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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Salinity Investment Framework 3 www.sif3.org David Pannell UWA Anna Ridley DPI Vic
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics The questions Which projects are worth funding? Which policy tools to use?
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics The problem It’s important to do well Small budget relative to the issues Big changes required - expensive Economics often adverse It’s difficult to do well Integrate diverse information Lots of knowledge gaps Spatially variable NRM outcomes vs community expectations Lack of capacity
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics SIF3: What is it? Decision frameworks on paper, not computerised Participatory process Multi-disciplinary team Quick scan of options short list detailed feasibility assessment Technical, social and economic
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics SIF3 Public: Private Benefits Framework
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Public and private benefits This framework is embedded in SIF3 Relevant to change on private land e.g. Salinity, water quality, clearing An advance on cost-sharing
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics “Project” A defined set of changes in a specific location private net benefits (internal) Economics, risk, complexity public net benefits (external) Neighbours, downstream water users, city dwellers interested in biodiverity
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Possible projects Each dot is a set of land-use changes on specific pieces of land = a project. Lucerne Farm A Lucerne Farm B Current practice Which tool? Incentives Extension Regulation New technology No action
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Simple public-private framework
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics SIF3 The decision-tree approach
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics SIF3 description Relate particular situations to the PPF Rules of thumb Benefit:cost analysis mindset Develop a map of ‘best-practice’ investment response by scenario x 60
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics High value terrestrial assets Waterways Dispersed assets (e.g. agric land) Saltland Asset types
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Waterway Salt input HighLow High Low Groundwater response HighLow Fresh runoff Adoptability Extension + − Incentives −− Technol. Devel. Positive incentives Technology development Private net benefit No action Extension No Action Negative incentives Public net benefit
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics SIF3 Piloting implementation
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Piloting implementation Worked with two CMAs North Central region Victoria South Coast WA Elements Communication Apply SIF3 decision trees Focus groups to understand capacity issues Interviews with lifestyle landholders Evaluation
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Results: localised assets
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Results: dispersed assets Less use of Extension and small temporary grants (should mainly use where viable options exist) More use of Technology development
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Response NCCMA accepted recommendations Completely rewrote salinity implementation plan Fast tracked application of the approach to their entire portfolio South Coast NRM likely to do similar Five regions now signed up
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics National impact Senate recommendation Standing Committee/Ministerial Council Meetings with senior policy groups in each state (with DAFF support) Partnerships with NRM bodies and state agencies Good links to DAFF & DEWHA
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics SIF3 Lessons and Implications
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Four essential elements Asset value Threat/impact (level and urgency) Technical feasibility of reducing threat/impact (cause and effect relationships) Adoptability of the desired practices Sometimes missed Often missed Usually missed Usually included
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Choice of mechanism Choice of mechanism is at least as important as choice of environmental asset
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics “Needs” for better decisions A re-focus on NRM outcomes A guiding framework (rule things out) Ease and understandability Support for NRM managers Data and analysis, not just judgment Tighter targeting A different mix of policy tools Patience
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Challenges we faced The difficulty of the analysis task Program constraints Insane time lines Requirement for “on-ground” work Community expectations - fear of backlash Battling vested interests Huge communication costs Low technical/economics capacity available Agency schizophrenia
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics Questions from organisers How does approach compare internationally? Seems to be unique How have we been supported by agencies and research organisations? Funds, in-kind, info, moral support, advocacy, … Ignored, resisted, abused, attacked How to measure success? Justified expectation that it will actually lead to more cost-effective NRM outcomes
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School of Agricultural & Resource Economics www.sif3.org Funding acknowledgements ARC CERF Future Farm Industries CRC DSE, DPI, DAFWA, DEC, DoW CMO partners
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