Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsMeet the newest leaders shaping the future of our Biosphere

Meet the newest leaders shaping the future of our Biosphere

A school principal who fosters activism in the next generation and a doctor prescribing a strong connection with nature for community health are the region’s latest sustainability champions.

These community representatives are the newest who have been chosen to help lead the sustainability movement since the Sunshine Coast local government area was declared a UNESCO Biosphere in June 2022, gaining official recognition of the region’s status as a place where active conservation and responsible development sits alongside people living sustainably.

Sunshine Coast Grammar School principal Anna Owen and gynaecology specialist Dr Beverley Powell have been selected to join the Sunshine Coast Biosphere Community Advisory Group, following an expressions of interest process to fill the education and health sector positions.

The group advises Biosphere implementation matters and includes representatives of First Nations Traditional Custodians and people across sectors and interest areas including tourism, environmental conservation, youth, agriculture, business, residents, academic and residential property development.

Mrs Owen was instrumental in weaving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals through Sunshine Coast Grammar’s student advocacy programs and curriculum, with her students pursuing their passions for taking down fast fashion, saving native bees or increasing opportunities for neurodiverse education and leadership.

“I know the biggest difference I can make is to motivate the next generation,” Mrs Owen said.

She was excited by the advisory group’s collaborative nature, and hopes to see a day when Biosphere values are engrained in everyday life and advisory groups are no longer required.

“It won’t have to be an activism piece; it’s just embedded in the whole community.

“We get to chart a change in direction. I love that young people are directing the course.“

Dr Powell represents the health sector as a medical practitioner on the Sunshine Coast for 22 years, and described the advisory group as the perfect new challenge to make a difference in the community.

She said the health sector faced its own sustainability issues, including medical waste, and health was a vital aspect for a sustainable community and for improving connections between people and nature.

“The health sector is a huge generator of good and bad,” Dr Powell said.

“We know that nature has a huge impact on your mental health, so being a Biosphere can be a positive thing for the whole population to enhance health physically, mentally and emotionally.

“This is something I can sink my teeth into and make a difference.”

After she was raised on a peanut farm in rural Queensland, Dr Powell studied in Brisbane and worked across Australia and the UK before moving to the Sunshine Coast, where she has served as a public and private health medical practitioner since 2001, specialising in women’s health and gynaecology.

As well as supporting community health across the region, Dr Powell has built a personal connection with nature though regenerating her property as a member of the Land for Wildlife Program.

“It’s very gratifying to see,” Dr Powell said.

“We’ve got heaps of bird life, we get visiting kangaroos and wallabies and koalas, and it’s really nice to provide a sanctuary for them.“

Biosphere Community Advisory Group chair Will Shrapnel said the group’s strength came from its members’ strong representation across the values of the community and the expertise of their sectors.

“Diversity of knowledge and experience has been a strength of the advisory group representation to date, and we look forward to the unique insights our new members will provide,” Mr Shrapnel said.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Retreat to nature

Tucked away in the rolling green hills of Queensland’s Sunshine Coast Hinterland lies a place where time slows, breath deepens, and nature gently takes...

Mountain rescue

Lions Club delivers

More News

Will the Euros rule Pipe?

By the time you read this, we may already have a start in the first WSL Challenger Series events for the year, the Lexus...

Ashtanga Yoga Belaku Brings Heart of Mysore to Noosa

In a world where yoga is shaped by trends and quick results, Ashtanga Yoga Belaku offers a deeper path: a lifelong practice grounded in...

Lions Club delivers

Members of the Tewantin Noosa Lions Club rolled up their sleeves and delivered a huge day for the community at the Noosa Australia Day...

Car warning

RACQ has issued a stark warning to Noosa motorists to never leave children or pets unattended in vehicles, after responding to more than 2,200...

Your feel-good escape at City Cave Noosa

Life on the Sunshine Coast might look cruisy from the outside, but between work, family, training and the general chaos of modern life, most...

Netting crisis fixed

A major breakthrough has been reached in the flying fox netting incident at Noosa Golf Club, with wildlife experts, the club and netting contractors...

Man taken to hospital

A man has been transported to Nambour Hospital in a stable condition following a multi-vehicle traffic crash at Doonan on Thursday morning. Queensland Ambulance Service...

Changes to community grants

Community organisations across Noosa Shire are being encouraged to apply for the latest council grant funding round, which opens on Monday, February 9, 2026. The...

Flying Fox update

Noosa Golf Club is today meeting with Flying Fox experts and netting companies to come up with a solution to the issue of bats...