Cradle Coast Authority NRM Strategy (Attachments)

Page 79

AT TAC H M E N T five : N R M p lanning lin k ages with R egional L and Partnershi p s O utcomes

3.6 RLP Outcome 6: There is an increase in the capacity of agriculture systems to adapt to significant changes in climate and market demands for information on provenance and sustainable production. The Australian Government has identified its approach to improving climate resilience and adaptation in the agriculture sector in its National Climate Resilience and Adaptation Strategy 2021-2025, with three main objectives:

• Drive investment and action through collaboration • Improve climate information and services • Assess progress and improve over time

Table 9: Climate resilience guiding documents Priority

Further information

Resilient industries and communities

National Climate Resilience and Adaptation Strategy 2021-2025

Resilient communities and industries

Key issues include:

This Australian Government investment priority relates to the resilience and adaptive capacity of agricultural systems, including soil and water, productive capacity, farmers and their families and workers and rural communities, in the face of climatic and market information changes.

• Risks to some aspects of soil function are increased by climate change, particularly erosion and soil carbon reduction under extreme conditions.

In the last 15 years Tasmania has experienced 1 in 100-year floods and droughts, including increasing frequency of dry seasons and changes in seasonal rainfall patterns. During that time Tasmanian agriculture has also seen a dramatic and rapid increase in irrigation infrastructure and use, demonstrating the urgency of adapting to these changes and unpredictability. However, irrigation is expensive and still limited in reach and capacity, and many farmers and their surrounding rural communities continue to experience hardships from locally-experienced climate variability, due in part to the relative novelty of these impacts and cultural inertia holding back significant increases in adaptive capacity. This paucity of adaptive capacity can cause wider social problems in the longer term, as many Tasmanian farming practices are high visible to locals and tourists – land degradation and livestock welfare problems related to climatic changes and poor adaptive capacity may create significant social licence issues for rural industries. Therefore, increasing agriculture’s capacity to adapt to climatic changes and variability will also increase capacity to adapt to significant changes in market demand for information on sustainable production.

• The threat of extreme climatic events has the potential to greatly influence production. Flooding from intense rainfall events at a local and regional level is a recognised risk that may increase under changing climate and rising sea levels. • There may be increased potential for agricultural production in some areas as temperatures change, with opportunities for new crops that prefer a warmer climate, resulting in land-use change or intensification in those areas. • Impacts from increased extreme weather events and projected drought, flooding and fire risk increases will certainly affect the health of our rural communities through associated loss of income, mental health issues and physical stress.

NRM STRATEGY 2030 ATTACHMENTS: CRADLE COAST TASMANIA

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FIGURE 17: Restorative continuum (McDonald et al. 2016

2min
page 84

FIGURE 16: Regional Land Partnerships Program Logic and 5-year Outcomes

3min
page 81

TABLE 10: RLP Outcome hierarchy (adapted from NRM MERI Framework Commonwealth of Australia 2009

5min
pages 82-83

TABLE 9: Climate resilience guiding documents

2min
page 79

4 Identification of future management actions (Projects

2min
page 80

FIGURE 14: Soil acidification risk

1min
pages 76-77

FIGURE 12: Hillslope Erosion Risk

2min
pages 73-74

FIGURE 11: White Gum Wet Forest

6min
pages 69-71

TABLE 5: Threats and mitigation options for priority threatened species in the Cradle Coast Region

4min
pages 58-60

FIGURE 6: Map showing locations of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area in Tasmania

2min
pages 62-63

1 Cradle Coast Authority partnership approach

2min
page 30

4 Stakeholder feedback

1min
pages 35-37

FIGURE 2: One Ramsar wetland on King Island in the Cradle Coast region

4min
pages 40-42

TABLE 6: UNESCO World Heritage sites in the Cradle Coast region

0
page 61

7 Actions in the 2030 Strategies

1min
pages 28-29

5 Specific considerations – Water Theme

1min
page 26

Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat

0
page 18

TABLE 1: Criteria and considerations for prioritisation in the 2030 NRM Strategy

1min
page 23

2 Coastal and marine

1min
page 11

Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts

0
page 17

5 Biodiversity

2min
page 13

desertification and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss

1min
pages 19-21

1 Land, Water, Agriculture

2min
page 10
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