The Future Farm Foundations project aims to support the agricultural sector in our region to adopt climate-smart agricultural practices that will reduce emissions, protect and conserve natural capital and biodiversity and build resilience to climate change.
The Northern Agricultural Region (NAR) is at the forefront of climate change, with a clear rainfall decline recorded in recent years and further deficiency predicted. Forty-eight per cent of land-use in the NAR is attributed to dryland cropping and further land-use is dedicated to other forms of agriculture, so the ongoing sustainability of the sector is vital for our region.
Developing and demonstrating transformational methods for resilience is essential to achieve landscape scale adaptation to a drying and more erratic climate. This project will include opportunities for farmers and the ag sector more broadly to:
- Improve management of agricultural land by adopting sustainable NRM practices that protect and conserve natural capital and biodiversity,
- Host or learn from demonstrations of practices that increase understanding of innovative adaptation to climate change,
- Explore the potential benefits of the carbon and biodiversity markets,
- Understand and implement industry sustainability frameworks,
- Participate in land management surveys, and
- Undertake revegetation projects.
By conducting a range of events and activities in partnership with Grower Groups, First Nations land managers and leading practitioners, NACC NRM will lay strong foundations for future-proofed farming systems in the NAR.
The Future Farm Foundations project is funded under the Natural Heritage Trust’s Climate-Smart Agriculture Program.


