Crossing the Tideline
Senator Peter Whish-Wilson has spent 14 years in Australian politics fighting for ocean and environmental protection. He's also a surfer and diver who uses deterrence himself, has had his own unannounced Great White encounters off the Tasmanian coast, and made the trip out to the Neptune Islands to observe deterrent testing firsthand. He's stepping away from the Senate mid-2026, and this conversation catches him at a moment of genuine reflection. Pete doesn't sit comfortably on either side of the debate and that's what makes him worth listening to. We get into why he thinks drum lines and shark nets give communities a false sense of security rather than actual protection. Why the genetic data on adult white shark populations doesn't necessarily line up with what people are feeling in the water. And why he believes both the fear and the frustration in coastal communities are completely rational, even when the policy responses aren't. We also talk about what governments can and can't realistically be asked to do, the difference between risk and perception of risk, and what he thinks ocean users themselves need to take more ownership of. He also shares a story from diving with Great Whites off South Africa that shifted something in how he sees them. Hard to explain. Worth hearing. A conversation that goes a lot of places. One of the more honest takes on the political side of all this I've had so far.
9 episoder
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