Having grown used to cheap food, at any time, from anywhere; we now have to face up to the big sustainability challenges, as well as some opportunities. Consumers and producers are both feeling the strain and expense of a rapidly changing climate, an end to cheap oil, and declining land and water resources.
Australians’ consumption habits come with a high environmental price tag - around one quarter of our carbon pollution related to the food we eat - yet most of us never know the true cost of our food.
Many farmers are already showing local leadership, but official report after report shows that the critical life-support services provided by a healthy environment are still in decline.
Time is short, but our wealth, democracy and knowledge give us an edge. The longer we wait to change, however, the more opportunities will slip through our fingers.
With support from the William Buckland Foundation and a focus on the state of Victoria, the Future Food & Farm Project is a first step towards sustainable food and an Australian first.
ACF is exploring a leadership role for government in helping our whole food supply - from paddock to plate - to become sustainable.
By bringing together diverse interests - farmers, policy specialists, agribusiness, restaurateurs, retailers, scientists, consumer advocates and opinion leaders - we’re tackling hard questions like:
Business as usual' is no longer an option for Victorian farming and food, as a rapidly changing climate, increasingly expensive oil, and declining land and river health threaten to undo the state's impressive productivity and prosperity.
A new report released this week by the Australian Conservation Foundation – Paddock to Plate: Food, Farming and Victoria’s Progress to Sustainability – finds we must re-think not just the way we produce food, but also the way it is hauled, stored, processed and consumed if we are to avoid a serious food crisis.
Key findings of the report include a warning that despite many landholders’ efforts through programs such as Landcare, Victoria’s landscapes and rivers are among the most stressed in the country.
The report also points out that farmers could be the key to restoring a healthy environment.
Carmel Egan March 2, 2008
TAX officials will investigate complaints that one of Australia's leading strawberry producers misled investors about its right to draw water for irrigation from Melbourne's river catchments.
The Australian Taxation Office is following up complaints that the Rewards Group, a Perth-based managed investment scheme, promoted its Yarra Valley strawberry and blueberry venture as having river diversion rights to Woori Yallock Creek, bore licences, and approval to collect and store run-off in dams.
But The Sunday Age last week revealed that Melbourne Water, which controls irrigation licences in the Yarra and Woori Yallock valleys, has not granted the Rewards Group any water rights. While refusing to comment on the specifics of the Woori Yallock case, a spokeswoman said the Tax Office would follow up any concerns that organisations were operating "in a way materially different to that described in the product ruling".
Also See: Surface tensions shatter valley calm , The Age 23/3/08