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    EPBC reforms welcomed by industry: approvals and risk insights for project teams

    November 28, 2025|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    EPBC reforms welcomed by industry: approvals and risk insights for project teams

    First reported on Australian Mining

    30 Second Briefing

    Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act reforms negotiated between the Australian Federal Government and the Greens have been broadly welcomed by the resources sector, which is now pushing to shape detailed approval pathways and timelines. Industry groups are seeking clearer statutory timeframes for project assessments, more predictable offsets rules, and streamlined approvals for brownfield expansions, while accepting stronger biodiversity safeguards. Miners warn that without tightly defined processes and resourcing for the new EPA-style regulator, major projects in iron ore, critical minerals and coal could still face multi‑year delays and higher compliance costs.

    Technical Brief

    • Reforms introduce an EPA-style federal regulator with determinative powers over EPBC project approvals.
    • Commonwealth–state bilateral assessment agreements are expected to be rewritten, affecting duplication and sequencing of approvals.
    • Industry groups are lobbying for statutory “stop-the-clock” rules tied to information requests and proponent response times.
    • Brownfield expansions are being targeted for lighter-touch referrals where disturbance footprints remain within existing cleared areas.
    • Offset arrangements are likely to shift towards standardised biodiversity metrics and pre-certified offset sites or markets.
    • Resources sector advocates are pushing for explicit resourcing commitments for the new regulator to avoid assessment bottlenecks.
    • Similar EPA-style models in some Australian states are being cited as templates for time-bound, tiered assessment pathways.

    Our Take

    Within our 20 recent Policy stories, Australia dominates coverage of environmental approvals, so EPBC reforms are likely to shape permitting timelines and risk assessments for most greenfield and expansion Projects in our database.

    Because this piece sits at the intersection of Projects, Standard/Guideline and Sustainability, it signals that Australian proponents may need to budget more time and specialist input for federal environmental documentation, even where state approvals are already advanced.

    For operators following Australian Mining’s policy reporting, aligning internal ESG frameworks early with anticipated EPBC settings can reduce redesign and rework costs once detailed Standards/Guidelines are finalised.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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