Trade-offs between agriculture and the environment: how do we decide what to protect?

About the speaker

Anna Roberts holds a PhD from the University of Melbourne and has 30 years’ experience in research, extension and policy interaction with the Victorian Department of Primary Industries. Her focus has been on understanding the impact of agriculture on the environment, developing farming systems which reduce environmental impacts and contributing to policy development. Currently, she is the co-leader of a multi-disciplinary team which has developed a framework to achieve cost-effective and realistic environmental outcomes. This framework is being used by both government and non-government agencies in Australia influencing their policy-making, as well as now being piloted internationally. Dr Roberts also leads Victorian work linking the impacts of farming systems and management on water quality at the catchment scale. She is a key scientist in a project assessing the impacts of reduced surface and groundwater availability on agricultural and environmental outcomes in the Victorian Murray-Darling Basin. She has served on a number of state and national committees, and has won several awards including the Australian Museum 2009 Australian Research Council Eureka Prize for Interdisciplinary Research.

About the talk

Most people want to know that ‘the environment’ is being protected, including water quality, habitat, threatened species and specific environmental assets. Agricultural land management greatly affects the environment and large amounts of money are being committed to protecting aspects of the Murray-Darling Basin, Great Barrier Reef and many other areas. A focus on process, including making plans, and setting targets, helps create a sense that outcomes will be achieved, but often they are not. In addition, many programs are based on an implicit assumption that largely voluntary adoption of improved agricultural practices will be sufficient to deal with environmental problems. Often this is not the case, leaving large policy dilemmas about trade-offs between land management and the environment. This lecture will explore interactions among science, economics, politics, and policy, and will address how to get more effective discussion about what aspects of the environment are sufficiently important and feasible to protect at acceptable cost.

Shine Dome,9 Gordon Street Australian Capital Territory

Contact Information

Event Manager: Mitchell Piercey
Phone: (02) 6201 9462

5:30 PM April 03, 2012
FOR Public
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Add to Calendar 03/04/2012 5:30 PM 03/04/2012 5:30 PM Australia/Sydney Trade-offs between agriculture and the environment: how do we decide what to protect?

About the speaker

Anna Roberts holds a PhD from the University of Melbourne and has 30 years’ experience in research, extension and policy interaction with the Victorian Department of Primary Industries. Her focus has been on understanding the impact of agriculture on the environment, developing farming systems which reduce environmental impacts and contributing to policy development. Currently, she is the co-leader of a multi-disciplinary team which has developed a to achieve cost-effective and realistic environmental outcomes. This framework is being used by both government and non-government agencies in Australia influencing their policy-making, as well as now being piloted internationally. Dr Roberts also leads Victorian work linking the impacts of farming systems and management on water quality at the catchment scale. She is a key scientist in a project assessing the impacts of reduced surface and groundwater availability on agricultural and environmental outcomes in the Victorian Murray-Darling Basin. She has served on a number of state and national committees, and has won several awards including the Australian Museum 2009 Australian Research Council Eureka Prize for Interdisciplinary Research.

About the talk

Most people want to know that ‘the environment’ is being protected, including water quality, habitat, threatened species and specific environmental assets. Agricultural land management greatly affects the environment and large amounts of money are being committed to protecting aspects of the Murray-Darling Basin, Great Barrier Reef and many other areas. A focus on process, including making plans, and setting targets, helps create a sense that outcomes will be achieved, but often they are not. In addition, many programs are based on an implicit assumption that largely voluntary adoption of improved agricultural practices will be sufficient to deal with environmental problems. Often this is not the case, leaving large policy dilemmas about trade-offs between land management and the environment. This lecture will explore interactions among science, economics, politics, and policy, and will address how to get more effective discussion about what aspects of the environment are sufficiently important and feasible to protect at acceptable cost.

Shine Dome,9 Gordon Street Australian Capital Territory false DD/MM/YYYY

Contact Information

Event Manager: Mitchell Piercey
Phone: (02) 6201 9462

5:30 PM April 03, 2012

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