Chapter 7 Role of Government
7.1
In their joint submission to the inquiry, the Department of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Forestry and the Department of Climate Change outlined the
Australian Government’s response to climate change:
Many farmers are testing and using different farming
practices so their businesses are better able to withstand drought and other
extreme events. However, this will not be sufficient to manage the future
impacts of climate change, and farmers will need support and guidance to do
this.
Coordinated national effort by governments, agriculture
industries, regions and individual producers will be required to put in place
sound climate change strategies to ensure that agriculture is able to
effectively manage the risks associated with climate change.
The Australian Government’s response to climate change
adaptation in agriculture is therefore to focus on providing fundamental
information and knowledge, and the decision support tools that will allow
farmers and rural industries to manage the risks of climate change.
This reflects the government’s preference for markets to
operate with minimal intervention, concentrating its role on situations where
there is market failure, where there is a clear need to intervene to protect or
maintain a public good, or where there is a high risk to assets of national
significance.[1]
7.2
The submission further noted:
Industry is best placed to respond to market drivers. Governments’
responsibility is to ensure consistency in policies, regulation and incentives
to facilitate adaptation, particularly so that these do not inhibit market
signals or encourage maladaption.[2]
7.3
This emphasis on providing a broad policy framework, creating a
regulatory environment in which market driven responses can flourish, and
intervening to correct market failure was also reflected in the submissions of
various State Governments.
7.4
In its submission, the Tasmanian Government stated:
In summary, governments’ role is to provide policy settings
that assist businesses, communities and individuals to adapt to the impacts of
climate change, and to take account of these impacts when making decisions
about the provision of public goods and management of public assets.
It is crucial that policies reflect the ‘triple bottom line’—
economic, social and environmental—in order to sustain the agricultural sector.[3]
7.5
In his submission, the Minister for Agriculture, Food and Forestry,
Western Australia, noted:
Government has a role in researching and communicating the
implications of climate change. It needs to devise response strategies for the
short term and long term. It needs to support industries and farming
communities with information to enable informed decision making, as well as to
develop risk mitigation strategies for extreme events.[4]
7.6
The submission continued:
The Western Australian Government has a role in assisting
agriculture and forestry to adapt through:
n Acting as an
“information broker” to both translate and integrate climate change
implications and provide guidance on management responses;
n Undertaking research
and development that will maintain or increase productivity in a changing
climate; and
n Ensuring land use
planning and regulation takes into account climate change projections to
maintain sustainable and profitable agricultural and forestry production while
protecting and maintaining the natural resource base.[5]
7.7
Similarly, the RM Consulting Group saw the role of government as one of
facilitating rather than creating change, creating the conditions for
successful adaptation rather than actually driving it:
Considering the areas in which farmers need assistance, there
is a strong rationale for governments to invest in research and development of
new technologies and practices and sectoral and regional information of changes
to farmers' environment, communities and regions. In the case of new
technologies and practices, research of these is clearly a public good. So too
is information regarding how the physical and community environment farmers
operate in will change. In fact, government is the only party that can inform
farmers as to what is likely to happen to key government services in the
future.
7.8
The Committee notes RM Consulting Group’s observation that the rationale
for assisting farmers with providing relevant and useful information and
assisting them in streamlining their decision making processes is less clear
cut. Furthermore, the Committee agrees that ‘the case of climate change’ raises
particular challenges, in that ‘past rules of thumb may no longer be relevant.’
RM Consulting Group notes that
… farmers are also likely to benefit significantly by
developing better systems for managing information, managing their finances and
their business, and making decisions. On balance, there is a role for
government in developing programs and policies to assist farmers in these
areas, but the cost of such programs should be shared by the farmers
themselves.[6]
7.9
In its submission, CCRSPI outlined the role of government in
facilitating the adaptation of communities and industries—including
facilitating the use of migrant workers in downstream processing:
There is a role for government in assisting individuals and
communities to transition from declining industries to emerging ones, while
minimising social dislocation and dysfunction.
Less reliable production associated with a more variable
climate is likely to reduce returns to capital and increase the difficulties
associated with maintaining, operating and staffing processing infrastructure.
The cost of future capital investments will probably rise in response to these
risks.
Downstream processing of agricultural products, especially
animal products, tends to be labour intensive. Processing facilities that
incorporate greater flexibility or that use less capital tend to be more labour
intensive. While capital costs are high, agricultural labour is scarce…
The Commonwealth’s 457 skilled work visas and Australian
Pacific Seasonal Workers Pilot Scheme offer suitable alternatives for
labour provision to some primary industries. There is clearly a role for
Government in providing appropriate regulatory frameworks to ensure these
programs benefit the wealth and wellbeing of all Australians without exploiting
the migrant labour force or their communities. Rural RDE networks have a role
in providing the training necessary to ensure farmers and agribusiness are
equipped to access and effectively work with these new labour pools.[7]
7.10
CCRSPI continued:
The government has a critical role in assisting Australia’s
primary industries adapt so they can continue to contribute to the nation’s
wealth and wellbeing. One way governments can do this is to help correct market
failures by—
n addressing
information failures through:
§
research into new knowledge to strategically filling existing
gaps;
§
ensuring the existing information is provided to farms and
businesses throughout the supply chain in forms they can readily use;
§
providing frameworks to better share and utilise information, to
reduce transaction costs associated with knowledge generation, distribution and
utilisation;
n providing appropriate
regulatory frameworks to enable the efficient operation of markets;
n correcting
externalities relating to the aspects of goods or services that are not
adequately captured in their market prices by:
§
subsidising the provision of goods and services which contain a
significant element of public good e.g. education and biodiversity;
§
pricing or limiting negative externalities associated with the
provision of goods or services e.g. pollution and food safety;
§
assisting in the commercialisation of new or infant industries -
particularly those which have considerable potential for public good e.g.
biotechnology and distributed renewable energy;
n providing public goods
and/or shared infrastructure where a market rent cannot be efficiently levied
or captured by an individual firm or entity e.g. biosecurity.[8]
7.11
CCRSPI endorsed the use of co-regulatory frameworks for facilitating
adaptation:
Co-regulatory frameworks such as farm or environmental
management systems (EMS) provide governments with a mechanism to achieve
widespread and ongoing adoption of best management practices (BMPs) without
excessive regulatory costs e.g. Cotton BMP program, Pathways to Industry EMS
program.[9]
7.12
In its submission, the South Australian Farmers Federation urged a
partnership between government and industry focused on innovation:
Regardless of activities undertaken to mitigate carbon
emissions, agriculture will need to adapt to a changing climate. Governments
have a role in working with industry to:
1. Develop stewardship payments for protection and
enhancement of native vegetation or water quality improvements,
2. Develop ‘new’ industries such as power generation from
piggery waste,
3. Provide research funding into conversion of urban and
animal waste to biochar which may provide an alternative to fertiliser use in
horticulture and cropping systems,
4. Produce more agricultural product with less water, and
5. Develop programs to monitor changes in the natural
resources, eg monitor the spread of weeds.[10]
Australian government policy initiatives
7.13
In their joint submission to the inquiry, the Department of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Forestry and the Department of Climate Change outlined the policy
framework governing agriculture and climate change. The submission stated:
The Australian Government has adopted a new National Climate
Change Science Framework which sets out climate change research priorities for
the coming decade. The focus of the Framework is fundamental climate system
science, which provides essential system knowledge to understand climate change
impacts, develop adaptation strategies, and manage carbon emissions. The
scientific research proposed under the Framework is designed to interact
closely with the adaptation response agenda, with mitigation science and
technology, and with efforts to develop more effective policy to deal with the
climate change challenge.
The Framework will deliver improved higher resolution
predictions of future climate, knowledge which is central to the development of
adaptation policy for agriculture. There will be specific focus on future
rainfall, evaporation and other climate features that affect our water
resources and dry land agriculture. The Framework will also deliver improved
knowledge on extreme events such as drought, heatwaves, storms and fire
weather, information which will assist in policy development around the
management of carbon in the landscape.[11]
7.14
The submission continued:
There is scope to substantially enhance the Framework. In
particular, the capacity of the agriculture sector to plan for climate change
will require extension of our predictive capability for weather and climate
from short term forecasts through to monthly, seasonal and decadal predictions
of climate. There is also a need for research infrastructure investments,
including the renewal and maintenance of supercomputing, ocean research vessels
and earth observation networks to underpin this work. The outcomes from these
investments would allow farmers to factor the longer-term climate and weather
predictions into farm planning and so be better prepared for unusual and
extreme events.[12]
7.15
The submission also outlined the National Climate Change Adaptation Framework
(NCCAF), which:
…recognises the government has an important role in
establishing optimal conditions for adaptation across Australia, including in
the agricultural sector. Consistent with the Framework, the government is
assisting agriculture adapt to climate change by addressing market failures.
Investment is being made in research that can deliver information needed to
assist the sector manage future climate risk through the establishment of a new
National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility (www.nccarf.edu.au) and an
Adaptation Research Flagship at CSIRO
(www.csiro.au/org/ClimateAdaptationFlagship.html). Information needs encompass
climate change science to deliver improved projections at scales and timeframes
relevant to producers; decision support tools that inform a range of production
systems; and adaptation options readily adoptable by producers to manage
climate risk.[13]
7.16
In evidence before the Committee, Mr Chris Johnston, Assistant
Secretary, Adaptation Innovation Branch, DCC, elaborated on the work of NCCARF:
The NCCARF has eight themes of which primary industries is
one and they have established a research network under each of those themes,
including primary industries, and that is led by Professor Snow Barlow at the
University of Melbourne. They are currently working on a national adaptation
research plan for primary industries and we expect to see a consultation draft
towards the end of this year with a final currently scheduled to be completed
around April or May 2010.[14]
7.17
As part of the Framework,
National Adaptation Research Plans (NARPS) are being
developed for areas such as primary industries, water resources and freshwater
biodiversity. The NARPS will set out national priorities for applied research
to underpin the development of Australia’s adaptation capability. NARPS will
have a central role in guiding investment in R&D activities.[15]
7.18
Another major policy initiative is Australia’s Farming Future:
The Australia’s Farming Future (AFF) initiative is the
government’s key initiative for assisting primary producers adapt and adjust to
the challenges of climate change. The initiative consists of several elements
that help build adaptable and resilient producers and industries and strengthen
their ability to manage climate change into the future.[16]
7.19
The initiative includes the Climate Change Research Program:
The $46.2 million Climate Change Research Program is funding
research projects and on-farm demonstrations to help prepare Australia’s
primary industries for climate change and build the resilience of the
agricultural sector into the future. Initially focusing on reducing greenhouse
pollution, better soil management and climate change adaptation, the program
will involve projects that provide practical management solutions to farmers
and industries…[17]
To June 2009, the Government has committed $37.9 million for
research under the Climate Change Research Program, leveraging $61.7 million
from partners, including state government, industry and research organisations.
This includes:
n the Soil Carbon
Research Program ($9.6 million from the program over four years as part of a
$20 million package) will be established in all states and the Northern
Territory to investigate carbon changes in soil across Australia in response to
farm management practices. A separate project has been established for biochar
research ($1.4 million from the program over three years from 2009–10)
n the Nitrous Oxide
Research Program ($4.7 million from the program over four years as part of a
$11.9 million package) will develop a national system for measuring nitrous
oxide emissions from Australia’s agricultural soils
n the Reducing
Emissions from Livestock Research Program ($11.3 million from the program over
four years as part of a $28.7 million package) focuses on reducing methane
emissions from livestock
n the
Adaptation Research Program ($11 million over four years as part of a $37.6
million package) will develop knowledge and management strategies to assist
primary producers to adapt to a changing climate while promoting productivity.[18]
7.20
FarmReady is a program targeted principally at the development and
provision of training activities and resources:
Within the Australia’s Farming Future framework, the
FarmReady program provides $26.5 million over four years to improve adoption of
risk management and business management skills, increase adoption of new
technologies and best practice management to enable primary producers,
Indigenous land managers and agricultural industries to adapt and respond to
the impacts of climate change. The program runs until 30 June 2012 and consists
of two separate elements:
n FarmReady
Reimbursement Grants of up to $1500 per person per financial year to individual
primary producers and Indigenous land managers to attend approved climate
change training activities
n FarmReady Industry
Grants to industry organisations of up to $80 000 per financial year to
industry organisations, farming groups and natural resource management groups
to undertake projects that will enable their members to adapt to the impacts of
climate change.
Under the first round of the FarmReady Industry Grants, $6.3
million has been provided for 46 projects.[19]
7.21
In evidence before the Committee, Mr Allen Grant, Executive Manager,
Agricultural Productivity Division, DAFF, elaborated on the components of
FarmReady:
One component allows individual farmers to attend training
courses that are directed at farm business practices and provide specific
education and learning about how farmers can adapt their own circumstances to
variations in climate change. Courses would include some technical aspects of
adaptation but there would also be courses directed at a range of business
skills and broader management skills and abilities. Under that program, farmers
can receive up to a $1,500 repayment for expenses incurred in attending those
courses. That is the reimbursement side of it.
…The second component of FarmReady provides industry groups,
including Landcare groups and landholder groups—that is, groups of farmers or
landholders who might just band together to form a group—up to $80 000 to
enable them to develop tools, education facilities and communication facilities
through which they can then transfer those skills and techniques to the farmers
within their area. They can develop capacities and build systems and learning
techniques… communication and on-the-ground techniques so that they can
demonstrate those to the other people within their communities or to the groups
that they represent. It is $80 000 to groups around the country, and that is on
a competitive basis. There is a call for expressions of interest for grants
under FarmReady and there is a process by which those grants are determined and
agreed.[20]
7.22
Another program promotes community networking and capacity building:
Community Networks and Capacity Building will build on the
leadership and representative capacity of women, youth, Indigenous Australians
and people for culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds to strengthen
community resilience and the productivity of primary industries. With increased
access to tools and resources, these target groups can improve their leadership
and management skills, increase participation in industry and more effectively
contribute to government and industry decision making.[21]
7.23
Mr Grant explained:
There is a small program under Australia’s Farming Future
which is a community networks and capacity-building program focused on
increasing the leadership and representative capacity of target groups. The
target groups include women, youth, Indigenous Australians and people from
culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds. It is trying to strengthen
primary industry productivity and build rural and regional community resilience
in a changing climate. That is a small program that is sort of directed in that
path. I think $2 million has been allocated to that program in 2009-10.[22]
7.24
Another program, providing adjustment assistance for farmers
experiencing financial hardship is the Climate Change Adjustment Program:
The Climate Change Adjustment Program is assisting low
income, low asset farmers who may be affected by climate change, including
those experiencing financial hardship caused by drought. The program provides
financial assistance to farmers with the aim of adjusting their farm business
to manage the impacts of climate change.
Assistance under the program includes:
n Adjustment advice and
training grants of up to $5 500—available for specialised professional advice
(where the advice is linked to managing the impacts of climate change) and
training
n Re-establishment
assistance of up to $150 000—enables farmers to exit the industry and pursue
other employment opportunities or retire.[23]
7.25
Another important program is the Rural Financial Counselling Service:
The Program provides grants to regional and state level not-for-profit
organisations to employ rural financial counsellors to provide free and
confidential financial counselling services to farmers, fishers and small rural
businesses who are in financial difficulty and have no access to other forms of
impartial support.
The objectives of the Program are to:
n make sure clients
have access to financial information, options, decision support and referral
services
n allow clients to
consider information and options to implement decisions to manage industry
adjustment and climate change
n provide
a needs-based service that is free, effective, responsive and flexible.[24]
7.26
Finally, an important part of the policy framework for delivering
outcomes at a regional and local level is Caring for our Country:
Caring for our Country commenced on 1 July 2008 and aims to
develop an environment that is healthier, better protected, well managed,
resilient, and provides essential ecosystem services in a changing climate.
The Caring for our Country outcomes contribute to climate
change adaptation by improving environmental management and assisting farmers
and land managers to adopt sustainable farm practices.
Sustainable Farm Practices is one of six priority investment
areas under Caring for our Country. The 2009–10 sustainable farm practices
targets aim to increase the adoption of sustainable farm practices such as
those that maintain or increase soil carbon, groundcover and vegetation on-farm
as well as reduce the risk of erosion and soil acidification.
From 1 July 2008, the activities of the former National
Landcare Program have been encompassed in the government’s Caring for our
Country initiative. Most landcare activity is undertaken within the sustainable
farming practices priority area.[25]
Detailed critique of policy initiatives
7.27
In its submission to the inquiry, the Future Farm Industries CRC
delivered an extensive critique of current policy initiatives. Starting with
the Government’s current approach, the submission stated:
The Commonwealth Government has two R&D funding
initiatives relevant to adaptation to climate change. The Primary Industries
Adaptation Research Network (PI ARN) is one of eight themes funded in the
National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility (NCCARF). It is managed by
Land and Water Australia and linked to the Climate Change Research Strategy for
Primary Industries (CCRSPI), which is a joint initiative of RDCs, the Primary
Industries Steering Committee (PISC) and CSIRO. Active network building,
coordination of research investment and further capacity building is about to
occur. Adaptation is one of three themes in the Climate Change Research Program
(CCRP) (others are emissions reduction and soil carbon). Decisions on projects
are rolling out now. These two initiatives (PI ARN, CCRP) are in different
ministerial portfolios (Climate Change; Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry).
The Government has a policy position on how agriculture will
be treated under the proposed Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme (CPRS). It will
decide in 2013 whether and how agriculture will be covered with entry into
CPRS, if it occurs, not before 2015. Meanwhile, the Government has made it
clear that metrics and technologies for agricultures' emission reduction need
to improve. CCRP funding decisions are supporting this priority.
This three-pronged approach looks impressive; however, the
threat of policy and program failure is very real. This claim is based on FFI
CRC's understanding of how innovation, technological change, research and
development and improved outcomes occur in dryland agriculture, and on the poor
track record of Commonwealth Government funding programs in getting these
outcomes.[26]
7.28
The submission identified three critical failings (all of which also
relate to the issues raised in Chapter 6). The submission noted:
Farmers’ path to adoption of new practices for drought
preparedness, climate change adaptation and compliance with emissions reduction
measures is much longer than the Government realises…
Investment in R&D is not large enough, not long enough
and not sufficiently allocated to new profitable solutions for farmers…
Commonwealth Government agencies administering funding
programs for land use change have failed to achieve high rates of adoption by
farmers. There is compelling evidence for this, and that a primary reason is
lack of profitable options for farmers.[27]
7.29
The submission concluded:
There is looming institutional failure with successive
Commonwealth government’s approaches to investing in sustainable agriculture
and natural resource management outcomes. Its programs are dependent on
Canberra based officers administering funds to contracted projects. These
officers are funds administrators without the authority or technical capability
to perform the risk managing investor role. The high number of consultancies commissioned
by Commonwealth agencies provides stark evidence that they are not able to
engage the agriculture sector first hand and adopt the more effective
partnership approach.
This Government, in particular, understands the importance of
tapping science expertise and is prepared to target its funding to institutions
where those scientists reside. This is good to a point. However key science
institutions (CSIRO, universities) have no path to farmer adoption and limited
industry engagement. Farmer behaviour change is not their mandate and there are
no accountable paths to adoption activities. State agencies have traditionally
had agricultural extension services alongside R&D capacity but these have
declined so severely that traditional information sources tapping public good
R&D no longer exist. Catchment management authorities and regional NRM
bodies are not a substitute. They now face uncertain times, don’t have R&D
capacity [and] aren’t geared for farm-level advice on production solutions. The
agribusiness sector has a growing capacity to technically service farmers but
can’t be expected to carry out public good functions if they don’t improve
their profit bottom line. Today, farm research groups and farm consultants are
the best placed to fill this void, but ‘next user’ programs such as that of FFI
CRC are needed and these are beyond the means of major R&D institutions.[28]
7.30
The solution to the problems outlined above was to make more effective
use of existing research infrastructure—the RDCs and CRCs:
RDCs are structured to manage investment more effectively
with program managers closer to farmers and industry. CRCs are structured to
manage R&D, training and path to adoption, including commercialisation of
R&D, in an integrated way.
Both institutional forms have been regularly evaluated and
their success and good returns on investment demonstrated. Under the current
evaluation framework for RDCs, a randomly selected 32 projects have returned an
estimated $11.00 for each dollar expended, and on the input side each dollar of
government funding is matched by $1.50 from industry (Council of RDC Chairs
2008). The recent evaluation of CRCs by the Productivity Commission, re-working
numbers from earlier studies with a more conservative method, estimated that
there was an aggregate increase in economic output of 51 cents for every dollar
of the Commonwealth’s CRC Program funds (O’Kane 2008). Again this is a
substantial return on investment.
FFI CRC argues that the Commonwealth reverts to current best
practice in how it invests climate change program funds in R&D and path to
adoption activities that will improve adaptation to climate change in the
longer run through real change in farm businesses. Rather than administer
funding programs direct to project managers in the absence of industry-credible
program managers, it should put its funds through RDCs. They have a strategy
for planning, priority setting and coordination (CCRSPI) and established
program managers with science, industry and field experience.
RDCs in turn could follow their best practice in
commissioning projects with R&D providers and collaborative ventures such
as CRCs that are uniquely set up to combine R&D, path to adoption with
commercialisation elements in an environment that fosters innovation and
public-private partnerships.
In this way Commonwealth Government investment in drought,
climatic variability and climate change outcomes become part of the mainstream
innovation, problem-solving, technology development, productivity growth and
structural adjustment that has been the basis of Australian agriculture’s
success over the past 60 years—and no longer an add-on activity.[29]
Committee conclusions
7.31
Notwithstanding the comments of the Future Farm Industries CRC, the
Committee believes the current policy framework provides the basis for a
comprehensive and sustained response to the challenges of climate variability
and climate change within the farm sector. The success of these policies and
initiatives, however, will depend upon sustained and consistent application,
well-targeted and sustained funding, effective coordination, and a very
deliberate focus on the delivery of outcomes on-farm.
7.32
As the criticisms of the Future Farm Industries CRC indicate, a
sustained and effective response by government, and the delivery of real gains
on-farm, cannot be guaranteed. The Committee has received plenty of evidence
about the deleterious impacts of short-term funding and sudden changes in
policy direction upon outcomes. There appears to be a real disconnect between
policy on paper and outcomes on the ground. Governments and bureaucrats need to
be aware of this problem and be constantly seeking to address it. While not
necessarily endorsing the proposals contained in the Future Farm Industries CRC
submission, the Committee certainly commends them to the Government for further
consideration.
Recommendation 13 |
7.33
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government give
further consideration to the analysis of government policy and outcomes in
the submission to the current inquiry made by the Future Farm Industries CRC,
with a view to ensuring the better coordination of research and extension
efforts and the delivery of effective policy outcomes.
|
Facilitating action
7.34
The need to facilitate action in response to climate change was seen as
a key role for government in the evidence presented to the Committee. Whether
providing financial incentives to undertake specific actions, building capacity
at an individual or community level, providing stewardship payments for
environmental management, or simply adjusting government regulation to
facilitate certain outcomes, a range of actions were identified that could
facilitate adaptation.
Incentives
7.35
The use of financial incentives was seen as a practical way of
facilitating adaptation to climate variability and climate change. In its
submission Australian Women in Agriculture stated:
Governments therefore need to clarify and strengthen
incentives and schemes to enable households, agriculture and industry to reduce
carbon emissions, develop energy self-sufficiency and manage water in a
sustainable manner so that all sectors of Australian society are working
together towards sustainability.[30]
7.36
The Committee received a number of suggestions about ways to promote
change through financial incentives—a range of options usually targeted at the
needs of specific industries or issues, a fact which suggests that targeted
incentives will work better than broadly based schemes.
7.37
In its submission, Apple and Pear Australia suggested the use of special
loans:
The Apple and Pear Australia Ltd Industry is a capital
intensive industry with significant upfront investment required and a lengthy
time period between initial investment and returns. The development of a
co-contribution scheme whereby growers could have access to funds in the form
of low interest loans, growers would have the confidence to implement new
technologies that would enable them to become resilient in the changing climate
and environment.[31]
7.38
The National Association for Sustainable Agriculture Australia Ltd urged
a substantial increase in funding to support organic agriculture:
Federal Government can play an important role in assisting
farmers to adapt to climate change by supporting organic agriculture at a major
scale and increasing current funding which resides at less than $500 000 p.a.
nation wide to a figure at least 100 times greater in the first instance. This
funding should be made available to research organisations with reference to
the Organic Federation of Australia, the peak National body for organic
agriculture
The key research needs in our view are holistic biophysical
studies that are carried out in decentralised locations and that permit farmers
and researchers to better understand soils, fertility and organic practices
that further enhance crop yields and carbon sequestration.[32]
7.39
In its submission, the Grain Growers Association suggested incentives
for better energy efficiency and transport use. It also highlighted the need
for better access to rail transport for grain growers as a means of lowering
the energy costs of transporting grain:
As an example, the current national water reforms include
measures to incentivise improved irrigation efficiency on farm through higher
technology water delivery systems. Where these systems are replacing gravity
fed systems, the energy requirements of these systems is increasing and
therefore emissions. However there are no apparent incentives for energy
alternatives such as solar, wind or renewable fuel sources which would
effectively address this issue.
Another example is the run down in investment in rail and
port infrastructure. Rail transport is vastly more efficient in terms of energy
than road but successive State Government underinvestment and parochial
management has resulted in a transport system with limited capacity which is
forcing industry to increasingly rely on road systems. One Government response
to climate change adaptation and energy efficiency is to dramatically improve
the transport infrastructure to assist growers to access markets using the most
efficient methods and potentially increasing the range of products growers
might produce if more efficient transport were available.[33]
7.40
Dr Christine Jones presented the Committee with a fully fledged
incentive scheme, the Green Agriculture Stewardship Scheme, as a means of
promoting the benefits of permanent ground cover for soil health, moisture
retention and soil carbon sequestration:
The most effective way to generate on-ground change is to
actively engage landholders in participatory approaches to innovation and
extension. Regenerative land management techniques such as ‘yearlong green’
represent fundamental redesign and hence are subject to ‘resistance to change’.
It is recommended that the Green Agriculture Stewardship
Scheme initially target regions which have only short-term annual cover
(commonly monoculture) for part of the year and bare ground for the remainder.
There are approximately 20 million hectares of land currently used for dryland
broadacre cereal cropping (bare summer fallow) and 130 million hectares of
grazing land lacking perennial groundcover…
The Green Agriculture Stewardship Scheme will result in the
establishment of 100 strategically placed, nation-wide, highly publicised
demonstration sites (Green Agriculture Innovation Nodes), showcasing leading
edge technologies that restore photosynthetic capacity, reverse soil structural
decline, improve carbon biosequestration, increase soil water-holding
potential, enhance productivity and increase gross margins per hectare. These
technologies have already proved successful and profitable for individual
landholders in assisting their adaptation to a warmer, drier climate.
A simple incentive scheme designed to catalyse innovation and
fast-track adoption may prove less expensive, easier to manage and have broader
application than a top-down prescriptive approach to land management.[34]
7.41
In its submission, the Murray Irrigators Support Group advocated the
payment of $10 000 grants to farmers to provide an incentive for the uptake of
water saving technology and practices.[35] In evidence before the
Committee, Mr John Padman illustrated how such incentive payments could work to
bring about rapid change at the farm level:
To do a farm properly you might have to spend $50 000 to $100
000. The $10 000 would be a catalyst. We want to get more research done. As to
all the work I have done, I have practically dedicated the last five years to
this. I have spent a lot of my own personal money doing that, but I still could
not go on to a farm and say, ‘You should be watering that bay in two hours’ or
whatever it is…
Mr Bryant is a typical example. When the $20 000 came out he
was the first one on the phone. I talked to him about it before and he said,
‘I’ll try a few of those six-foot Padmans.’ That is all we had to do. We did
not have to say another word to Mr Bryant. He tried it once. That is what can
happen. That is catalyst money.[36]
Capacity building
7.42
Another key to responding to climate variability and climate change is
building capacity—giving individuals and communities the knowledge and tools to
become more resilient and adaptive. In its submission, Australian Women in
Agriculture argued for a long-term commitment to community development as part
of the response to climate change:
Meaningful change in community attitudes and behaviour
requires a diverse approach incorporating information, education, incentives
and support. Adherence to the principles of community development, namely:
empowerment/ownership of activities by communities; valuing the local
knowledge; collective working and encouraging participation and inclusion;
balancing process with outcome; being sensitive to cultural/political
paradigms; and sustainability/longevity (not just ‘blow in/blow out’) is
particularly important during times of major change and adjustment.
In the context of community development, short term funding
and contracts for drought support and rural adjustment services are
counterproductive. It takes time to build trust and rapport and networks and
partnerships and this social capital can be lost when there is a regime of
constant change of staff and programs. A more positive approach is sustainable
programs based on evidence and focused on building community capacity to manage
social and environmental change and changing business situations.[37]
7.43
In their joint submission, Horticulture Australia Council and Horticulture
Australia Limited also saw capacity as part of the response to climate change:
Overall, the best defence against future climate change is to
continue to develop the capacity and knowledge so that growers can make
effective business decisions, minimize risk, and manage our response to current
climate variability more effectively. This will ensure both the long-term
viability and sustainability of our industry, and continued availability to
consumers of fresh and health-giving horticultural outputs.[38]
7.44
In its submission, the Australian Institute of Agricultural Science and
Technology argued for building capacity in business and management skills:
There is an urgent need to improve the business management skills
of farmers—these skills will be crucial in our increasingly deregulated and
diverse markets (both buying inputs and selling commodities). The new carbon
economy is just one more management skill which farmers will have to learn.[39]
7.45
In evidence before the Committee, Dr Nigel Wilhelm, a member of the AIAST,
highlighted studies which had demonstrated that business management skills
rather than land management skills often made the difference between success or
failure in coping with drought:
… the clear message from those studies is that it was not the
ability of the farmer to run his farm; it was his ability to run the business.
They were the skills that made the difference between an intact business at the
end of this dry period compared to the neighbours’ ones which were in dire
straits. It was not so much their ability to farm the paddocks; it was their
ability to manage the business. That message is coming back time and time
again…We expect climate change to create generally more adverse conditions in
southern Australia and there will still be good years and bad years. It is the
ability to respond to those challenging conditions which will help those
farming businesses survive. So it is about giving them the tools to make
changes quickly in the right direction. That is the major focus.[40]
7.46
A number of submissions focused on the need to support local groups and
grower organisations in building capacity. In its submission, Monaro Farming
Systems stated:
MFS sees the role of government is to strengthen their
support and investment in regional farmer groups and to provide funding support
which is accessible to independent, non-Government, member owned and driven
groups.
The Federal government could also place more emphasis on
facilitating communication and fostering synergistic relationships between
local representatives and farmer groups such as MFS and national research
bodies (AWI, MLA, GRDC) to provide a forum for information exchange.
By supporting regional projects MFS believes Government will
increase the resilience of farm business in the face of increasing climate
variability and also encourage a move towards more systems based agriculture.
By supporting these type of projects, the government will encourage attitude
change, practice change and increased confidence in the rural industry in
managing uncertainty in climate and markets thereby moving the industry towards
greater self-reliance.[41]
7.47
Likewise, Southern New England Landcare urged support on Landcare
groups as a catalyst for action, however:
…to do so requires a long term partnership approach between
community and government, whereby government provides secure and ongoing
resourcing to allow such organisations to support the community in developing
and implementing innovative projects to address climate change.[42]
7.48
In its submission, the Goulburn Broken Catchment Management Authority
stated:
The government must ensure that the research, extension and
training assist the farming community adapt to climate change through a systems
approach (there must be improved understanding of the biophysical and
socio-economic systems), ensuring that the information can itself be localised
and importantly empowers the community to act.
The government has a role identifying what the likely shocks
are, increasing the diversity options available and create an environment for
their adoption.
The government has a role in research and devolving the
information along with the decision making. It is ultimately the community that
will create the resilient systems in the face of climate change, the government
must undertake the relevant research and provide the best information possible
to facilitate decision making. It must also support regional bodies in
devolving information and making information locally relevant.[43]
7.49
The Conservation Agriculture Alliance of Australia and New Zealand also
urged support for grower groups as a positive way to facilitate change:
One way government can better support the shift to
conservation agriculture is to support not-for-profit organisations that
growers themselves support financially through voluntary subscriptions and
in-kind contributions of time, skills and resources.[44]
7.50
The Fenner School of Environment and Society, ANU, simply urged a focus
on accessible low-technology solutions to climate variability and climate
change:
Prioritising inexpensive, flexible, low-tech solutions that
are proven to work, and have important synergies with other societal goals,
will be a vital first step to truly bring Australian farming systems in line
with their natural environment.[45]
7.51
In her submission, Ms Rosemary Hook, a grazier, highlighted the need to
maintain programs which support access to training and extension, and suggested
incentives along the lines of ‘land stewardship’ payments. She noted, however,
the need to directly support holistic solutions, not solutions that solved one
problem by creating another:
There is a clear need for the development of programs to
assist farmers, to be advised by research from social science groups. For
example, the Sustainable Farms Project within the Fenner School at ANU, is
currently investigating the attitudes of graziers to their farm landscapes—an
understanding of such attitudes is vital in designing assistance programs
(including financial) to which a broad spectrum of farmers will respond.
Successful support programmes, such as assistance provided
for farmers to attend holistic management courses (run by HM Educators, RCS and
Principal Focus) and to obtain professional farm planning advice, should be
continued.
It may be appropriate to provide financial incentives/rewards
for implementing practices known to be beneficial, but which do not necessarily
require acceptance of climate change per se—the “land stewardship” type
payments that have been considered in other contexts.
In funding research which underpins the development of
appropriate agricultural systems, the government needs to ensure that whole
farm systems and their carbon economy are considered. This is to avoid
developments which may have beneficial aspects but which overall are part of or
support, carbon expensive farming systems.[46]
Committee conclusions
7.52
Facilitating action at an individual, community and industry level is a
key role for Government. It is, of course, axiomatic that Governments should
always be aware of the potential impacts of laws and programs on the ability of
farmers and industries to adapt to climate variability and climate change.
Policies which produce perverse or negative outcomes, or fail to promote
positive outcomes, must be adjusted.
7.53
The Committee is aware of government programs which provide financial
support and incentives for farmers to undertake training and develop their
business commercially and environmentally. Opportunities are there for those
who wish to take advantage of them. Nonetheless, the Committee believes that
there are further opportunities for government to facilitate adaptation through
targeted incentives. A number of the suggestions made to the Committee in this
vein would seem to offer low cost means for catalysing positive responses to
climate variability and climate change.
7.54
Lastly, as has already been canvassed in this report, the Committee is
supportive of organisations and activities that build resilience and promote
adaptation at a local and community level. Again, the Committee is aware of
Government support for such activities and organisations. However, the
precarious nature of much of this support is a matter of ongoing concern to
many. It is perhaps time to place this support on a more permanent and regular
footing, thus ensuring that resilience and adaptive capacity are created and
sustained into the long term.
Recommendation 14 |
7.55
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government, as
part of its overall response to issues affecting agriculture and climate
change, explore further opportunities to facilitate adaptation to climate
variability and climate change through the use of targeted, industry and
issue specific, incentives.
|
|
|
Recommendation 15 |
7.56
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
place funding for local and community organisations engaged in the work of
supporting farmers in adapting to climate variability and climate change upon
a permanent and regular basis.
|
Drought policy
7.57
During the course of the inquiry, the Committee received evidence on
drought policy. Much of this evidence concerned the need to alter the way
drought relief was provided, directing funds at building resilience within
farming communities to better prepare them to survive drought.
7.58
In evidence before the Committee, Mr Geoff Thomas, president of AIAST,
commented upon drought relief:
It played its role, but there is no question that it has
caused less adjustment than there would otherwise have been. Even some of the
people who have received it would admit privately that it probably has not done
them a favour. It certainly has not done other farmers in the area a favour
because it has reduced their capacity to adjust. So what does one do about it?
We are not saying to chop them off at the socks. I might quote this, that we
ran a program in the 1980s when I was with the South Australian Department of
Agriculture with farmers on the Eyre Peninsula who, because of drought and
because of high interest rates and everything else, were in all sorts of trouble.
There was an enormous amount of change that occurred. A lot of farmers left
simply because we provided adequate services whereby they—not just the farmer
but the farm family—could realistically analyse their real situation. We also
did things like look at job opportunities in the cities and put them on track
with those.
If you do those sorts of very practical things, people will
change. The major restriction on that sort of change, of course, is the social
pressure—knowing that, if the kids leave, the school closes and everybody
suffers. It is a very difficult situation. That is the thing to do rather than
continuing with the current system, which I do not think is doing anybody any
good.[47]
7.59
In its submission, Australian Pork Limited stated that ‘future drought
policy should be aimed at assisting the agricultural sector to adjust to
climate change and prepare for extreme climatic conditions’.[48]
7.60
The Victorian Farmers Federation (VFF) stated in its submission that:
Climate change policy will be strongly tied to drought policy
and support measures. The VFF supports a model that focuses on preparedness and
adaptation, in addition to emergency response and mitigation.
The VFF’s position on drought preparedness has been
articulated in the submission to the drought support review processes. In
principle these views are a move to a broad-base preparedness system that
n Provides incentives
to implement more resilient production system
n Facilitates the
building of risk management knowledge and skills
n Encourages the adoption
of risk management strategies
n Strengthen rural
communities by diversifying the economic base
n Assisting where
necessary structural adjustment to increase the sustainability of communities,
industries and the agricultural sector.
This model of drought support focuses on assisting viable
farms to manage the impacts of drought, while also allowing those farmers who
are unable to continue to exit in an informed and supported manner.[49]
7.61
In its submission, the National Farmers’ Federation argued for a
visionary new strategy in drought management, noting that Australian farmers ‘are
world-leaders in implementing drought-resistant technologies and practices’.[50]
7.62
The NFF has urged the creation of a system of financial incentives to
facilitate change, providing a catalyst for the adoption of better farm
management practices:
To support this policy direction, in 2007, the NFF proposed
Climate Management Grants—based on mutual obligation—to help farmers prepare
for, manage and recover from drought, with the intention of alleviating the
impact of future severe droughts.
To be effective, these mutual obligation grants must be
available to all farmers who pass eligibility criteria, including:
n Having a drought
management or a business plan that incorporates drought,
n Management
strategies, and
n Demonstrate
implementation of drought mitigation activities over the past five years.
NFF said it is essential that these grants not be restricted
to those farmers already in drought (or Exceptional Circumstances [EC])
declared areas. If the full benefits of effective drought preparedness and
management measures are to be realised, they must be available to all farmers
so they can prepare for, and mitigate against, droughts ‘before’ they are in
the midst of one.
It is envisaged the grants could cover a variety of approved
activities, including—but not limited to:
n Building stock
containment (in accordance with relevant environmental and local laws);
n Trialling new/
different drought-resistant farm systems;
n Increasing or
improving fodder storage capacity;
n Soil mapping,
including water-holding capacity and plant requirements; and
n Implementing
innovative practices and infrastructure to improve drought resilience.
Eligible farmers would have to match the Australian
Government’s funding with either cash or in-kind support - effectively a
partnership to better drought-proof the sector. This mirrors the desire—both
within the broader community and within the farming sector—to, over time; shift
the policy paradigm from drought relief towards drought preparedness and
management.[51]
7.63
In his submission, the Western Australian Minister for Agriculture, Food
and Forestry noted that Western Australia was already moving towards a more
proactive strategic approach to drought preparedness:
Government has a role in assisting those disadvantaged by
prolonged and protracted consequences of climate change to reduce pressure on
the natural resource and provide options for producers to leave farming. The
Department has developed a draft strategic plan on preparedness (drought),
based on a risk management approach, in response to the Productivity
Commission's inquiry on drought assistance.
The drought preparedness strategy assists farmers to improve
their skills in self reliance and climate change management. The policy principle
for WA’s plan is to assist farmers to make the transition from receiving
drought assistance to being drought prepared and develop pathways to
resilience. A safety net that provides support for farm families severely
affected by drought is an essential component of the plan. Government funding
is directed to activities and programs that promote long term profitability and
productivity of farm businesses. These policy principles will assist farmers
structurally adjust while addressing previous impediments to industry
productivity growth, protecting the natural asset base, farm families and
communities. To implement the strategy, the Department works with farmers to
promote, communicate and provide relevant information on drought preparedness
for incorporation into farm management strategies.[52]
7.64
In evidence before the Committee, Mr David Mortimer, Executive Manager,
Climate Change Division, DAFF, highlighted the current review of drought
policy:
The government is presently doing a major review of drought
policy, which Minister Burke has been leading. As part of that there was an
expert panel set up to specifically examine the social pressures in rural areas
resulting from drought. That was headed by Mr Peter Kenny previous head of
AgForce in Queensland and comprised a number of people with expertise in the
area. That report has been provided to the government. That will form part of
the government’s consideration of future drought policy.[53]
Committee conclusion
7.65
The Committee is aware that drought policy is under review by the
Australian Government and offers no comment on this matter except to state that
it supports an approach that emphasises capacity building and long term
resilience rather than short term survival. Drought policy should be about
developing industries and enterprises that can cope with drought.
The Hon Dick Adams MP
Committee Chair
24 February 2010