Property

Casino operator Star Entertainment secures Qld property for carbon

Beef Central, 08/02/2023

The Star Entertainment Group’s Head of Sustainability, Amanda Visser, Odonata’s CEO Sam Marwood and The Star Gold Coast executive chef Uday Huja on Corymbia near Gympie

CASINO developer Star Entertainment Group has secured a 170 hectare parcel of farmland in South-East Queensland to help manage its future carbon emissions reduction and to support biodiversity and native forest regeneration.

The Star will use the Corymbia property near Gympie as its first carbon credits project, as well as create a nature-based farm partnering with local farmers and through widescale tree planting support endangered species particularly koalas, with new habitat. The property was purchased in 2021 for $1.83m.

The Star Entertainment Group’s Head of Sustainability, Amanda Visser said it has taken two years to bring the project to life as an extension of its sustainability strategy and will directly bolster the company’s target of net-zero scope 1 and scope 2 carbon emissions for wholly owned and operated properties by 2030.

“We will be planting over 100,000 native trees over the next five years to not only generate Australian carbon credit units but also to establish a koala sanctuary and create habitats for local, endangered species,” Ms Visser said.

“We have completed initial biodiversity assessments to ensure this regeneration project supports local, native forest cover and we can measure the impact we are having over time.”

Supported by the carbon management expertise of Ndevr Environmental, The Star has registered the native tree planting component of the project under the Emissions Reduction Fund.

Noosa Landcare has completed wide-scale soil testing ahead of the first instalment of planting, set to begin in Autumn 2023, while the emissions reduction project is being broadened with guidance from the Odonata Foundation, the architect of this innovative and big-picture approach to environmental sustainability.

Odonata’s CEO Sam Marwood said, “Organisations can use their carbon offset priorities as the driver to do something that adds incredible value to the business, people and communities, with no real additional costs.”

“The Star Entertainment Group has demonstrated real dedication to innovatively supporting environment and community, over and above what is required,” he said

“It has been a couple of years of collaborative planning. Along with the strategic and commercial aspects, it’s been outstanding how much engagement there has been on the detailed aspects of the project, like how to select the right trees to attract koalas, how best to help threatened species, improve biodiversity and river health, and work alongside local communities.”

Ms Visser added, “Working with Odonata has also directed and strengthened our commitment to local farmers and regenerative agriculture by exploring the use of produce grown across the region and on the farm for The Star’s restaurants, bars and hotels.

“The bigger picture is to fully engage our teams in sustainable agriculture and biodiversity education and it’s already creating great interest.”

The Star Gold Coast Executive chef Uday Huja, who has visited the farm and other nearby properties, said, “It’s every chef’s dream to have a farm.”

“Having a direct touchpoint from planting to harvesting not only provides endless inspiration but a deep understanding of what is best practice in farming and agriculture and how that directly connects with a culinary product,” he said.

For every hectare The Star operates across its three resorts in Sydney, Brisbane and the Gold Coast, it will rewild three hectares, and a minimum of 100 hectares.

The Star’s pathway to its 2030 net-zero target also includes energy efficiency initiatives, onsite solar (where possible) and offsite renewable electricity delivered via Power Purchase Agreements.

The Star Entertainment Group’s Managing Director and CEO, Robbie Cooke said the farm was a further demonstration of The Star’s ambition to develop and operate socially, environmentally, and economically sustainable destinations.

“As an organisation, we’re committed to delivering positive impacts on the communities and cities in which we operate. Corymbia is the evolution of our wider sustainability strategy and will help us achieve our goals.” said Mr Cooke.

“We look forward to unveiling further announcements about this exciting, and innovative project in the near future.”

 

Source: The Star Group

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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  1. Rob Atkinson, 08/02/2023

    Well, here we go.
    State government has changed the rules. No longer can a business offset carbon emissions against natural vegetation.
    Now a large business that is required to offset carbon emissions must purchase cleared land and plant trees.
    This will create inflated land prices, it eliminates livestock from the property for an unknown period, and it depopulates rural areas.
    The Labor Party along with the Greens strike another blow against farmers!

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