Our collaborations

The Queensland Reef Water Quality Program collaborates with the Australian government and industry groups and natural resource management (NRM) bodies.

These collaborations maximise resources, knowledge and networks and allow for a more holistic approach to projects and on-ground outcomes.

Grazing Resilience and Sustainable Solutions program

The over $14.5 million Grazing Resilience and Sustainable Solutions (GRASS) program is working with graziers in the Burdekin, Fitzroy and Burnett Mary regions to identify opportunities to improve land condition for poor (C) or degraded (D) land.

The GRASS program supports graziers to develop and implement a tailor-made action plan for land management. The action plan assists graziers to improve and then maintain their land condition with a specific focus on improving ground cover. Improving land condition can enhance production, provide economic benefits and environmental outcomes.

The GRASS program is funded through the Queensland Reef Water Quality Program and delivered by the Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (DAF), Burnett Mary Regional Group, Fitzroy Basin Association and NQ Dry Tropics.

Complete nutrient management planning for cane farming

Complete nutrient management planning projects have been supporting sugarcane growers to improve their nutrient management, profitability and productivity since 2016 while delivering water quality benefits for the Reef.

The RP161 nutrient management planning project began in the Burdekin with a $2.74 million Queensland Government investment in partnership with local agronomy firm Farmacist.

The project has since attracted investment from the Australian Government’s Reef Trust and extended into the Mackay Whitsunday region, Isis area (Burnett Mary region), Herbert catchment (Wet Tropics region) and Mulgrave-Russell catchment (Wet Tropics region).

It provides sugarcane growers with a tailored nutrient management plan and one year of on-farm agronomic support to improve their whole-of-farm management.

The total investment from 2016 to 2022 was $7.8 million through the Queensland Reef Water Quality Program and the Australian Government’s Reef Trust. Projects were delivered by a variety of partners including Farmacist, Herbert Cane Productivity Services, Sugar Research Australia, ISIS Productivity Services and Mackay Area Productivity Services.

Nearly 700 farms covering almost 70,000 hectares have been involved in the projects, reducing on-farm nitrogen application by nearly 900 tonnes.

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RP161 is about planning, application and education, not just for the grower but also for us. We're going on that educational journey with them with the support and background of science.

We've been on a journey of looking to improve our business and our management practices now for quite some time, close to 20 years, and we saw RP161 as an opportunity to partner up with people who actually enhance our business and bring to the table some expertise that we didn’t have.

We've learnt that following the SIX EASY STEPS is the right way to go. We've been able to cut back on our fertiliser, our crop has gone up in fact, this year we will have cut our best crop ever.

We've made lots of changes. We've learnt that our management practices in the past were actually masking some of the real issues that were there, so we're actually learning more about our soils, we're learning more about our topography, for want of a better word,drainage, soil condition and learning that you need to manage those issues as well as your nutrient management and your irrigation management.

Like most growers you think you've got everything fine-tuned and under control but there's always room for improvement somewhere. We've learnt, well it's something we already knew, we know that we don't know everything there is to know about our business and that quite often you need to go and seek the expertise that your business needs. It's continuing to learn about the things that we don't know.

We've increased the crop so that's definitely, like that's a major bonus and it hasn't cost us anything more to do it really, like it's cost less to grow more cane. One of the most positive outcomes is the fact that we've actually reduced inputs and reduced the intensity on the old farming system and we've actually come out the other side with a similar if not better result in terms of production.

The main one is the fertiliser in the past we've been putting too much fertiliser on, and we've got that under control now, we calibrate regularly, our fertiliser box – we want to make sure that we're doing everything right.

This project has been so well run by Farmacist, that it's made it easier, that much easier it is unbelievable. We received a hell of a lot of support from Evan, Jayson and the girls, especially Heidi. Whenever I ring, there's nothing's too difficult for them to come out and lend a hand, and they’re not afraid to get dirty either – they get into it.

For the industry and the Great Barrier Reef, it's a great project because you know, not only are we doing nutrition plans where the right inputs are getting put in the right place, but we're also helping growers with calibrations, we're having a look at irrigation, we're having a look at EC mapping, we're having a look at lime and gypsum prescriptions, we're looking at improving the soil water relationship.

It's not all about nutrients but from the Reef’s point of view and the environments point of view, if we can contain the nutrient on-field where it's supposed to be and get that crop using it and we're reducing losses coming out of the paddock, well it's a win-win for everybody

It's a win for the grower because, you know, he's using his inputs efficiently. It's a win for the crop because we’re getting more cane out of it and it's a win for the environment because we're not getting the losses that we may have done in the past.

It's made me more open to somebody else coming and have a look at what I'm doing. It's basically like going to the doctor and having a check-up. There's no harm in it, all you can be told is what you need to do to improve. I would encourage other growers to take the opportunity to participate in the project.

It does give you a lot more intimate knowledge of the way that you farm and the issues, all of the issues that you have to deal with rather than dealing with nutrition just in isolation.

Streambank Remediation Program

Streambank erosion and sediment flow to the Reef will be reduced through the Queensland Government’s Streambank Remediation Program.

The Queensland Government is providing $6 million for three projects in the Burdekin, Herbert River and Fitzroy River catchments to repair and remediate streambanks along rivers and waterways.

The Australian Government is co-investing $6.4 million in three projects in the Burdekin, Mackay Whitsunday and Burnett Mary regions to reduce sediment run-off from eroded streambanks and gulllies.

Works will include revegetation, fencing, bank reprofiling and pile fields to reduce sediment loss. Activities will be guided by the Queensland Government’s River Rehabilitation Guidelines and the Australian Government’s Reef Trust Gully and Streambank Toolbox.

This work builds on the joint efforts by both the Queensland and Australian Governments into sediment management through landscape repair initiatives. Projects such as the Innovative Gully Remediation Project which was jointly funded under Greening Australia’s Reef Aid program and the Queensland Reef Water Quality Program play a crucial role in helping protect the Reef. This $4 million project directly remediated 17.41 hectares of gullies and restored ground cover to 44 hectares at Strathalbyn Station in the Burdekin.

It demonstrated that eroding gullies can be cost-effectively restored, delivering benefits for landholders and the Great Barrier. The results from 10 gully remediation trial sites reduced fine sediment reaching the Reef by an average of 98 per cent.