A deal between Australia鈥檚 biggest regional university and the federal agricultural agency could see the two organisations borrowing each other鈥檚 staff, in a research-driven quest to boost farm exports and avert a flight from country towns.
The 鈥渟trategic partnership鈥 between Charles Sturt University (CSU) and the Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment (DAWE), signed in December, is also designed to thwart outbreaks in the biosphere and cybersphere.
CSU鈥檚 acting vice-chancellor, John Germov, said details of the agreement would be fleshed out in the coming months. But it would involve seconding university staff to work on the department鈥檚 projects and 鈥渧ice versa鈥.
CSU also proposes a cadetship programme for its Aboriginal students, giving them 鈥渧aluable work experience鈥 while helping the department boost its indigenous staff numbers.
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Professor Germov said CSU鈥檚 agricultural research capabilities, its footprint across six regional campuses and its 鈥渃onnections to primary producers鈥 would help the department test and develop its policies.
鈥淲e mightn鈥檛 be as big as some of the other players in the sector but our research, predominantly, is applied research dealing with real-world problems,鈥 he said.
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The partnership will focus on new crop strains and sustainable management practices to preserve land and water resources. Professor Germov said the agreement would also bolster the department鈥檚 biosecurity activities and the security of its 鈥渕assive鈥 databases.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge department. They鈥檙e dealing with big data and how to ensure that it鈥檚 secure and analysed effectively to support evidence-based decision-making.鈥
The data load has snowballed partly because of the creeping automation of agriculture, as farmers harness robotics and online sensors that monitor crop development, nutrients and moisture levels. 鈥淎g-tech is going to be a huge growth industry,鈥 Professor Germov said.
鈥淲hile we might see manual tasks declining on the farms, there will be this other industry developing in how to use the data to inform effective land- and water-management practices.鈥
By imparting such technological skills, universities can boost agricultural profitability while averting the long-feared desertion of country towns, as rural workers displaced by farm mechanisation decamp for the cities.
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DAWE wants to increase Australia鈥檚 agricultural output to A$100 billion (拢57 billion) by 2030, up from about A$61 billion at present. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 do that without strengthening those regional communities,鈥 Professor Germov said.
He said there were already signs of growth in 鈥渕id-sized鈥 regional towns聽such as Orange, Bathurst and Wagga Wagga, where CSU has campuses. The聽movement to such places has accelerated during the pandemic, as workers embrace the potential of remote work.
Similar influxes are occurring in Victorian regional centres like Ballarat, where Federation University is based. While this increases local demand for higher education, Federation vice-chancellor Duncan Bentley said the demand must be addressed thoughtfully.
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He said the traditional approach 鈥 establish a regional campus and 鈥渟tick in a few courses鈥 鈥 often ended in closure once latent demand had been absorbed. 鈥淔or regional areas, the big issue is [to] respond to the needs of the community. Don鈥檛 think of the university 鈥 think of what the community needs.鈥
That philosophy guided Federation鈥檚 December agreement with the rural council at Ararat, about 100 kilometres from Ballarat, to 鈥渞eactivate鈥 the university鈥檚 local campus 鈥 which it withdrew from last decade 鈥 as a centre for advanced agricultural research. Professor Bentley said he hoped to develop dozens of similar partnerships across regional Victoria.
He said the Ararat centre would initially house four council-employed economic development and project management staff. Dozens of academics and PhD students could work with them, researching the 鈥渇undamental agricultural priorities鈥 of an area that typically produces raw food and fibre and leaves more profitable production stages to others.
Research areas would include 鈥渟mart farming鈥 technologies聽such as drones, robotics and sensors, including producing them locally through 3D printing and advanced manufacturing techniques. Researchers would also look at the viability of new product lines like flatbread and game meat, and 鈥渃ircular economy鈥 approaches such as reusing farm waste to generate energy.
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The aim was to replicate the success of top overseas agricultural exporters. Professor Bentley said the Netherlands, with around nine times Ararat鈥檚 farmland, produced 878 times the export value.
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