if required, was a REQUISITE assessment report prepared and considered?
35 Even if I had been of the view that the preparation and consideration of an environmental assessment report was a precondition to the exercise of the Minister's power to make the 2008 instrument, I am not of the view that such a precondition was not satisfied.
36 On the basis that an assessment report was required, the applicants argued that a draft assessment report and a final assessment report of the kind required by the legislation had not been prepared, had not been considered by the Minister and thus a condition precedent to the exercise of the Minister's power to amend the live import list to include an item was not satisfied. As a result, the applicants contended that the 2008 instrument is invalid and ultravires the relevant enabling power.
37 There is no issue that prior to the Minister including an item on the live import list on the Minister's own initiative and unless s 303EC(5)(b) or s 303ED(3) apply, the Minister must first consider a relevant report under s 303ED or 303EE. The preparation of a draft report is required by s 303EF(2) and after the publication of the draft report and the receipt of submissions and the finalisation of the report taking into account comments received on the draft report, a final report is to be prepared. The fact that draft and final reports were prepared and considered is not in contention. The applicants contend, however, that those reports were not compliant with the kind of reports the EPBC Act requires.
38 The applicants contend that the draft environmental assessment report for the 2008 instrument, released by the Department on 19 June 2008, was not a "draft of a report on the relevant impacts" under EPBC Act s 303EF(2)(a) for the following reasons:
(a) the Latitude report had concluded that F5 Savannah Domestic Pedigree Cats (and later generations) posed no greater risk to the environment than that posed by the Domestic Cat;
(b) despite that, the draft report:
(i) selectively cited the Latitude report;
(ii) quoted the Latitude report out of context;
(iii) deliberately amplified the risk of importing F5 Savannah Cats described by the Latitude report;
(iv) failed to properly distinguish between F5 and later Savannah Cats and F1 to F4 hybrid cats;
(v) was not scientifically adequate or rigorous;
(vi) included assessments and a conclusion that were influenced by adverse media comment which, in turn, was erroneous;
(vii) failed to adequately address the terms of reference for the report;
(viii) failed to adequately assess the potential impacts on the environment of the proposed amendment.
39 The applicants also contend that the final report, the Environment Assessment Report, was not a report prepared in accordance with s 303EF of the EPBC Act for the following reasons:
(a) the report failed to properly distinguish between F5 and later Savannah Cats and F1 to F4 hybrid cats;
(b) the report was not prepared by authors with, or with adequate, scientific expertise in animal husbandry or breeding;
(c) the report included statements and conclusions that were speculative in nature and inconsistent with scientific principles;
(d) the report conflated features and behaviours of Serval and hybrid cats other than F5 Savannah Cats, with those of F5 Savannah Cats (and later generations);
(e) the report failed to adequately assess the potential impacts on the environment of the proposed amendment;
(f) the report erroneously treated F5 Savannah Cats (and later generations) as discrete from, and different to, Domestic Cats.
40 The applicants also relied upon ss 303EC(5) and 303ED(1) and (2) as the source of the imposition of a condition precedent upon the Minister's power to amend the live import list. In that respect the applicants contended that the condition precedent was that a report had been prepared which objectively amounted to "an assessment of the potential impacts" of the Minister's proposal to amend the live import list.
41 There are two matters the Court would need to be satisfied about before any conclusion could be reached that the 2008 instrument is invalid by reason of the matters here raised by the applicants. The first element is that the requisite precondition exists and has been breached or not complied with and secondly, that such a breach of or non-compliance with the condition regulating the exercise of the power to amend, renders the amendment invalid and of no effect.
42 In Project Blue Sky v Australian Broadcasting Authority (1988) 194 CLR 355 at [91] McHugh, Gummow, Kirby and Hayne JJ said:
An act done in breach of a condition regulating the exercise of a statutory power is not necessarily invalid and of no effect. Whether it is depends upon whether there can be discerned a legislative purpose to invalidate any act that fails to comply with the condition. The existence of the purpose is ascertained by reference to the language of the statute, its subject matter and objects, and the consequences for the parties of holding void every act done in breach of the condition.
43 For the purpose of considering whether there has been any breach of the asserted precondition and also for considering whether a legislative intent can be discerned to invalidate any act that fails to comply with any such precondition, it is necessary to turn to the subject matter and objects of the provisions in question.
44 Firstly, it is to be observed that the Minister is given a very wide discretion to include an item on the live import list. That discretion is not conditioned by any specified criteria and there are few limits on the way in which the power is to be exercised. No doubt the power must be exercised for the purpose for which it is conferred and in that respect the objects of the EPBC Act and those of Part 13A, including of conserving the biodiversity of Australian native wildlife, will need to be taken into account by the Minister. But the Minister's power is broad. For instance, the power is not conditioned by any criteria requiring the Minister to reach a particular view as to the extent of any potential impact on the environment of an amendment to the list. Such matters, of very obvious importance, are left for the Minister to determine and are wholly within the Minister's discretion.
45 The only specified limits on the exercise of the power to include an item on the list are procedural and not substantive. The procedural constraints are limited to processes designed to put information before the Minister for the obvious purpose of promoting an informed decision by the Minister. There are two distinct forms of information gathering envisaged. The first is consultation which is dealt with by s 303EC(3). The second is the consideration of a report or a review which is dealt with by s 303EC(5) in combination with the provisions of Subdivision B (ss 303ED-303EJ).
46 An analysis of those provisions demonstrates that the sufficiency, quality or adequacy of the information that the EPBC Act envisages the Minister may consider prior to including an item on the list, is a matter largely left to the discretion of the Minister.
47 The extent of any consultation that may be engaged in is left to the Minister to determine. Ministerial consultation need only occur with other Ministers that the Minister "considers appropriate" (s 303EC(3)(a) and (b)) and the Minister "may" consult with others that the Minister "considers appropriate" (s 303EC(3)(c)).
48 The requirements for the consideration by the Minister of a report or review are more prescriptive but, apart from identifying in broad terms the nature of the assessment required, the provisions say little or nothing of the adequacy, quality or sufficiency of the information to be considered. These are matters left to be controlled by the Minister.
49 The broadly expressed nature of the assessment required is contained in the requirement for an assessment "of the potential impacts on the environment of the proposed amendment". That requirement applies to an amendment to be made at the initiative of the Minister (s 303ED(2)(a) and (3)(a)); or on the application for an amendment made by others (s 303EE(3)(b) and (4)(a)); and to a review by the Minister (because a review conducted under s 303EJ will be conducted by reference to an earlier report made under s 303ED or s 303EE).
50 Reports meeting that legislative description may take many forms and vary as to content, quality and have many other variable characteristics. Reasonable minds can probably agree as to whether a particular report meets the legislative description of "an assessment of the potential impacts on the environment of the proposed amendment", but given the subject matter in question, it is highly likely that reasonable minds will differ in opinion as to the quality, sufficiency or adequacy of any particular report dealing with the impact on the environment of a proposed amendment.
51 It is highly unlikely that Parliament intended that a court should be the arbiter over the quality, sufficiency or adequacy of a particular report and that the court should strike down a report which failed to meet some indeterminate and unspecified standard, on the basis that such a failure constituted non-compliance with a requisite precondition on the Minister's exercise of power.
52 It is far more likely that Parliament intended that, with some legislative guidance as to the expected process (and in particular an expectation of public consultation), the Minister would be the arbiter over the quality, sufficiency or adequacy of the information which the Minister must consider in arriving at his or her decision to amend the list to include an item. That the Minister is trusted with that task follows naturally from the fact that the Minister is trusted to make the ultimate decision unencumbered by prescriptive criteria. That the Minister is accorded that task is also apparent from the following characteristics of the procedural process itself:
It is the Minister that determines the terms of reference for the draft report (s 303EF(1)). That power is a very significant control mechanism over the information which will be put before the Minister through the final report, including as to its quality, sufficiency and adequacy;
It is the Minister that is given the power to determine whether an assessment is required at all or whether instead an extant report prepared by Biosecurity Australia meeting the requirements of s 303ED(3) or 303EE(4) will suffice. In that respect, the Minister will need to assess the quality, sufficiency or adequacy of the extant report and decide whether more information obtained through an additional assessment is appropriate;
It is for the Minister to decide whether an assessment is required or whether instead a decision to include an item on the list will be made upon a review of a relevant report made at an earlier time for the purpose of an earlier decision as to whether to include an item on the list (a five year limitation applies): s 303EC(5) and 303EJ. In this respect, the Minister is called upon to consider the quality, sufficiency or adequacy of the extant report as an alternative to the preparation of a new report; and
Where the proposed amendment is not at the Minister's initiative, the Minister is empowered to call for further information beyond the information contained in an assessment report prepared in accordance with s 303EE (s 303EH(1)).
53 The provisions in question provide no statutory prescription regulating the quality, sufficiency or adequacy of a report beyond the requirement of s 303EF(2)(c) that the final report take into account the comments received after the publication of the draft report. The quality, sufficiency or adequacy of the report is otherwise a matter left to the Minister's judgment and discretion. Whilst consideration of a report is a necessary jurisdictional precondition to the exercise of the power, the consideration of a report of a particular quality or particular standard is not.
54 For the reasons contended by the Minister, most if not all of the applicants' allegations as to the report's failures set out at [38] and [39] above are not made out. Most were not pursued in final submissions. But I need not deal with them individually, it is sufficient to observe that each of the alleged failures challenge the quality, sufficiency or adequacy of the draft or final report. None of the alleged failures were suggested to constitute an express breach of any particular provision. The applicants' case rests on the proposition that a report containing the failures alleged is not a report of the kind that the provisions mandate. However, that contention is premised on the erroneous presumption that the preparation of the report of a particular quality, sufficiency or adequacy is mandated as a requisite objective jurisdictional fact. It is not: Anvill Hill Project Watch Association Inc v Minister for Environment and Water Resources (2008) 166 FCR 54 at [16], [17], [19]-[34] (Tamberlin, Finn and Mansfield JJ).
55 For the reasons I have sought to explain, whilst the scheme of the legislation intends that the Minister makes an informed decision, including by reference to consideration of a report which meets the description of an "assessment of the potential impacts on the environment of the proposed amendment", the quality, sufficiency and adequacy of the information to be considered is a matter for the Minister's judgment. A requisite standard is not mandated as an objective fact which must be satisfied as a prerequisite to the exercise of power. The applicants have failed to demonstrate any breach of the provisions of the EPBC Act, let alone any legislative purpose to invalidate any act that fails to comply with the precondition for which the applicants contend.
56 The applicants also contended that the report considered by the Minister was a non-compliant report because it should have, but did not, assess the environmental impacts of the re-inclusion of Domestic Cats on the live import list. There is no issue that the Environmental Impact Report did not make any such assessment.
57 The failure of the Environmental Impact Report to assess and report upon the potential impacts on the environment of the re-inclusion of Domestic Cats (excluding Savannah Cats) on the live import list did not render the report non-compliant with the requirements of s 303EC(5) and s 303ED(2). The proposed amendment, if implemented, would have brought no change to the regulation of the importation of Domestic Cats (excluding Savannah Cats). That aspect of the proposed amendment had no potential to impact upon the environment because it involved no change to the status quo. To interpret the requirements of s 303EC(5) and s 303ED(2) as requiring an assessment of the maintenance of the status quo because of the form of the amendment involves the inclusion of an item, would be to place form over substance and ignore the rationale of the provisions to which I have earlier referred at [28]. It would also fail to give proper regard to the textual indicators contained in the phrase "potential impacts on the environment of the proposed amendment". In particular, the future tense involved in the phrase "potential impacts", suggests that only the influence or effect exerted by something new or changed is to be assessed.