The society generally serves the Greater Blue Mountains area, but has also been involved in national campaigns such as
Save The Franklin, Daintree and Myall Lakes, and has participated in
Nature Conservation Council initiatives. Local activities of the individual societies and later the Blue Mountains Conservation Society have included education of the public, campaigning for the protection of natural areas, bush walking, bush care, propagation and study of native plants, and bush walking track restoration.
Campaigns • The 1960s and 1970s saw campaigns eventually preventing limestone mining in the Colong Caves and stopped exotic pine plantations and the construction of a paper pulp mill on Boyd Plateau. The campaign led to the abandonment of the mining proposal and the pine plantations on the Boyd Plateau, and both areas were added to the
Kanangra-Boyd National Park. • In 1988, after lobbying the
Blue Mountains City Council, an Environmental Officer was appointed by council, being one of the few people in NSW to hold such a position at the time. The officer identified environmentally sensitive land in the Blue Mountains, which found consideration in council’s Local Environmental Plan 1991. His work also led to the gazetting of two forms of
Blue Mountains hanging swamps. • In 2014,
Western Sydney University published research which became the basis for a campaign urging the
Environmental Protection Authority to take action against the pollution of the Wollongambe River. For over 40 years, the
Centennial Coal Clarence Colliery underground coal mine at
Lithgow discharged poorly treated wastewater directly into the river, which flows through the heart of the Blue Mountains. In 2015, a mine wall collapsed causing further pollution of the river, its impact being compared by the
Wilderness Foundation to a giant oil spill. In 2019, the Environmental Protection Authority issued regulations requiring Clarence Colliery to reduce the release of pollutants, particularly zinc and nickel, which had water quality improve and animals return to the river. The campaign is continuing (2022) due to remaining river and sediment pollution. Since the declaration of a
climate emergency by
Blue Mountains City Council in 2019, the society has been calling on the public to urge council to take up the Ready for Renewables Council Challenge, which would see council to cut gas from council-owned buildings and infrastructure, reject new gas connections in the local government area and request planning scheme amendments by the state. A campaign in opposition to the raising of the dam wall of
Warragamba Dam, being conducted together with the Colong Foundation for Wilderness, is still ongoing as of 2022. Raising of the dam wall would fragment and degrade two World Heritage listed
Wilderness areas and destroy Aboriginal cultural heritage sites of the
Gundungurra people, beyond those already inundated by the original construction. == See also ==