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A Landcare Point of View on the Land and Biodiversity at a time of Climate Change Green Paper At a workshop organised by Phillip Island Landcare Group, a diverse group of Landcare people from across Victoria studied the Green Paper on Land and Biodiversity at a time of Climate Change, and arrived at a Landcare point of view. The aim of this document is to provide a window into the Green Paper, for Landcare groups and Networks to use freely as they prepare their own response. The list of actions is not inclusive and by no means restricts members from identifying other matters and commenting on issues important to them. We urge Landcare members to read the Green Paper, think about what it proposes and tell government what they think. This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to improve the policies that guide the way we manage land and biodiversity. Submissions should be returned to DSE by 30 June 2008. Copies of the Phillip Island document can be found on the Landcare Gateway. The full Green paper is available on the DSE website at www.dse.vic.gov.au. Yours in Landcare Peter Huthwaite (Phillip Island Landcare Group, convener) There is a crisis, and we need to change now! Chapters 1-5. ”… continuing and emerging pressures mean if we continue our present path we will not maintain our ecosystems and ensure they continue providing essential services.” (Green Paper, p 5) We applaud government’s recognition of the crisis in land and biodiversity, and welcome the opportunity to comment on the Green Paper. To attain broad scale change, government needs to display more leadership. The first five chapters communicate the scale and the urgency of the crisis, but do not articulate strongly enough the need for sustained action. Government needs to clearly outline a plan with targets and resources, and say how outcomes will be measured. Institutional arrangements including planning controls should target improvement in biodiversity. To have credibility in urging better land management on private land, government needs to be a good role model itself in management of public land. Where regulation is required, for example with pest plants and animals, this should be resourced and enforced. To achieve a significant increase in outcomes, government needs to calculate and secure the funds necessary for long term action. We do not believe that private sector investment will be large enough in the future to cover shortfalls in government funding. We also believe that the public has a duty to pay for the benefit received through natural resource management outcomes. Landcare already generates substantial private investment, but its capacity is limited by resources. To do more, it needs more resources. Government needs to initiate programs promoting the significance of biodiversity, (for example, the monetary value of ecosystem services), and aligning public values consistent with achieving the objectives of the Green Paper. Landcare is well positioned to play a part in this communication process, providing an avenue for government to communicate policy issues and implement them on-ground. 1 Landcare can be a key part of mobilising deep community response Chapter 9.1 Landcare and volunteer organisations. “Landcare networks and other community groups mobilise community efforts in their local areas and facilitate the flow of private funding into natural resource management…. They provide informed opinion, influence local attitudes and diver many forms of innovation. Without these groups, government would find it difficult and expensive to influence, support and coordinate better land management practices and protect priority assets across the state.” (Green Paper, p 73) We agree that community approaches to natural resource management need to be increased and strengthened. The structure of Landcare provides a well developed and substantial resource within communities across the State. It makes a significant contribution towards improving land management and biodiversity, and is evolving into a professional, skilled and adaptive movement with a unique capacity to engage, involve and mobilise local communities. Landcare provides the critical interface between the bureaucratic constraints of government and dynamics and diversity of communities. It can interpret, translate and communicate to government local knowledge of people, environment, issues and circumstances, and communicate government policies, programs and priorities to local communities. We support the suggested direction and expansion of planning and collaborating at a landscape scale. Landcare is in an ideal position to facilitate collaborative visioning and planning at a landscape scale. This collaboration includes all land tenures and various investors. Landcare is also well-placed to be a key player in research into, and on-ground responses to, climate change. Q. What kinds of support would help Landcare and other groups to build on current successes? (Green Paper, p 74) To meet the crises of biodiversity and climate change, Landcare groups and networks need: o clear guidelines and strong commitment from all levels of government to develop and implement landscape scale visions and change, o access to research and data, and streamlined processes and systems for mapping and data management, to support consistent planning approaches and tools, and for monitoring and reporting, o access to business planning and professional development to build capacity to deliver on-ground landscape scale programs, be ready for corporate investment and diversify their funding sources, o security of employment, skill development and a professional working environment for coordinators and facilitators. Absolutely fundamental to Landcare’s role at the interface between government and community are coordinators and facilitators. These people: o build on the existing momentum of groups and networks as community organisations, o develop and maintain relationships within community and between all partners (investors, landholders, policy makers), o facilitate collaborative visioning and planning, o coordinate on ground community action. A level of statewide coordination and support, and a mechanism that provides a voice for grassroots Landcare across Victoria would further strengthen Landcare. 2 Q. How can government work more collaboratively with volunteers and community groups? (Green Paper, p 74) It is time that governments and bureaucracies developed a mature response to communicating with Landcare. We are community organisations responsive to local and regional issues. Our identity is based on the landscape and social character in which we operate – we are people who care about what happens long-term to our landscapes. Landcare needs to be at the table when policy and program decisions are made, so that implementation at community level is effective and efficient. The view that Landcare sits at the end of the line to deliver on policies and programs developed by people in relative isolation from Landcare is inaccurate and demeaning. Landcare Networks are not just project implementers. They broker resources and fit together community interests with government’s agenda. They are strategists and advocates for their landscapes and communities. They maintain action at the local level, and can play a greater role as a catalyst for change in the community beyond their membership. We need improvement across many different land uses The Green Paper recognizes the value of Landcare in delivery of outcomes but under-estimates its potential to deliver strategies in response to climate change. Landcare operates across the State, and responds in each landscape to landowners’ land use. In agriculture, environment improvement depends on management of the resources used in production of food and fibre: o soil organic matter and carbon o ground cover o pasture perenniality o biodiversity above and below ground level o water table level o water efficiency - production per mm of rainfall o carbon footprint o soil nutrients o revegetation o remnant vegetation and riparian areas Each element has significant and measurable environmental value, which must be included in the total response to the maintenance and improvement of healthy ecosystems. Improvement in the environmental values of farm ecosystems are being embraced by a growing number of farmers and are critical for maintaining Victoria’s food production capacity and the economic viability of individual farm businesses. Chapter 6, which presents actions for enhancing land and biodiversity, is incomplete without a section on ’Managing food and fibre production ecosystems.’ Lifestyle properties are increasing in area and have a significant potential for carbon sequestration, biodiversity improvement, soil health and water quality improvement. Landcare groups and networks are a critical point of reference for landholders who do not have a background in land management. Public land can benefit from carryover of Landcare knowledge from private land to management of public lands. Conservation management networks provide one good model for the relationship between public land and private landholders’ knowledge. 3 Urban land Is increasing in area and having significant climate change and environmental impacts. The effects on agriculture are also profound. Current provisions in land use planning that protect amenity are failing to protect agriculture as a land use. Innovation in production may change the look of agricultural landscapes, but it can also deliver healthier ecosystems. Section 7.6 needs to raise the need for revision of the way amenity operates in land use decision making. Market-based instruments have to be integrated into community-based change Chapter 7. Applying modern tools. “….opportunities exist to develop new markets and address missing markets … In particular, there is a growing interest in harnessing market forces to encourage investment that improves ecosystem services.” (Green Paper, p 60) Payment for work with environmental benefits for the wider community is a powerful new tool, and Landcare groups have been observing and participating in trials of this approach. Our conclusion is that Market-Based Instruments (MBIs) run a risk of being too narrow in focus and exclusive rather than inclusive in their reach. o MBIs appear to be skewed towards broader landscape issues, with the risk of sidelining locally important issues and changes that are slower to implement than tenders for specific ecosystem services. o Current expectations of landholders duty of care are unclear, resulting in a perception that landholders are paid through MBI’s for things they were already doing or were committed to doing. o Landholders can be involved in bidding for payment for ecosystem services in isolation from their community. Some MBI models have had little knowledge sharing and learning within the local community. Beyond the tender process, MBIs are all about individual action. This can cut across a collaborative approach to changing practices and undermine community cohesion. o Tender processes can be complex and inhibit some people’s involvement. o Funding of MBIs at the expense of funding for Landcare would undermine long-term community change in practices. MBIs are not a panacea. The causes of ecosystem degradation are interconnected, and actions for improvement also have to be kept closely interconnected. Sustainable agricultural enterprises that manage to duty of care evolve within each landscape when there is a community of learning that brings together knowledge, incentive and opportunity. Community learning develops best practice models that work in each landscape, and communicates these through farmer discussion groups, farm walks, field days, demonstration farms and opinion within community networks. Based on Landcare’s experience of change in communities, we believe that if you mix MBIs with community capacity, you get broader outcomes, and improve cost-benefit through knowledge sharing and additional volunteer action. Already, the capacity building and education processes in Landcare have contributed enormously to landholder ability to deliver on MBIs. Development of MBIs needs to respond to regional and State priorities, but engage with locally specific issues and involve local communities in setting local priorities. Decisions developed externally or in isolation from the community are dangerous. Information sharing in a tender process should not be viewed as collusion. Auction or tendering process can be adapted to integrate capacity building and knowledge sharing. Longer term contracts can be generated to allow landholders to deliver longer term outcomes. 4 The Bass Coast Land Stewardship Trial provides one example that integrates MBIs into sustainable agricultural outcomes. It encourages and supports farmers to manage to their duty of care and achieve Land Stewardship status. It takes account of the processes of developing landholder capacity. A workable community-based approach that will lead landholders to Land Stewardship status is as follows: o Program 1. Information/education – self assessment, action planning, other planning mechanisms that work locally to generate environmental farm plans. o Program 2. Continuing practice and incentives – bedding down changes in practice, being supported to reach duty of care responsibilities, along with project-based incentives to adopt best practice. o Program 3. Land Stewardship – where landholders can provide environmental benefits to the community beyond their private benefit. This is where MBI’s can be used effectively using a Landcare partnership approach. A call to action for Landcare itself The Green Paper signals change in government’s agenda. We want to signal changes that Landcare itself needs to make, to strengthen its contribution …. o Encourage landholders who have not been traditionally involved, and recruit future generations to Landcare to ensure continuity of the movement. o Encourage and foster a permanent change in landholders’ best practice environmental management. o Improve Landcare organisational structures, and showcase achievements to ensure continuity of funding and engage new members. o Take a more rigorous and scientific approach taken to demonstrate successful project outcomes. o Educate and inform government about the importance of the professional Landcare staff who support Landcare groups and others working on Landcare projects. o Challenge government to increase funding, resources and enthusiasm to support Landcare and community projects via the CaLP act. o Seek other sources of funding as a movement, instead of each group in isolation. o Improve our ability to plan strategically, so that we build on strengths and manage weaknesses. o Position Landcare to link communities and government on the issue of climate change, offering practical support and action in all landscapes. o Establish a Victorian Landcare Council to represent Victorian Landcare and provide a pathway for speak to government on policy and programs. 5 Participants at the Phillip Island Workshop Peter Huthwaite (convener), Ross Colliver (facilitator, TTDG), Sally Abbott Smith (Yea River Catchment Landcare President), Karen Alexander (Johns Hill Landcare Group, Southern Ranges Environment Alliance), Alex Arbuthnot (LAL), Robert Atkinson (Bass Coast Landcare Network), David Blicblau (Deep Creek Landcare Group), Andrew Brown (East Gippsland Landcare), Wayne Bryce (Watershed 2000, Central Hopkins Land Protection Association), Paul Burns (International Power Mitsui), Mike Cleeland (Bass Coast Landcare Network), Ian Clues (Bairnsdale Urban Landcare), , Nick Dudley (Department of Primary Industries), Brian Enbom (Bass Coast Landcare Network), Doug Evans (Port Phillip and Westernport CMA) Pat Francis (Australian Landcare magazine), Joel Geoghegan (Bass Coast Landcare Network), Stephen Guy (Lismore Land Protection Group), Ann Jarvis (Kiewa Catchment Groups), Lindsay Jarvis (Kiewa Catchment Groups), Alice Knight (Woady Yaloak Catchment Group), Andrea Mason (Victorian Landcare Network), Paul Martin (Yarram Yarram Landcare Network), Stewart Matthieson (Upper Barwon Landcare Network), Moragh MacKay (Bass Coast Landcare Network), Phillip McGarry (West Gippsland Landcare Network), Neil McInnes (Upper Barwon Landcare Network), Jim Mead (Landcare Education Program), Irene Medley (East Gippsland Landcare Network), Kellie Nichols (Bass Coast Landcare Network), Geoff Park (Newstead Landcare Group, North Central Cathment Management Authority), Claire Penniceard, Jim Sansom (Newham and Districts Landcare Group), Barry Sibly (Bass Coast Landcare Network), Matthew Stephenson (Bass Coast landcare Network), Sarah Van Stokrom (Bass Coast Landcare Network) Leon Trembath (Yarram Yarram Landcare Network, Gippslandcare), Julie Weatherhead (Westernport catchment Landcare Network), Darren Williams (State Industry and Landcare Coordinator DAFF). Observers; Kevin Love (Deputy Secretary Department of Sustainability and Environment – Chair Project Control Board Land and Biodiversity White Paper), David Lucas (Senior Policy Officer, Sustainable Rural Landscapes, Department of Sustainability and Environment), Jo McCoy (Manager Natural Resource Reform/Project Director Land and Biodiversity White Paper, Department of Sustainability and Environment), Mick Murphy (Victorian Catchment Management Council, Chair Stakeholder Reference Group), Mike Nurse (Statewide Coordinator, Landcare and Community Engagement, Department of Sustainability and Environment) 6