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The irrigation industry is improving water management practices.

Growing more grain with less water: Grains Week 2006

Reference: 06/58

Australian researchers are investigating ways to improve grain yields using less water in response to decreasing water allocations and climate variability.

  • 5 April 2006

Studies facilitated by the CSIRO and Australia’s Grains Research & Development Corporation (GRDC) are part of the Water for a Healthy Country Flagship and aim to determine the best approach to improve water productivity in drought-affected areas.

CSIRO Land and Water’s Dr Shahbaz Khan says dry conditions, environmental flow demands and world pressure to produce increased crop yields mean that rainfall and river supplies are failing to meet irrigation water requirements in many parts of Australia.

“A recent major study in the NSW Coleambally and Murrumbidgee irrigation areas demonstrated that the systems approach could save more than 300gigalitres, with costs of water saving technologies ranging from A$50million to A$5000million.”

"Irrigated agriculture constitutes 70 per cent of Australia’s consumptive water use, existing resources are already stretched and there will be less water available for irrigated agriculture in future," Dr Khan says. "The only way to ensure growth in the grains industry is to improve water use efficiency at both farm and catchment scales."

He says evaluation of the economic and environmental merits of on-farm and off-farm water efficiency options, and ranking them in a multi-scale whole of system context, is the key to achieving real and substantial water savings.

Such options include canal lining; irrigation scheduling; high-tech irrigation technologies; improved cropping patterns; and conversion to crops with higher economic returns.

A recent major study in the NSW Coleambally and Murrumbidgee irrigation areas demonstrated that the systems approach could save more than 300gigalitres, with costs of water saving technologies ranging from A$50million to A$5000million.

Options explored by researchers included reducing the break-even period by leasing water for the environment from farmers, and providing preferential access rights to saved water for farmers who invested in water saving technologies.

Read more media releases in our Media.

  Logo for Grains Week 2006   Image of the Grains Research & Development Corporation (GRDC) logo.

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CSIRO aims to establish and build relationships with members of the community. We welcome people of all ages to come and explore our facilities, holiday programs and public events.

Contact

Phone:

1300 363 400

Email:

enquiries@csiro.au

More contact options

About CSIRO

CSIRO, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, is Australia's national science agency and one of the largest and most diverse research agencies in the world.

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