It is a great honour to be here as part of the third National Agriculture and Related Industries
Day. Thank you to Tony Seabrook and the Pastoralists and Graziers Association for
organising this conference today. I would also like to recognise Mrs Gina Rinehart, the
founding patron of the National Agriculture and Related Industries Day, and Mr Kim
Beazley, the Governor of Western Australia.
I have just got off a 31-hour (with stopovers) flight from Washington DC, so please excuse
me if I am a little slow this afternoon! On Monday in DC, I met with the US Secretary of the
Interior, David Bernhardt. In his office there is a beautiful painting of the construction of the
Hoover Dam.
The Hoover Dam was more than just an enormous engineering feat, it also helped change the
world’s view of agricultural development. The dam had been the idea of John Powell, a
veteran of the Battle of Shiloh, were he lost an arm. Despite only having one arm, John led
the first American expedition of the wild Colorado River and the Grand Canyon in 1869. In
1878, John Powell produced a report on western US agricultural opportunities titled The
Report on the Arid Land of the Arid Region of the United States – and remember Powell
supported the development of this self-described arid region!
He did disagree, however, with some of the common views of the time. Then, there was a
view that the west could be developed according to a Jeffersonian ideal of small,
independent, yeoman farmers without the need for government involvement that would dilute
Americans’ well-known aptitude for individual enterprise. Powell disagreed. He became a
champion for large government-funded dam projects as the only way to harness the wild
rivers and irrigate the arid lands of the Colorado Basin.
Powell did not live to see his vision become a reality. Technological and political
developments in the early 20th century, however, did result in an amazing manifestation of
Powell’s dreams in the form of the then named Boulder Dam – later renamed the Hoover
Dam. In opening the dam in 1936, President Roosevelt paraphrased Julius Caesar “I came, I
saw and I was conquered”.
What are the lessons of this for us? I think they remain that the opening up of new
agricultural areas has always involved a healthy degree of large scale government investment.
A few years ago the CSIRO looked closely at a number of agricultural initiatives in Northern
Australia and found that:
All four of the continuing large scale (> 10,000 ha) irrigation schemes (Ord, Burdekin,
Emerald and Mareeba-Dimbulah) have received significant government investment … With
the exception of Katherine and Lakeland Downs, all of the private agricultural development
schemes that had little or no direct government investment, particularly in infrastructure,
have not persisted.
That is why the Federal Government has been leading the push to build the water
infrastructure that will help double our agricultural production by 2030. When we came to
government six years ago, no one was talking of building dams and we had lost a generation
with no dams being built. We have changed the conversation and things are now happening.
This week construction of the Rookwood weir in the Fitzroy Basin near Rockhampton began.
Last month contracts were signed to begin the Hells Gate Dam near Townsville, and the
Federal Government announced investments of over $500 million in three dam projects in
New South Wales. All up now the government has invested around $1.5 billion in new water
projects across the country.
There is lots of opportunity here in Western Australia too. Last year, the CSIRO completed a
major study for the Australian Government on the opportunities for additional water
infrastructure in the Mitchell (in North Queensland), Darwin and Fitzroy (in Western
Australia) catchments. Given the location of this conference in Western Australia and the
limits on my time, I will concentrate on the Western Australian angle.
The CSIRO concluded that almost 200,000 hectares of land could be irrigated in the Fitzroy
using a combination of on-farm dams and groundwater. To put that in context that is more
than six times the size of the Ord. There is enormous potential.
We are often told to listen to this science. Well the science is in. We can develop the water
and soils of our vast country and do so in a way that grows more food without damaging the
environment. These conclusions were drawn by 100 of our top scientists at the CSIRO
working for over a year. Of course, the naysayers were out of the blocks quickly, that
respected scientific organisation GetUp! said on the release of the report that dams “wreak
havoc on ecosystems”. While the Labor Party dismissed the report as a “thought bubble”.
What the CSIRO’s work shows is that it has never been a lack of good soils or lots of water
that has restricted intensive agricultural development of our north. It has been a lack of
people. The lack of people in Northern Australia in particular has limited the size of the
market to make it hard to get a diverse agricultural districts up and running.
We are not going to be able to create towns of millions of people in Northern Australia
overnight but we can provide better market access to the countries of Asia where there are
billions of people.
We have worked hard to open new markets and over the last few years. Since 2013, the
Australian Government has concluded eight new trade agreements and the vast majority of
our exports are now covered by free trade agreements. Key wins for agriculture have
included better beef access to Japan, Korea and China, and more consistent access for the live
cattle trade with Indonesia.
The latest free trade agreement was only concluded last month and the Regional Cooperation
and Economic Partnership (RCEP) agreement is the largest free trade agreement ever
concluded, covering 30 per cent of the world’s GDP.
It is unfortunate that India could not reach agreement to be included in the final agreement.
However, I remain hopeful of stronger trade ties with India in the future.
There is a logical, synergy between the development of the Fitzroy basin in Western
Australia and the growing food needs of the subcontinent. There are three main reasons that
WA agriculture and the development of the Indian economy make sense: geography, diet and
weather.
The Kimberley faces the Indian Ocean with easy access to Indian ports. The Kimberley has a
similar climate to the subcontinent, making for ideal growing conditions for the pulses and
grains prevalent in Indian diets.
And finally, the Kimberley has counter-seasonal and counter-cyclical growing conditions.
The seasons are at different times of the year and the Indian Ocean dipole effect means that
when it is wet in north-western WA it is often dry on the subcontinent, and vice-versa.
Thinking of India and Western Australia as a connected food bowl makes abundant sense.
Making such a partnership will have to be approached carefully. Australia can never replace
the farming needed in Asian countries. Even today Australia only produces enough food for
about 60 million people. We hope to double that by 2030 but even if we do we will then feed
just over 120 million. We will be a long way from being able to feed India, let alone many of
the other countries we already supply.
Still, India will face a major challenge feeding itself as its demand for high quality proteins
increase alongside its economic growth. As a recent academic paper concluded last year:
Under India’s current self-sufficiency model, our analysis indicates severe shortfalls in
availability of all macronutrients across a large proportion (>60%) of the Indian population.
The extent of projected shortfalls continues to grow such that, even in ambitious waste
reduction and yield scenarios, enhanced domestic production alone will be inadequate in
closing the nutrition supply gap. We suggest that to meet SDG2 [Zero Hunger] India will
need to take a combined approach of optimising domestic production and increasing its
participation in global trade.
What Australia can do though is provide an important buffer to guarantee a country’s food
security during droughts and other interruptions to a nation’s food supply. We are helping do
that right now in China as they respond to the swine flu crisis.
We also suffer our own interruptions from time to time and we are seeing that starkly at the
moment with one of the worst droughts in our history. There is so much suffering for many in
the farming community and it is hard to see. What we can do is provide assistance to relieve
suffering, however, governments can never completely remove it.
We have provided over $8 billion of funding towards the response to this drought. As the
drought has gotten more severe we have made a greater response. Just a fortnight ago we
announced that we would fire up the Adelaide Desalination Plant so that we could provide
more water to desperate farmers. The capacity of this plant is only 100G a year so it will not
help everyone, but it will make an important contribution. We will ensure that this water goes
to those doing it tough and it will be used to grow fodder to keep livestock alive (especially
the all-important breeding stock) and to help the dairy industry.
A double blow hit the other day when farmers already suffering with drought have been hit
by bushfires. One of the fires started just around the corner from where I live. It has
destroyed over 10,000 hectares of farming land and an entire lychee orchard.
There are those saying that climate change is increasing fire risk in Australia. I think the
evidence for this is more complicated than is often made out, but there is enough there that
we should make some response.
The key point is, however, that if the risk is higher, we should be doing more to mitigate and
reduce that risk. That means more cool burns, that means more fire breaks and that means
less restrictions on farmers clearing their own land. Instead state governments, like mine in
Queensland, are doing less to reduce fuel loads, and they are putting more red tape on
farmers just trying to manage their own land. We have to hit reverse on these wrong-headed
policies in light of these fires.
It is the same with the broader ideas I have placed here to expand our agricultural
opportunities – too often government red tape holds our farmers back from reaching their true
potential. I started this speech by recounting how a one-armed man overcame his disability to
help contribute towards the building of perhaps the greatest dam in history.
Our farmers are a bit the same except they have governments who tie one arm behind their
backs. Like John Powell, our farmers still get things done. Look at what Gina has achieved in
agriculture and mining despite the thousands of regulations she has had to navigate.
But imagine what we could all do with two arms. I am committed to doing what we can to
remove that red tape, to fulfil our potential to develop our great country and to help provide
food to a growing world.