Assessing whether environmental management strategies are working — and whether they genuinely uphold sustainability principles — is the culminating analytical task in VCE Environmental Science Unit 3.
A strategy is effective if it:
1. Achieves its stated aims and objectives
2. Addresses root causes of the environmental problem (not just symptoms)
3. Is consistent with sustainability principles
4. Does not create unacceptable impacts on other systems or stakeholders
5. Is able to be sustained over time (financially, politically, practically)
For each sustainability principle, evaluate:
| Principle | Questions for Evaluation |
|---|---|
| Conservation of biodiversity & ecological integrity | Has biodiversity improved? Are ecological processes recovering? |
| Efficiency of resource use | Is the strategy delivering conservation gains per dollar invested? |
| Intergenerational equity | Are improvements durable? Will future generations benefit? |
| Intragenerational equity | Are costs and benefits distributed fairly? Are Indigenous rights respected? |
| Precautionary principle | Was there sufficient caution under uncertainty? Were risks properly assessed? |
| User pays principle | Are those responsible for harm bearing appropriate costs? |
Even partially effective strategies have limitations:
- Implementation gaps: Strategy adopted but not fully enforced
- Funding constraints: Insufficient resources to implement fully
- Scale mismatch: Local strategy cannot address regional or global drivers
- Political interference: Policy reversed when government changes
- Time lag: Ecological recovery takes decades; monitoring period too short to show results
- Inadequate monitoring: Cannot assess effectiveness without good data
| Strategy Type | Common Effectiveness Measures | Common Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Protected areas | Species richness inside vs. outside; population trends | Insufficient size; not representative; invasive species inside |
| Water buybacks | Environmental flow volumes; wetland condition | Market price inflation; uneven geographic distribution |
| Predator control | Population growth of target prey; breeding success | Requires sustained investment; edge effects; new predators fill niche |
| Revegetation | Vegetation cover; species diversity; soil condition | Slow recovery; weed invasion; drought stress |
| Regulation/legislation | Compliance rates; prosecutions; habitat cleared | Under-resourcing; political capture; loopholes |
A high-quality VCAA evaluation response follows this structure:
EXAM TIP: VCAA frequently asks students to ‘evaluate the effectiveness’ of a management strategy. High-scoring responses always include evidence, apply at least two sustainability principles by name, and acknowledge limitations. Avoid purely descriptive answers — evaluation requires judgment.