Cropping

New crop research centre to support northern farming systems

Grain Central, August 6, 2020

 

FARMER, industry and research organisations have combined forces to form The Northern Australian Crop Research Centre of Excellence to deliver R&D activities specifically to meet the needs of the growing northern Australian cropping sector.

The Centre brings together researchers from CQUniversity with farm machinery leaders Vanderfield, farmers from the Central Highlands Cotton Growers & Irrigators Association and Grain Producers Australia, and agribusiness expertise from the Central Highlands Development Corporation.

The aim is to bolster the productivity and profitability of northern farming systems, with each organisation bringing to the table unique skills and networks that contribute to this goal.

Emerald farmer and Central Highlands Cotton Growers and Irrigators Association president, Aaron Kiely, said that by working together under a collaborative partnership, the group could overcome capacity constraints by consolidating the complementary skills of each organisation and attract new investment to the region from research funding agencies.

“The development of agricultural opportunities in northern Australia is a policy priority for the Commonwealth, Queensland, Northern Territory and West Australian governments, which recognise the productive potential of currently under-utilised natural resources across the Top End,” Mr Kiely said.

“However, in many areas gross margins for high-volume, low-value broadacre crops are marginal, with distance to market and limited localised processing key supply chain factors impacting on profitability.

“The formation of this Centre is critical to providing the R&D capability to address these challenges, whether that’s through tropically-adapted crop varieties or new high-value niche crops, along with supporting agronomy advice, or via farm equipment customised for the northern environments.

“A concerted and coordinated research program is required to address how these factors can come together to realise a profitable and sustainable farming system.”

According to the CSIRO, there are 16 million hectares of land across northern Australia suitable for intensive agriculture, and 15,000 gigalitres of water – enough to irrigate 1.5 million hectares – could be safely made available for irrigated farming.

The Centre believes that fulfilling this potential will require research, development and extension focussed on:

  • Advanced farming systems responsive to changing crop, pest, climate and market trends
  • The role of pulses and new broadacre crops in northern cropping systems
  • Crop production insights which support adoption of enhanced agtech hardware and software
  • Crop biosecurity (entomology, pathology) and the bridge between northern and southern farming systems, and
  • A specialist focus on sustainable development of new broadacre farming systems and infrastructure in greenfield farming areas of northern Australia, which will face challenges different to those experienced in established production zones.

“The role of farmers in developing and delivering RD&E projects is considered central to the Centre’s objectives,” Grain Producers Australia farmer representative Brendan Taylor said.

“The participation of GPA and CHCG&IA representatives is essential to ensuring that all projects are relevant to real-world needs, and that solutions can be practically incorporated into farm businesses,” he said.

The initial focal point of the Centre’s activities will be Emerald on Queensland’s Central Highlands.

As one of Australia’s northern-most outposts of large-scale broadacre crop production, and home to a CQUniversity campus, the area offers a logical base for northern-focussed research projects.

Source: CQUniversity

 

 

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