Future Leadership, Livelihoods and Landscapes

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Future Leadership, Livelihoods and Landscapes ANDREW CAMPBELL ABARES Regional Outlook Conference, 26 October 2011

http://riel.cdu.edu.au


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Converging Insecurities • Climate change

• Direct impacts • Impacts of climate change policies – e.g. carbon markets

• Water • Every calorie we consume uses one litre in its production • Every litre weighs one kilogram — energy intensive to distribute it • Per capita freshwater availability declining steeply (globally)

• Energy — the era of cheap, abundant fossil fuels is coming to a close • Food — need to increase world production by 70% by 2050 • Using less land, water & energy and emitting less carbon • Improving nutrition, distribution, animal welfare, pollution • Looking after rural landscapes, biodiversity, animal welfare, amenity & communities

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Profound technical challenges 1. To decouple economic growth from carbon emissions 2. To adapt to an increasingly difficult climate 3. To increase water productivity — decoupling the 1 litre per calorie relationship

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To increase energy productivity – –

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more food energy out per unit of energy in while shifting from fossil fuels to renewable energy

To develop more sustainable food systems – –

while conserving biodiversity and improving landscape amenity, soil health, animal welfare & human health

6. ALL AT THE SAME TIME


We need a third agricultural revolution • High level goals: e.g. doubling food & fibre production while doubling water productivity, and becoming a net energy producer from farming & pastoral lands • How to get there? – Farming systems that make more efficient use of and conserve water, energy, nutrients, carbon and biodiversity – Smart metering, sensing, telemetry, robotics, guidance, biotech – Better understanding of soil carbon & microbial activity – Radically reducing waste in all parts of the food chain – Farming systems producing renewable (2nd gen) bioenergy • Also producing energy from waste

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– Urban and peri-urban food production – Attracting talented young people into great careers


The integration imperative • Managing whole landscapes – – – – –

“where nature meets culture” (Simon Schama) landscapes are socially constructed beyond ‘ecological apartheid’ NRM means people management engage values, perceptions, aspirations, behaviour

• Integration - across issues — e.g climate, energy, water, food, biodiversity - across scales — agencies, governments, short-term, long-term - across the triple helix — landscapes, lifestyles & livelihoods


Murrumbidgee Irrigation - a current case • Bulk water distributor and seller in the MIA – $1B GVAP, and $7B value-add of food, wine and fibre production

• 100 year old irrigation & drainage network being modernised – – –

Replacing ‘leaky’, gravity-fed open earthen channels Piping and pressurisation will treble energy consumption And hence greenhouse gas emissions

• Options: – – – –

Biomass energy plant - 0.5m tonnes p.a. of ag & food process waste Solar thermal power plant on linear easements (C price-dependent) Conversion to biodiesel Carbon offsets through large scale tree planting

• Turning a water company into a water, energy & carbon company – Liberating opportunities through a more integrated approach 7


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Planning landscapes & infrastructure • How can this all ‘fit’ at a landscape and regional scale? • The landscape needs to be re-plumbed, re-wired and re-clothed • We need new regional planning approaches that: • are robust under a range of climate change & demographic scenarios • build in resilience thinking (e.g. improve habitat connectivity & buffering, protect refugia) • accommodate carbon pollution mitigation options (energy, transport, food) • safeguard productive soil and allow for increased food production • facilitate recycling of water, nutrients and energy

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Scales for response to climate change • Many of the main drivers of biodiversity loss operate at the landscape-scale e.g. habitat fragmentation, invasive species and changed fire regimes. • It is the scale which lends itsel

CSIRO 2010


The Cynefin knowledge framework* • Climate change spans all of these domains • If temp increase > 2ºC, then disorder & chaos will reign • The challenge is to handle the necessary range of simultaneous responses – to work in all of these domains at once – to develop a system-wide perspective – & the knowledge systems and learning strategies to underpin that perspective

* David Snowden & Mary Boone (2007) “Leader's Framework for Decision Making” Harvard Business Review

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Response Options We need to be operating in each of these quadrants Develop research partnerships +/or link into existing collaborations

Source: FFI CRC EverCrop

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Climate-smart land use in the Top End • Managing whole landscapes to increase carbon storage – – – –

Smarter fire regimes Better control of weeds and feral animals Substantial co-benefits for biodiversity (wildlife and plants) More sustainable livelihoods for traditional owners and pastoralists

• Increasing food production for local resilience and food security – –

Groundwater (sustainable yield) and wastewater-based irrigation mosaics Within and near to population centres

• Integrating production of renewable energy – Large scale (solar, geothermal, tidal) for regional centres and export – Small scale (solar, wind, biodiesel, biomass) for households and remote firms & communities 13


An engaged community base is crucial

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Rapid, often surprising, on-going environmental change will challenge governments and industries, and stress communities.

Many responses (proactive and reactive) will need to be worked out at regional and local levels. Successful implementation of tough decisions depends on community support.

This requires environmentally literate and capable delivery frameworks at regional scale, involving community leaders and engaging grassroots volunteers.

Convergence in climate, energy, water and food mandates an integrated planning & delivery framework 14


NRM: sequential vs parallel evolution Three major developments in NRM over the last 20 years:

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Community landcare (writ large – e.g. land & sea mgt groups)

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The regional model

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Assets-based approach — ‘evidence-based’ targeting

There is a tendency to see these developments as sequential: each supplanting the previous approach

Rather, they should be implemented in parallel − They are complementary, mutually reinforcing − Synergistic with good planning & delivery − Building sustainability and resilience

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Sustainability and Resilience • Complementary concepts • Sustainability remains relevant and desirable − − − −

Living within our means Thinking long term (inter-generational equity) Distinguishing between depletable and renewable resources Avoiding or limiting actions that degrade, pollute, over-use or compromise ecosystem function

• BUT: Sustainability is less instructive around: − Social and economic dimensions − Operating in contexts with inherent variability 16

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Resilience – the cool new kid on the block • Basically refers to the capacity of a system to absorb shocks, reorganise and retain the same functions − As resilience declines, it takes a progressively smaller shock to push a system across a threshold

• Adds value in explicitly embracing change and variability • Introduces the useful concept of thresholds or tipping points • Also embraces scale − Resilience at a given scale requires an understanding of at least one scale up & down 17

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Tipping elements and thresholds!

Cold

Warm

In and out of ice ages – last couple of millions of years oscillating every 70,000 years or so! Hot

* Source: Greg Bourne http://www.australia21.org.au/buildingAustraliasResilience-


Tipping elements and thresholds!

Cold

Warm

Loss of each “tipping element� increases the risk of passing thresholds Hot

* Source: Greg Bourne http://www.australia21.org.au/buildingAustraliasResilience-


Tipping elements and thresholds!

Cold

Warm

Loss of each “tipping element� increases the risk of passing thresholds Hot

* Source: Greg Bourne http://www.australia21.org.au/buildingAustraliasResilience-


Tipping elements and thresholds!

Cold

Warm

Loss of each “tipping element� increases the risk of passing thresholds Hot

* Source: Greg Bourne http://www.australia21.org.au/buildingAustraliasResilience-


Tipping elements and thresholds!

Cold

Warm

At some point we trigger runaway global warming

Hot

Overshoot and collapse to a new stable state? * Source: Greg Bourne http://www.australia21.org.au/buildingAustraliasResilience-


Building resilience What determines resilience, in general?* • • • • •

Diversity: biological, economic (e.g. energy sources), social Modularity (connectedness, engagement) Tightness of feedbacks Openness – immigration, inflows, outflows Reserves and other reservoirs (e.g. seedbanks, nutrient pools, soil moisture, memory, knowledge)

Overlapping institutions

Polycentric governance & leadership

Are any of these changing? Are any limiting? 23

* Source: Brian Walker http://www.australia21.org.au/buildingAustraliasResilience-papers.htm

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In Summary • Climate, water, energy, food and health are interconnected • The age of cheap, abundant fossil fuel energy is ending • The carbon pricing era has begun! • Rural, urban and regional planning needs to integrate its consideration of climate, carbon, water, energy and food

• The Territory has both the imperative (risk exposure) and the opportunity (manageable scale, ability to get things done) to lead Australia in tackling the climate-energy-water nexus • Distributed Leadership will be crucial • This will deliver high value jobs & position the NT economy well for the challenges ahead

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For more information

e.g. Paddock to Plate Policy Propositions for Sustainable Food Systems Managing Australian Soils Managing Australian Landscapes in a Changing Climate Powerful Choices: transition to a biofuel economy

http://riel.cdu.edu.au


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