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Burdekin Falls Dam - one of the largest above ground water storages in the north. This picture illustrates the flat landscape of northern Australia. |
Improving knowledge about water in Australia’s north
Research to provide a better understanding about irrigation and the water systems of northern Australia has been released at the recent Irrigation Australia conference in Melbourne.
A suite of research bulletins are now available to summarises outcomes from the Northern Australia Irrigation Futures (NAIF) project – a partnership established to develop new knowledge, tools and processes to support debate and decision-making regarding irrigation in the north.
NAIF Steering Committee Chairman Ian Lancaster says the research outcomes will inform current policy development for the north and can help identify the focus of future research efforts.
The bulletins cover an overview of the NAIF project, information about northern groundwater systems, frameworks to support irrigation decision making, and the potential of developing distributed parcels of irrigation, known as mosaics, in the north.
A major output of the project is a web-based framework to help apply ecologically sustainable development principles in irrigation decisions in northern Australia.
NAIF Team Leader Mr Jeff Camkin, from CSIRO’s Water for a Healthy Country Flagship and the CRC for Irrigation Futures, says northern Australia has unique and diverse ecological systems that need special care to retain their integrity.
“We have an unique and historic opportunity to ensure that management and use of Australia’s northern land and water resources takes place within a strategic, ecologically, culturally and economically sustainable framework,” Mr Camkin says.
“An improved understanding of river and catchment attributes and the risks associated with irrigation will help inform decisions regarding irrigation and other development opportunities in northern Australia.”
NAIF is a major collaboration between the Australian, Queensland, Northern Territory and Western Australian Governments, as well as CSIRO, the Cooperative Research Centre for Irrigation Futures, Land and
Water Australia, and the National Program for Sustainable Irrigation.
Mr Camkin also presented results of the work at the Melbourne conference, which ran from May 20-22 at the Melbourne Exhibition Centre.
The NAIF work is delivered through the Better Basin Futures theme of the Water for a Healthy Country Flagship.
The research bulletins and technical reports are available at: www.clw.csiro.au/naif/.
Contact:
Keith Bristow, CSIRO Land and Water
Email: keith.bristow@csiro.au
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