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Southern NSW Drought Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hub: Amazing results!

By Emily Mason posted 13-12-2022 10:09

  

The Southern New South Wales Drought Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hub has brought significant investment into the region, through projects which have been activated on the ground with a range of industries.

They include collaborations focused on maintaining ground cover, promoting resilient pastures, optimising management of soil and water, managing biosecurity risks, creating resilient communities, capturing the value of AgTech, managing rangelands and creating longevity in perennial horticulture plants.


About the Hub
The Resilience Adoption & Innovation Hub is a consortium of nine regional partners including primary producers, Indigenous, industry and community groups, researchers, entrepreneurs, education institutions, resource management practitioners and government agencies.

Charles Sturt University is proud to lead the Southern NSW Innovation Hub, one of eight hubs being established across Australia to combat drought and form the epicentre of user-driven innovation, research and adoption and facilitate transformational change through the co-design of research, development, extension, adoption and commercialisation (RDEA&C) activities.  

A key activity in the SNSW Drought Resilience Hub’s (the Hub) Operational Plan is to develop a baseline understanding of farmer and community perceptions of drought! Read more


Investing in Community Resilience
Working with the Farming Systems Groups Alliance, Local Land Services, NSW Department of Primary Industries (NSW DPI), Rural Aid and the region’s major universities, the investments involve thousands of farmers, agronomists, technology innovators, data scientists and scientists.

The project portfolio - valued at more than $6 million combined - is in line with the Hub’s vision of connected and adaptable people and places, prepared to respond to future challenges and capitalise on opportunities.

Hub director Cindy Cassidy said that the current floods have shown that investing in climate resilience is essential.

“We know that the impacts of things like floods and droughts are largely the same,” she said.

“We know that they happen in cycles and preparing for them is an essential part of business as usual.

“The projects and investments we are supporting will help the region manage the impacts of climate variability and recover more quickly when the cycle changes.

“The Southern New South Wales Innovation Hub is investing in the knowledge, information flows and relationships that will help build genuine effective resilience into our landscapes, farms, businesses and communities.”

Significant investments include the $1 million saving our soils during drought project to help farmers maintain groundcover across rested paddocks, so the soil can better endure and recover from drought conditions.

It aims to influence at least 400 farmers through field visits, workshops, publications, modelling and follow-up support.

There are further investments of almost $2 million in two related projects – creating landscape-scale change through promotion of resilient pasture systems led by Holbrook Landcare Network, and optimal management of soils and available water led by Riverine Plains.

A further investment with NSW Local Land Services as the lead partner has resulted in the development of a virtual reality (VR) experience to help farmers design stock containment facilities to protect ground cover during drought.

The highly engaging presentation takes viewers on a virtual tour as two farmers talking about their containment facilities with interactive information highlights.

Another exciting initiative is two projects that are shared with other regional drought hubs around the country through the Drought Resilient Soils and Landscapes Cross Hubs Collaborative Projects program.

These include $183,333 being spent in the Southern NSW Hub region as part of a national project to protect Australia’s rangelands during droughts and $250,000 for the Southern NSW region, and a project studying drought management for perennial horticulture plants with the South Australian, Victorian and Tasmanian Drought Hubs.

The Hub is investing a further $2.5 million in projects that apply technology to regional resilience under the Agricultural Innovation Hubs Program.

A third project explores how data could provide early warning of falling community resilience before, during and after extreme climatic events such as fire, drought or flood.

Led by Charles Sturt University, the Southern New South Wales Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hub is one of eight Hubs established through funding from the Australian Government’s Future Drought Fund.

Article Attrition: Riverine Herald


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