Statewide weed program to protect farming and public lands adopted

USEPW001

A strengthened response to new and emerging high-risk weeds that can blight the landscape and impact farming productivity is being delivered through new, four-year funding for 97 Local Control Authorities, comprising groups of local councils.

The $40.7 million NSW Weeds Action Program is an important part of the NSW Biosecurity Action Plan, designed to ensure the state’s $25 billion-a-year primary industries continue to thrive.

The program supports targeted surveillance and rapid biosecurity responses, and is building a statewide network to prevent, eradicate and contain priority weeds by undertaking a range of actions, including preventing parthenium weed entering New South Wales as well as prevent the spread and aim of eradicate parkinsonia and tropical soda apple weeds.

The program will also work with landholders to contain alligator weed, frogbit, Hudson pear, harrisia cactus and sticky nightshade as well as instigate surveillance and rapid response resources to detect new high-risk weeds early and act quickly to stop their spread.

These high-risk weed species, which can cause significant environmental and agricultural damage and pose serious health risks to livestock, wildlife and people, require urgent action to stop them from becoming more widely established.

The new Weeds Action Program strengthens weed biosecurity by providing stable funding for risk-based planning, compliance and education, and ensures accountability from the LCAs through biannual reporting and evaluation.

Led by the NSW Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development, the new four-year program will be delivered in partnership with Local Land Services.

Minister for Agriculture and Minister for Regional NSW, Tara Moriarty said the four-year grant model provides certainty in budgeting, giving local councils and other control authorities the ability to put boots on the ground, retain staff and train new weed biosecurity officers across New South Wales.

“This network of biosecurity officers sustains the surveillance, eradication and containment efforts on key high-risk weeds, including parthenium weed, alligator weed and frogbit to protect our valuable farming lands,” she said.

Follow Moree Online News on Facebook

Related Stories

NSW Farmers’ welcome $300m feral animal control commitment

NSW Farmers’ has welcomed the NSW Liberal and Nationals $300 million biosecurity and feral animal control policy announcement, as a significant step toward addressing a burgeoning crisis farmers have been managing almost alone for too long. NSW Farmers’ president Xavier Martin said the size of the investment recognised the seriousness of the challenge. “This is [...]

USEPigsBaiting004

Record investment to back farmers and tackle feral pigs

NSW Nationals Leader Gurmesh Singh and NSW Opposition Leader Kellie Sloane says an elected Liberal and Nationals Government will fund a $300 million biosecurity and control program for the co-ordination and management of feral animals to protect critical primary industries sector and conserve the environment. They said agriculture contributes about $25.5 billion per year to [...]

USEFeralPig666

Brazilian cotton growers visit Moree district on knowledge-sharing tour

A group of Brazil’s leading cotton growers and industry representatives recently visited Moree, Wee Waa, Narrabri and Goondiwindi on an industry knowledge-sharing tour to see ‘best practice’ in Australia’s cotton industry. Held last month, the tour also took in Dalby and Toowoomba. An initiative of Cotton Brazil, and supported by Rabobank, the tour saw a [...]

USERabobankCottonBrazilTour03