Farming Innovation

150 Years of Farming Land Damage Reversed in 15 Years

Our farmers do an incredible, tireless job keeping food on our tables and our country would most-likely come close to cataclysmic failure without them. They may, however, be facing a future in which traditional practices need to change. According to reports, our arid land is expanding, with rapidly diminishing water tables and rising salinity levels. Researchers are suggesting 150 years or more of standard farming practices have left some of Australia’s grazing and crop-growing land depleted. But it’s not all dire news. Recent initiatives are seeing incredible improvements in soil quality and water retention and may usher in a new era of farming.

For every 100 drops of rain that fall on Australian soil, 50 are evaporated back into the atmosphere before they can replenish our aquifers and hydrate vegetation. 14 of these 100 drops end up in the ocean, or feed into lakes, depending on location. That’s a whopping 64% of our rainfall which is being lost before it can play a role in our agricultural hardiness.

Was it always this way?

According to Soils for Life, Australia is the driest (inhabited) continent on Earth. Over time, they claim our farming practices have drastically changed the way that our soils retain water. Water runoff into the sea from rivers was very minimal before our modern-day agricultural practices; as our in-soil reservoirs used to effectively capture and distribute water, as well as leach away salt. Thus, rainfall on Australian soil used to, in turn, replenish aquifers and feed inland deltas, wetlands and lakes. Over the last 150 years however, these wetlands and lakes have been largely drained; our landscapes do not retain water as they once did; rainfall is lost to the sea and evaporation; and the delicate balance between vegetation and farming appears to have been temporarily lost.

What does this mean for farming and water needs?

Around 70% of our water needs are agricultural and demand for water is due to outstrip supply by 40% around the world in the next 20 years. This is clearly not a sustainable situation. Unless something is drastically changed.

Australia’s farming industries contribute 93% to our domestic food supply. Without sufficient available water, not only will we struggle to meet basic household water needs, but farmers will be unable to produce crops and cattle sufficient enough to maintain exports and feed the country. This worrying trend towards water shortage is not just an Australian problem, and these threats are faced around the world in both developing and developed nations.

Topsoil erosion

Another consequence of inefficient water management on Australian farming land is the erosion of topsoil. Topsoil accumulates at a glacially slow pace—around 20mm every 1,000 years. Unfortunately, it’s eroding much more quickly than it can be replenished.

“You’re never going to get that soil back in your lifetime – probably not in your kids’ lifetime or your grandkids’ lifetime.” John McPhee from the Tasmanian Institute for Agricultural Research

As rain and flood waters wash over paddocks, they take with them this valuable soil. Replacing topsoil is expensive, at over $15 per cubic metre (that figure does not take into account transportation costs). However, regardless of the cost, topsoil is in shortening supply. Without effective water management plans, the ability to grow crops with any efficacy will continue to become more limited for Australian farmers.

What is being done?

Organisations dedicated to this problem of water management are continuing to investigate, trial and implement solutions to the problem—and with some amazing success.

One of these good news stories comes from Soils for Life who, as a not-for-profit organisation, work to foster innovation of regenerative landscape management initiatives.

“We support innovative farmers and land managers demonstrating high performance in regenerating their landscape whilst maintaining or increasing production. We believe their stories are compelling and can provide confidence for those who want to make a change from conventional practices.”

In a recent interview with ABC, chief of staff for Soils for Life, Natalie Williams, spoke about how a recent project of theirs has seen regeneration of soil which had been slowly degraded over 150 years. In 15 short years, Ms Williams has been able to turnaround the damage done to her own western Queensland property, through concerted landscape management. She has been able to increase the carrying capacity of her grazing land from around 100 when the property was bought in 1994, to 3,000 since undertaking the regeneration efforts.

“When you’re trying to fix landscapes, nothing happens quickly. Fifteen years seems like a long time, but in the area where we are located, there’s been grazing happening for 150 years, to run it down to where it was. It’s only taken 15 years to bring it back to up to a highly productive landscape.”

There are a number of solutions available to farmers which can help to buck this trend of otherwise-unavoidable water wastage and degradation of landscapes. These include:

  • Planting ground cover which prevents runoff and erosion
  • Rotating crops which promote deep root growth
  • Reduce the use of chemical fertilisers, as well as pesticides to encourage a healthy biodiversity within soil
  • Increase vegetation which produces higher organic carbon levels
  • Minimise soil disturbance (zero-tilling and minimal tilling practices)
  • Get in touch with organisations such as Soils for Life and Natural Regeneration Australia, who can provide resources to start your own soil regeneration project.

What are the benefits to farmers?

Natalie Williams has seen clear and obvious benefit to her lands, since applying regenerative initiatives on her property.

“By managing the landscape properly, you also then pick up profitability, environmental outcomes, resistance to disease, resilience after drought, being able to manage high rainfall events,” she says. “It actually is a triple bottom-line benefit, [from] improving and re-hydrating landscapes.”

Ignoring these solutions is likely to result in less productive land, and potentially widespread shortages in food and water. Not great for farmers and especially problematic for those who inherit their land. The benefits of employing soil regeneration practices are more than simply financial for farmers, and for Australia and the world at large. By improving soil quality and preventing unnecessary water runoff, we can ensure our farming lands and water supply are sufficient well into the future. Natalie Williams’ example is a beacon of hope for Australian farmers, and goes to show just how quickly a positive future for the land we depend on can be cultivated.

Summary
Article Name
150 Years of Farming Land Damage Reversed in 15 Years
Description
New initiatives are seeing incredible improvements in soil quality and water retention of Australian farming land, after many years of degradation.
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Machines4u
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Machines4U

(To contact the Machines4U Magazine team, click here).

View Comments

  • You seem to think farmer are dumb ass bastards
    99% of farmer look after their land to pass it on to their next generation
    Maybe you should look at Super Funds or big business like the banks that are in agriculture and they really do have no bloody idea about farming
    I have worked for many and they do not care about erosion or how much chemical they waste all they care about is the $ at the end, and they make 8.5% return pa farming and 10-15% because land values go up all the time.
    It's just money to them

    • Thanks Richard, you bring up a great point here and I think we may have framed this topic poorly. We're certainly not out to villainise farmers with this and don't for a moment think that farmers are ignorantly or actively contributing to the unavoidable issues they face. Of course you're right that real farmers would be constantly investing enormous care and effort into the preservation of their land. It's more our hope that this article rebukes any alarmist conservationists who suggest that our land is somehow "doomed", and perhaps also provides some very basic tips and additional hope to new farmers who are concerned about the possibility of eventual soil degradation on their own land. Indeed I'm sure we will also take a closer look at any 'Big Business' culprits who may be spoiling things for the rest of us! Thanks again.

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