Today is a great day to celebrate that 93% of Australia's fruit, nuts and grapes together with 83% of our vegetables are all grown by irrigation.
Every day, is great day to support Aussie Farmers and buy Australian grown fruit, nuts and vegetables.
#AgDayAU celebrating that Aussie farmers grow more crop per drop
15 November is National Ag Day, a day to celebrate the amazing work our farmers and the broader agricultural industry do for Australia. Australian
irrigators are recognised as the most water efficient in the world, growing more crop per drop than many of our international counterparts.
100% of Australia's rice is irrigated, and is world leading using 50% less than the global average [DAFF].
85% of Australia's cotton crop on average is irrigated, the cotton industry has increased its water use efficiency by 240% since the first crop in the 1970's [DAFF]
Irrigators’ have called out Minister Plibersek’s announcement of having ‘1000 willing sellers towards’ the Commonwealth’s tender to buy
water for the Murray-Darling Basin Plan, as a political stunt on the day of Senate Estimates.
“The last time Minister Plibersek announced a buyback tender round had been over-subscribed, the Government later rejected 72% of the
offers contracting only a small proportion of the reported offers (26 GL out of 90 GL), mostly due to value for money concerns,” said Zara
Lowien, CEO of the National Irrigators’ Council. [...]
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National Irrigators' Council CEO, Zara Lowien writes "after decades of difficult reforms implementing Australia's best-practice water
management blueprint - the National Water Initiative (NWI) - the federal government is negotiating to water it down, in the National Water
Agreement (NWA).
If the NWI is the architecturally designed blueprint, the NWA is the flatpack version with unclear instructions and a few missing
pieces"...
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The independent advisory body with statutory authority to review Australia’s national water reform has published scathing feedback on the
Federal Governments proposed National Water Agreement, calling the approach “detrimental to the conduct of water management in Australia”
[...]
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The National Irrigators’ Council proudly announces the election of a new leadership team at its Annual General Meeting in Canberra last week. This transition includes the appointment of Ms Jenny McLeod as the first female chair and Ms Rosalie Auricht as vice-chair, alongside
two new board members, Ms Jenna Bell and Mr Ben Fessey. [...]
he Federal Government continue their pre-election rush, with a flawed buyback tender process designed to over-estimate irrigator interest in
selling water to the Government as part of the Government’s relentless pursuit of buybacks to achieve the additional 450 GL of water under
the Basin Plan. This is despite Minister Plibersek’s assurances that all other options, other than buybacks, were on the table. [...]
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The Federal Government is again being called out for rushing through risky and untested reforms that seek to gain more power for themselves, prior to the upcoming election. Consultation soon closes on their recent grab, to list two new areas as “endangered” under national
environment law, replicating a controversial and subsequently, disallowed move by the former Labor Government in 2013. [...]
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The federal governments draft National Water Agreement should be of concern to all who rely on rivers writes National Irrigators'
Council CEO, Zara Lowien for the Weekly Times [...]
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National Irrigators are calling on states and territories, the future signatories to an updated National Water Agreement, to say “no way to the draft NWA”. The Federal Government’s rushed NWA is tipped to be our nations next water management blueprint[i] but
risks major changes to water management frameworks in its current form. Zara Lowien, CEO of the National Irrigators’ Council said, “States
cannot sign the current draft NWA" [...]
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