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Information for farmers

National environmental law - EPBC Act

Young silverbeet crop

Find information on:

  • Farmers and the national environment law (EPBC Act)
  • Protected matters on your farm - what is protected?
  • Single touch approvals

View more about national environmental law

Farmers and the national environment law (EPBC Act)

The Department recognises the important role farmers, agricultural organisations and natural resource managers play in protecting our environment.

Farmers need to know about Australia’s national environment law as some agricultural activities may need federal government approval. This could be in addition to state or local government approvals. .


Protected matters on your farm - what is protected?

National environment law only applies to matters of national environmental significance. You can check if there are likely to be protected matters on or near your property by using the environment reporting tool.


Single Touch Approvals

The Australian Government is committed to delivering Single Touch Approvals. It will accredit state planning systems under national environmental law, to create a single environmental assessment and approval process for nationally protected matters.


Carbon farming - reducing emissions on the land

Leaf

Find information on:

  • Emissions Reduction Fund
  • Climate change in Australia
  • Australia's National Greenhouse Accounts

View more about reducing emissions on the land

Emissions Reduction Fund

The Emissions Reduction Fund allows farmers and land managers to earn carbon credits by storing carbon or reducing greenhouse gas emissions on the land.


Climate change in Australia - projections for Australia's NRM regions

Information about observed and projected climate change in Australia.


Australia's National Greenhouse Accounts

The Department publishes Australia’s National Greenhouse Accounts, which track national emissions – including from the land sector - from 1990 onwards.


Land management

Farm near Echuca, Victoria

Find information on land management including:

  • the National Landcare Program
  • 20 million trees

View more about land management

National Landcare Program

The National Landcare Program will support sustainable land management practices to deliver long-term benefits to our communities, our environment, our economy and our country.


20 Million Trees

The Australian Government will work with the community to plant 20 million trees by 2020, to re-establish green corridors and urban forests. The programme will involve competitive grants, delivered by individuals and organisations, and larger-scale plantings, delivered by service providers


More resources

Programs


Science

Northern Australia Hub research in the Daly River is showing that big wet season flows are extremely important to Cherabin (Freshwater Prawns).

Find information on:

  • National Environmental Science Programme
  • National Environmental Research Program
  • Climate science

View more about science programmes

National Environmental Science Programme

The National Environmental Science Programme will assist decision-makers to understand, manage and conserve Australia’s environment by funding world-class biodiversity and climate science. The programme brings together the Australian Climate Change Science Program and the National Environmental Research Program.


National Environmental Research Program

The National Environmental Research Program has been amalgamated into the National Environmental Science Programme. The National Environmental Research Program invests $20 million each year in environmental research to support decision making.


Climate science

The Australian Climate Change Science Programme and the national framework for climate change science focus on delivering policy and governance arrangements, and providing essential systems knowledge.


More resources


Threatened species and ecological communities

Slender Darling Pea

Find out about:

  • Threatened species and ecological communities
  • Threat abatement advices:and plans
  • Invasive species
  • Threatened Species Scientific Committee:
  • Threatened Species Commissioner

View more about threatened species and ecological communities

Threatened species and ecological communities

The Australian Government is working in partnership with state, territory and local governments, non-government organisations, tertiary institutions and community groups to ensure the protection of our native species.

The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC Act) protects Australia's native species and ecological communities by providing for:

Search online


Invasive species

Information about diseases, fungi and parasites, insects and other intertebrates, and feral animals in Australia - cane toads, feral cats and feral pigs.

Weeds

Invasive weeds are among the most serious threats to Australia's natural environment and primary production industries. They displace native species, contribute significantly to land degradation, and reduce farm and forest productivity.


Threatened Species Commissioner

The commissioner works collaboratively with the national Threatened Species Scientific Committee and the community, including the non-profit sector, industry, scientists and all levels of government to broker solutions that avoid the extinction of Australia’s native species.


Threatened Species Scientific Committee

The committee advises the Minister on the amendment and updating of lists for threatened species, threatened ecological communities, and key threatening processes together with the making or adoption of recovery plans and threat abatement plans.


Resources lists


Water use and infrastructure

Irrigation sprinkler

Find information on:

  • The Basin Plan
  • Coal, Coal seam gas and water
  • Commonwealth Environmental Water Office
  • Sustainable Rural Water Use and Infrastructure
  • On-Farm Irrigation Efficiency Program
  • Private Irrigation Infrastructure Operators Program in New South Wales
  • Restoring the Balance in the Murray-Darling Basin - Water entitlement purchasing
  • Wetlands
  • Great Barrier Reef

View more about water use and infrastructure

Basin Plan

The Murray-Darling Basin Plan delivers on the Australian Government's commitment to restore the Basin's rivers and wetlands to health while supporting strong regional communities and sustainable food production.


Commonwealth Environmental Water Office

The Commonwealth Environmental Water Holder, supported by the Commonwealth Environmental Water Office, manages the Commonwealth’s environmental water portfolio, research projects that inform approaches to aquatic ecosystems and environmental watering policy, and major projects to improve water quality and the ecological health of iconic wetland assets in the Murray Darling Basin.


Sustainable Rural Water Use and Infrastructure

Sustainable Rural Water Use and Infrastructure is a national programme investing in rural water use, management and efficiency, including improved water knowledge and market reform, and water purchase for the environment


On-Farm Irrigation Efficiency Program

The On-Farm Irrigation Efficiency Program is aimed at assisting irrigators within the southern connected system of the Murray-Darling Basin to modernise their on-farm irrigation infrastructure while returning water savings to the environment


Private Irrigation Infrastructure Operators Program in New South Wales

The Private Irrigation Infrastructure Operators Program (PIIOP) in New South Wales aims to improve the efficiency and productivity of water use and management of private irrigation networks and deliver water savings for the environment.


Restoring the Balance in the Murray-Darling Basin - Water entitlement purchasing

Water buybacks obtain water for the environment from irrigators who wish to offer their water entitlement for sale.


Wetlands

Many different types of organisations and people look after wetlands, from the Australian Government to individual landowners. There are specific roles and responsibilities outlined in the Ramsar Convention, as well as national and state legislation, regarding how Ramsar and other wetlands are managed


Coal, Coal seam gas and water

The Australian Government plays an important role in protecting our environment from potential impacts of development activity, with a focus on matters of national environmental significance.

The Independent Expert Scientific Committee on Coal Seam Gas and Large Coal Mining Development (the IESC) provides scientific advice to decision makers on the impact that coal seam gas and large coal mining development may have on Australia's water resources.

Bioregional assessments

Bioregional assessments are being undertaken in up to 15 subregions within New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia and Victoria. The assessments will provide baseline information on the ecology, hydrology, geology and hydrogeology in a particular geographic region, and an assessment of the cumulative impacts of coal seam gas and large coal mining developments on water related assets.


Great Barrier Reef

The Reef 2050 Long-Term Sustainability Plan is the overarching framework for protecting and managing the Great Barrier Reef from 2015 to 2050.


Wildlife trade

Kangaroo

Find information on:

  • Wildlife trade management plans
  • Commercial harvesting of native animals

View more about wildlife trade

Wildlife trade management plans

If you want to export for commercial purposes an Australian native wildlife specimen (unless exempt) and/or CITES-listed specimen sourced from Australia, it must come from an approved program such as a wildlife trade management plan.


Commercial harvesting of native animals

Information about wild harvest of kangaroos and wallabies, wild harvest and farming of crocodiles, and wild harvest of Tasmanian common brushtail possums.


Australia's heritage

Kakadu National Park

Find information on.

  • Heritage places
  • Australian Heritage Database

View more about Australia's heritage

Australia's heritage places

Information about natural, historic and Indigenous heritage places throughout Australia.


Contacts

Web sites