New national park to protect Sydney’s largest koala population: Sharpe, Scully

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The Hon. Penny Sharpe, Minister for the Environment (NSW); The Hon. Paul Scully, Minister for Planning and Public Spaces (NSW), Joint Media Release, 30 July 2025

Sydney’s largest koala population will now enjoy greater protection thanks to the state’s newest national park that winds along the Georges River in the city’s south-west.

Warranmadhaa (Georges River Koala National Park), located between Long Point and Appin, covers 962 hectares. Work is already underway to grow the park with more land transfers planned into the National Park system which will protect up to 1,830 hectares of habitat.

Koalas require large, connected areas of habitat so they can eat, move and breed.

Warranmadhaa National Park will safeguard the most important corridor in the area, facilitating the safe movement of koalas between Campbelltown and the Southern Highlands.

When fully established, the reserve will further protect Cumberland Plain Woodland and Shale Sandstone Transition Forest, which are both listed as critically endangered ecological communities in NSW.

Warranmadhaa National Park delivers on the NSW Government’s commitment to establish a koala national park along Georges River under the Cumberland Plain Conservation Plan.

The Plan supports the delivery of approximately 73,000 homes in Western Sydney and will minimise the impacts of development on threatened plants and animals at a landscape scale while creating protected suburban green spaces.

The name Warranmadhaa refers to the geography in the southern areas of the reserve and was chosen in close consultation with Traditional Custodians, the Tharawal Local Aboriginal Land Council and the local Aboriginal community.

The NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service has started the process to prepare a plan of management for Warranmadhaa National Park.

This will provide opportunity for people to have their say to help shape how the park will be managed to preserve its values and how it will be accessed and used by the community.

Quote attributable to Minister for the Environment, Penny Sharpe:

“This new national park is one of the most important in the state for koala conservation, protecting almost 1,000 hectares of vital koala habitat in south-west Sydney and delivering on our promise to safeguard this iconic species.

“$48.2 million has been committed to establish and manage this park, ensuring long-term protection for the south-west Sydney’s koalas.”

Quote attributable to Minister for Planning and Public Spaces, Paul Scully:

“It is great to see this land in southern western Sydney transferred into the national park system to protect koala habitat in perpetuity.

“There is even more great news, in the longer term with plans to almost double the size of the park through future land acquisitions in the Georges River area under the Cumberland Plain Conservation Plan.

“This is a strategic approach which aims to balance urban development with the protection of important biodiversity including threatened plants and animals.”

Quote attributable to the Member for Campbelltown, Greg Warren:

“I welcome this important step towards koala conservation in our region.

“Our community has an expectation that wildlife in our region, particularly our koalas, are protected and safeguarded. This commitment is a step towards ensuring that this community expectation is not just met, but exceeded.”

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1 COMMENT

  1. This is ridiculous. The koalas are already there in unsustainably high numbers. $50 million is a lot of money to draw some lines on maps. The Minister’s mob have just been caught out trying to move koalas to another area because there are too many. It’s nothing to do with conservation. Probably intended to placate Greens when a smaller than expected Great Koala Park is announced for the North Coast. These parks are totally unnecessary and deprive people of houses and jobs.

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