Chapter 2 Background
2.1
This Chapter will provide background information on the Caring for Our
Country initiative and the Landcare program which falls in its remit. The joint
and individual roles of the portfolio agencies involved will also be discussed.
Caring for Our Country
2.2
Caring for Our Country (CfOC) is the Australian Government’s natural
resource initiative, aiming to make ‘a real and measurable
difference to Australia’s environment’.[1]
2.3
The initiative, administered jointly by the Department of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF) and the Department of Sustainability,
Environment, Water, Population and Communities (SEWPaC), funds projects aimed
at enhancing the state of the natural environment. It does so by supporting
communities, farmers and land managers to protect Australia’s natural
environment and sustainability. According to its website:
Caring for our Country aims to achieve an
environment that is healthy, better protected, well-managed, resilient and
provides essential ecosystem services in a changing climate [and funds] projects
that improve biodiversity and sustainable farm practices.[2]
2.4
CfOC funds are used to provide grants to projects that improve
biodiversity and sustainable farm projects.[3] At present, CfOC is
nearing the end of its first phase between 2008 and 2013. This period saw
Australian Government investment of $2 billion to support a range of National
Priority Areas:
- National Reserve
System;
- Biodiversity and
natural icons;
- Coastal environments
and critical aquatic habitats;
- Sustainable farm
practices;
- Community skills,
knowledge and engagement; and
- Natural resource
management in northern and remote Australia.[4]
2.5
From July 2013, the second phase of CfOC will commence, characterised by
administration devolved into two streams – sustainable agriculture
(administered by DAFF) and sustainable environment (administered by SEWPaC). This
will see the Australian Government commit over $2 billion to continue the
program.[5]
2.6
To guide project funding for the 2013-14 year, the Australian Government
has released the document One Land – Many Stories: Prospectus of Investment.
This document:
…provides an overarching framework of the Australian
Government’s priorities for funding conservation and improving natural resource
management in 2013–14. This Prospectus articulates the places (target areas),
national priorities (investment themes) and the available grant funding to
guide the development of project proposals in the 2013–14 round of biodiversity
conservation and natural resource management investment across the Australian
Government environment portfolio.[6]
2.7
The Sustainable Agriculture Stream will focus on:
- Sustainable
production of food;
- Innovation
in Australian agriculture and fisheries practices;
- Reduced
impact of weeds and pests on agriculture;
- Improved
management of agriculture and fisheries and the natural resource base; and
- A
skilled and capable Landcare community.[7]
2.8
The Sustainable Environment stream will focus on:
… a broader range of Commonwealth priorities
such as Commonwealth waters and marine biodiversity. It will support work that
contributes to the Government's broader objectives for improved outcomes at
land, seascape and ecosystem scales, while continuing to meet legislated
responsibilities.[8]
2.9
Funding in the environment stream, will be
available for the following project types:
- Community
Environment Grants for local groups to take action to conserve and protect
their natural environment
- Environmental
Stewardship Program using a market-based approach to protect threatened
ecological communities on private land
- Reef Rescue
providing assistance to farmers and land managers in the Great Barrier Reef
catchments to reduce nutrient runoff, pesticides and sediment from agricultural
lands (delivered with the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry)
- Regional Delivery
for the identified regional natural resource management organisations
(delivered with the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry)
- Target Area Grants
for medium to large-scale projects to deliver against the three strategic
objectives of the Sustainable Environment stream of the second phase of Caring
for our Country, including funding opportunities for protecting urban waterways
and coastal environments
- Working on Country
supporting local Indigenous communities to manage their land and seas and
providing opportunities for Indigenous employment
- Indigenous
Protected Areas program provides support for Indigenous communities to
increase and manage Indigenous Protected Areas.[9]
Landcare
2.10
Landcare is a major grass roots movement which obtains some of its
funding through CfOC, with some $36.8 million provided by DAFF in 2011-12.
Landcare is described as:
a community-based approach that has played a major role in
raising awareness, influencing farming and land management practices and
delivering environmental outcomes across Australian landscapes.
Caring for the land captures a range of activities such as
soil conservation, management of erosion and salinity, sustainable farm
practices, restoration of native habitats, revegetation, control of weeds and
pests and the development of local natural resource management skills and
knowledge.
While a key element of Landcare is the voluntary network of
more than 6,000 groups across Australia, there are many farmers and landholders
that undertake this important work but are not affiliated with any particular
Landcare group.[10]
2.11
Under the second phase, Landcare will largely fall under the auspices of
DAFF (in the overall CfOC framework). In guiding the progress of Landcare, an
Australian Framework for Landcare has been developed by the community of those
involved. It provides that the approach to Landcare involves:
- a philosophy,
influencing the way people live in the landscape while caring for the land –
the Landcare ethic
- local community
action putting the philosophy into practice – the Landcare movement founded on
stewardship and volunteerism
- a range of knowledge
generation, sharing and support mechanisms including groups, networks (from
local to national), facilitators and coordinators, government and
non-government partnerships – the Landcare model.[11]
2.12
The Landcare movement involves significant contribution from the
community itself as it is:
…based on the concept and practice of community members
providing their time and energy to identify, plan and implement on-ground
works.[12]