Natural Resource Management – An ABS Perspective Peter Harper Deputy Australian Statistician Population, Labour, Industry and Environment Statistics Group Australian Bureau of Statistics NatStats 2008
Response DriversImpact Pressures State A framework for thinking about environmental issues
An example Driving forces –Population Pressure –Agricultural activity State –Land quality -- salinity Impact –Economic losses Response –NRM practices
The information base Physical science is mainly concerned with state, as well as certain pressures and impacts –This is the realm of scientific information Drivers and many pressures are economic and social in nature Many impacts are also of a social and economic nature The ABS is well placed to measure the economic and social dimensions of environmental issues Many responses are affected through the actions of businesses and people –The ABS is also well placed to measure these
Integration is vital The physical, social and economic dimensions of environment issues need to be collectively understood, because of the linkages This requires common frameworks, standards and classifications –For NRM issues, geographic integration is particularly important Information should be presented in a way that is consistent and coherent
Environmental accounting An organising framework –Presents comparable information in a systematic framework –Encourages development of comprehensive and consistent data sets over time –Provides a framework from which a range of indicators can be produced
Environmental-economic accounting An emerging discipline Enables the relationship between the environment and the economy (and society) to be analysed Presents environmental data in a way that is consistent with broader economic data, such as the national accounts Shows the distribution of environmental resources across different parts of the economy Enables monetary valuations of environmental assets and environment-related flows Follows international standards to enable international comparability
SEEA 2003 System of Environmental and Economic Accounting Provides policy makers with indicators and descriptive statistics to monitor economic- environment interactions as well as a database to identify paths to sustainable development Four categories of accounts –Flow accounts for pollution, energy and materials –Environmental expenditure and resource management expenditure accounts –Natural resource asset accounts –Non-market flow and environmentally adjusted aggregates Currently being redeveloped
The ABS tool kit Surveys of businesses –NRM issues related to industries, including agriculture Surveys of households –NRM issues related to persons Land-based surveys –NRM issues related to particular geographic areas Economic-environmental accounts Analysis Classifications and standards Assistance to other information producing bodies – statistical ‘know-how’
ABS NRM-related products Water account for Australia –Experimental monetary water account –Experimental estimates of regional water usage Water Use on Australian Farms Natural Resource Management on Australian Farms Farm Management and Climate Environmental Issues – People’s Views and Practices Environment expenditure, local government Salinity on Australian Farms Land Management: Eurobodalla Shire & Fitzroy and Livingston Shires Australia’s Environment – Issues and Trends
Agriculture Resource Management Survey Purpose: to inform Caring for Our Country initiative Includes issues such as –Details of commodities produced –Land preparation for crops and pastures –Soil condition management practices –Fertiliser use –Water use –Surface water management practices –Practices to protect the environment for conservation purposes –Practices for dealing with adverse seasonal conditions Results available May 2009
The challenges Filling information gaps –Unlocking the statistical potential of relevant administrative or regulatory data sets –New collections where needed Greater integration of disparate data sources –Particularly to understand linkages and consequences Making information visible, accessible and usable – A National Environment Information System The ABS cannot do these things by itself – it needs to work in partnership with others