Dennis Donohoe, farm manager with Aminya Pastoral, is a seasoned producer with decades of experience, and his story is a testament to how even minor changes in farming practices can lead to significant improvements in productivity and land health.
This is an important question to ask. The ideal answer being they partner with an education and training company that can teach and support you in the implementation of the changes needed on your land to meet the eligibility requirements of the project. The training and ongoing support completes the loop and truly provides an end-to-end service.
Soil carbon farming is a relatively new industry. Therefore, it’s attracting many new operators some with limited experience and no track record. Ask your aggregator how long they’ve been in business, what’s their history and how many hectares they have sampled commercially for producers in Australia. Look for a team with inhouse scientists, mapping experts and project managers with an impressive record in research.
It’s important to compare upfront and ongoing costs of potential aggregators. A low start-up cost may look attractive on the surface, but can be deceptive, as sometimes the upfront costs are not absorbed, rather moved into ongoing costs where they can outweigh any financial benefit. Ask to see their costs model and most important the estimated returns and methodology employed to reach the estimates.
A major barrier to entering a soil carbon farming project is the paperwork. Some aggregators are end-to-end, meaning they work on your behalf to complete the necessary documentation. The benefit here is in time and expertise, leaving you to get on with the business you know best. Ask them if they offer the full end-to-end solution.
The Emission Reduction Fund or ERF methodology requires a minimum of just 9 cores per Carbon Exclusion Area (CEA). However, we believe a much higher sampling intensity for soil carbon projects is required to reduce variance and optimise the potential Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCU’s). By only completing the minimum number of cores per CEA, this results in greater variance or standard deviation of soil core sample results. The higher the variance, the less ACCUs that will be credited. Go for deeper soil samples (1200mm) and a greater number of core samples to maximise your project outcomes.
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Dennis Donohoe, farm manager with Aminya Pastoral, is a seasoned producer with decades of experience, and his story is a testament to how even minor changes in farming practices can lead to significant improvements in productivity and land health.
Once you have ownership as to why planning is important, the next ingredient is to work out where and how you will do your planning. When you write something down you change your relationship with the content. I cannot emphasise enough the power of getting your thoughts and plans out of your head onto paper or the computer.
The season in SA and Tassie is particularly tight right now with little or no useful rain since early January and a generally failed 2023 spring prior to that. Right now, across southern Australia and much of the eastern NSW, you won’t need to drive far out into the countryside to see cattle and sheep grazing (and lying on) hay and silage trails lined across paddocks.
Martha Lindstad and partner Robert James are farm managers on ‘Karalee’, Enngonia NSW. Both have travelled different paths to being where they are. Martha is originally from Norway, growing up on a three hectare farm before travelling to New Zealand and eventually the Pilbara in Western Australia. It was here that she saw the benefits of sustainable farming for the country and livestock.
The Prince’s RCS mentor, Raymond Stacey, sees a strong future ahead for Simon and Laura. “The Drought Resilient Soils and Landscapes project is about supporting graziers to manage their country and businesses better,” Raymond said. “I see an operation here where they’re working hard on their planning and putting their plans into action to leave their country, business and people in better shape.”
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