Chapman Nov 1309

Page 1

WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE – BUT GOING DOWN THE DRAIN Colin Chapman Vice President, STRATFOR


AUSTRALIA: TIME FOR ANOTHER SURGE

All the evidence suggests that Australia could significantly boost the production of food.  With a population of 20,000 it currently produces enough food for 60,000. It could double that  World War II provided the impetus for a surge in farming. There could – and should – be another surge now.


FOOD RATIONING IN WWII BRITAIN Big Boost for  Australia 


RICE TO CHINA, PASTA TO ITALY

Australia now sells sushi rice to the Japanese, basmati rice to South Asia, pasta to the Italians, claret to the French, and beef to the Texans.


AUSTRALIAN TOP 10 AGRICULTURAL EXPORT MARKETS

Market

Value A$m

Rank

Percentage

TOTAL

28,637

Japan

4,416

1

15.4%

China

3,122

2

10.9%

United States

2,645

3

9.2%

Indonesia

1,427

4

5.0%

New Zealand Republic of Korea United Kingdom Saudi Arabia

1,366

5

4.8%

1,348

6

4.7%

1,079

7

3.8%

892

8

3.1%

Singapore

716

9

2.5%

Malaysia

712

10

2.5%

100.0%


AUSTRALIA: ONLY ARID IN PARTS Australia is the sixth largest country after Canada, Russia, China, the United States, and Brazil.  Even after you take into account the fact that two­thirds of Australia is arid or semi­arid, that still leaves 2.5 million square kilometres that are not, which makes it a big country for food production. 


TWO THIRDS OF AUSTRALIA IS ARID OR SEMI ARID


LACK OF POLITICAL VISION 

Politicians of both main parties lack vision in agriculture

BECAUSE:  There are no votes in it.  Australia is an urban race, and most people live in six cities, with the vast majority in Sydney and Melbourne. 


2 IN EVERY 3 AUSTRALIANS LIVE IN SIX COASTAL CITIES


THE GREAT DROUGHT 

YES – there has been several years of drought

BUT

Australia is not short of water The cities and towns where most Australians live enjoy more rainfall than many locations that are important centres for large scale farming in North America and Europe.


WISE WORDS “Australia’s water supply system

is broken, and needs urgent solutions. Unavoidable water scarcity is one of Australia’s greatest myths.”

Katie Lahey, CEO Business Council of Australia


THE GREAT MURRAY­DARLING BASIN


MURRAY DARLING BASIN Australia’s most important agricultural watercourse.  Blighted by state feuding and lack of investment.  The whole area could be revitalized if Canberra mobilized the resources needed and encouraged private investment in water supply.  Water supply is run by public sector utilities with no imagination and a fixation on rationing.  Privatization the only sensible answer. 


AUSTRALIA RANKS NO.3 WATER CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA


DRY CONTINENT..CHEAP WATER! Australians pay far too little for their water  They happily pay 500 per cent more for imported bottled water than for what comes out of the tap.  Water is half as expensive as in Britain and most of Europe.  There is a water trading scheme – but it is unsophisticated.  If water was economically priced, then it would be supplied – via desalination using boundless natural gas or pipelines from the wet north. 


“MAKE BEEF A WINNER”


BEEF CATTLE GREEDY FOR WATER 

Producing one kilogram of beef uses as much water as an individual drinks in a year.

BUT

No Prime Minister is going to preside over the death of the Great Australian BBQ


AS REPORTED IN THE TIMES, LONDON October 16, 2007

Holy cow! We’re crazy to farm livestock like this Our guest columnist on the green case for changing our eating habits Joanna Lumley I prefer not to eat food that has a face. But many of my nearest and dearest love their meat, and who am I to ask them not to eat so much of it? Until now, that is. Having just discovered the huge impact of livestock production on global warming, I need hesitate no longer. Reducing our meat consumption is no longer an option but an urgent necessity. Here’s why.

Eighteen per cent of the greenhouse gas emissions that we produce come from the production of livestock – that’s 4 per cent more than from transport. That’s not all, as the amount of meat and dairy produce consumed globally is set roughly to double by 2050: so if there’s a problem now, how big will it be by then?


900 UNCAPPED BORES IN AUSTRALIA’S GREAT ARTESIAN BASIN


GAS FIELDS IN THE COOPER BASIN COULD BE USED FOR DESALINATION


WHERE IT RAINS One third of Australia’s irrigation water is unaccounted for before it reaches the farm gate.  70% of Australia’s rainfall falls in the tropical north.  ALL but five per cent of this is lost – it evaporates or flows out to the oceans.  SOME could be diverted to the Murray Darling Basin.  And farms can be developed in the North and along the coasts 



LIBYA’S GREAT MAN­MADE RIVER – VISIONARY PLANNING


FIRST MOVES TOWARDS ABORIGINAL LAND RIGHTS


GO NORTH, YOUNG MAN But Australians don’t want to.  The Ord River scheme is a land of milk and honey – but only 6000 live there.  The Chinese would like to farm Northern lands ­ but are snagged by problems over land rights and native title, and Australia’s rigid and highly restrictive migration rules.  Only a few Pacific islanders are allowed in as temporary farm workers 


SEASONAL WORKERS LIMITED TO PACIFIC ISLANDERS AND THE YOUNG


TWO THIRDS OF AUSTRALIA IS ARID OR SEMI ARID


SO THE MYTH CONTINUES 

Expanding Australian agriculture is in the too hard basket, and will have to wait for the arrival of political leadership with vision.

But, 40 years on, who will own the Northern territory?


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