As a capital city, Hobart is unique in its connection to the natural environment. From kunanyi/Mt Wellington to the Derwent River, the natural environment shapes the way we interact with the city. Over 60 per cent of the Hobart municipal area is native vegetation, with 23 per cent of all land protected.
Hobart is at risk of sea level rise and more extreme weather events, heatwaves, floods and bushfires due to climate change.
Natural spaces - parks, sportsgrounds and reserves
The City of Hobart manages and maintains high-quality public parks, gardens, playgrounds, reserves, tracks, trails and sporting facilities in and around Hobart.
We manage 4600 hectares of diverse native bushland and manage and maintain over 250km of tracks that cater to the interests of hikers, runners, mountain bikers, and those heading out on a casual stroll.
These areas are the stronghold for the city's biodiversity and encompass entire ecosystems, geological and hydrological features, and the lifeforms that are part of them, including native trees and shrubs, grasses, wildlife, leaf litter, soils and seed beds.
Climate change
The City of Hobart is a committed climate leader. We are working with the community towards achieving zero emissions and to be climate ready for current and future generations.
Hobart was the first council to commit to climate change in 1999 and was the first capital city council in Australia to declare a climate and biodiversity emergency in June 2019.
Greenhouse gas emissions
Between 2010 and 2020 the City reduced its greenhouse gas output by 17 per cent and has a target to reduce this by a further 20 per cent by 2030. Corporate greenhouse emissions come from landfill, energy usage and transport.
In the 2022-23 total corporate emissions were calculated to be 41 024 tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (t CO2-e), with 92 per cent of emissions being from landfill.
Community greenhouse emissions are largely generated by industry and commerce. Community emissions in the year 2021-22 were calculated at 537 000 t CO2-e.