The Albanese government passed reforms to environment laws last year after a 2020 review found they were failing to protect species and habitats.
Prof Hugh Possingham, a leading conservation biologist at the University of Queensland, said: “AI tools generally need material to be trained against.
“The past 20 years of EPBC Act approvals are clearly unsuitable material as the act has demonstrably failed to protect the environment.”
To speed up assessments, he said the government should instead be employing more people to carry them out.
The chief executive of the minerals council, Tania Constable, said comparisons with robodebt were “disappointing” and the proposal was innovative and could strengthen environmental protection while improving efficiency.
She said: “The proposed approach would support human decision-making with AI tools for both the regulator and the project proponent, including helping to navigate the complexity and variability of assessments and approvals under the EPBC Act.”
A federal government spokesperson said budget decisions would be made “in due course” but the environment department was considering how AI could make applications easier.
“Decisions about whether to approve projects must, and will, always be made by assessment officers, not by AI,” a statement said.
AI tools had the potential to save time, reduce uncertainty and translate technical language, the spokesperson added.
