassland group called a snap protest on Monday morning to protest the works.

“In 2022, federal Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek put the Canberra Grassland Earless Dragon on a threatened species recovery plan, and as part of that, she said the airport needed to provide evidence the road won’t impact the species,” Dr Copland says.

“But we haven’t seen that evidence. They haven’t done the work that we’re aware of.”

Canberra Airport says the new link road will make freight connections easier. Photo: File.

The group fears Canberra Airport is preparing to use the federal government’s pre-election caretaker period to “bulldoze the land and get away with it”.

Canberra Airport does hold valid Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation approval for the entire length of road, but Dr Copland says this predated a distinction between different types of the dragon.

“The grassland earless dragon has since been split into four different species, and so Canberra’s species is actually really rare … So we don’t really accept that approvals that were granted 15 years ago match the science that has happened since then.”

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One idea that’s been floated to save the dragon population involves elevating the road and running pipes to allow the lizards to pass underneath. A lizard-proof fence would then be strung along both sides of the tarmac.

“But there hasn’t been research done to see whether a lizard would actually use that,” Dr Copland says.

“So we’d expect [Canberra Airport] to be a responsible developer and do some research to find out if that’s actually a viable solution.”

In the meantime, the group is calling for Ms Plibersek to “intervene and ensure construction doesn’t go ahead until we see these plans”.

A Grassland Earless Dragon in the breeding facility at Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve

A Canberra Grassland Earless Dragon in the breeding facility at Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve. Photo: Blake Reeves.

The Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water told Region that after talks with the Federal Government, the airport will continue to work on the southern half of the road but has agreed to suspend work on the northern half.

The spokesperson said this is “while options to confirm or strengthen protections for the dragon are being considered”.

“The Canberra Airport continues to work with the department, the ACT Government and species experts to manage potential impacts on the Canberra Grassland Earless Dragon.”

Canberra Airport head of aviation Michael Thomson told Region the airport “remains committed to balancing critical infrastructure needs with environmental conservation”.

“The road project has been rigorously assessed and approved by the relevant authorities, ensuring no net loss of habitat, no fragmentation, and no increased risk to the Canberra Grassland Earless Dragon population,” he said.

“We will continue to work closely with the department and recognized experts to focus on delivering a nature-positive outcome while ensuring safe and secure access to the Fairbairn Precinct.”

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Don Fletcher6:30 pm 01 Mar 25

There is not such a high proportion of Canberrans uninterested in conservation as those commenting here. I suspect someone pro-development has organised comments. Many untrue statements have been made

Here are a few facts: This is legally an endangered species. It is found only near Canberra. Contrary to comments here, this species has rarely turned up on development sites. (One commentator is confusing it with the Striped Legless Lizard found near Gungahlin Town Centre in what is now Mullanggari Nature Reserve. Another commentator appears to be confusing it with the Golden Sun Moth.) Contrary to one commentator, ALL populations of threatened species are still present in ALL the Gungahlin Nature Reserves. Protection of habitat in Nature Reserves is often a highly effective way to conserve populations of wild plants and animals. This species is difficult to keep in captivity (but progress is being made at Tidbinbilla and Uni of Canberra) and has never been successfully translocated, nor can it move out of the way of bulldozers to occupy other types of grassland than the rare kind in which it is found.

40 Ha is a minescule total area. In Australia, are we so impoverished that we need to chop into one of the last few tiny areas in which the Canberra dragon occurs?

Simon Copland and his buddies would be better off objecting to government use of tax payer funds to tenant privately owned office buildings located on the far side of the airport.

@assiduous
Given that the federal government doesn’t own any office blocks, where do you propose they station the various govt departments if not in “privately owned office buildings” – the location of which would be determined by the importance of location and the negotiated lease terms?

Many have been sold off but not all. I’d like to see the public service occupy better located commonwealth owned buildings on commonwealth owned land. Some good reasons for this are laid out in this article:

Lowland Natural Temperate Grasslands were ideal places to build on or sow crops on, so 99% is gone. Tiny patches remain, especially in the ACT, and they hold a large number of species threatened with extinction. People frequently get confused between those species (as have other commentators here), but as the reporter states, this reptile remains in only 40 hectares (two thirds of a small football field). I wish they really were common and turning up everywhere that development is proposed, but those claims are opposite of the facts. I would have thought the Canberra Airport could do better than cut into such a small patch of remaining grassland, which has such high value. If the road cant go around the grassland, maybe the road can go under it? We are officially in the ‘biodiversity crisis’ and we need to be cleverer than to think we can have either development or conservation, never both.

Progress is essential for our future as it allows our society to prosper, we are living in an unbalanced illogical present day existence, our future children need a world of manufacture to have certainly of employment not an Ai future of human redundancies

Its absolute rubbish they are inhabiting there, I have been told by weeds & seeds bureaucrats over the last twelve years when requesting cattle be allowed to roam & KEEP THE GRASS DOWN on Dunlop Reserve that the Earless Dragon, Brown & Black bellied snakes & other creatures roam freely there & NO, you can’t have cattle & that’s why.

‘Left footed potaroo’, ‘wingless butterfly’ (🙃), now a dragon! Will this green tape never stop!? Our ECONOMY needs to progress. And infrastructure is a major part. Latter day St George …. get at it!

They can’t be that endangered. Wherever there is a development, they turn up.

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