March 10, 2022
The ‘horrible’ practice of animal parks hiring out koalas for thousands of dollars per hour to homes and hotels in NSW may be outlawed.
Conservation organizations slammed the Australian Reptile Park on the NSW Central Coast in January for allegedly renting koalas to clients who wanted to ‘impress guests’ at events, hotels, or residences.
Due to the native species’ diminishing numbers, koalas in NSW are classed as ‘vulnerable to extinction,’ and they are known to internalize stress from being put into unfamiliar environments such as hotel rooms and people’s homes.
At a NSW budget estimates hearing on Tuesday, Greens MP Cate Faehrmann quizzed Environment Minister James Griffin over what action had been taken to stop the ‘horrendous practice’ at the reptile park, labelling it an ‘unacceptable situation’.
‘That’s obviously not okay,’ Mr Griffin said.
The reptile park had been contacted, he said.
‘I understand that they won’t be proceeding to undertake that action, or provide that service anymore’, he said.
Sydney’s Taronga Zoo, meanwhile, had ruled out doing anything similar and had demonstrated care and support for koalas at the ‘highest level’, he said.
‘(It) does not participate in those particular practices.’
The NSW Government will consider whether law reform is needed to stop koalas being rented out by zoos and animal parks.
The Australian Reptile Park has been contacted for comment.
A previous NSW parliamentary inquiry found that koalas would lose their habitat and become extinct in NSW before 2050 without urgent intervention.
The government aims to double the NSW koala population by 2050.
In January, the federal government committed an extra $50 million over the next four years to pull east coast koalas back from the brink.
This article was first published by The Mail Online on 1 March 2022. Lead Image: Koalas are endangered in NSW and could become extinct unless urgent intervention is put in place (pictured: a Koala at the Australian Reptile Park).
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