Our project ‘Stabilising Soils: Managing Catchment Scale Flood and Fire Risk in a Productive Landscape‘, is part of the broader Nature-led Resilience initiative and focuses on practical, nature-based action across the Northern Agricultural Region.
NACC NRM is working in catchment and tributary systems within the Hill, Chapman and Moore River catchments to restore landscape function, slow water movement, stabilise riparian zones and improve water retention in agricultural areas. Our aim is to show that restoring these degraded systems can reduce flood and fire risk while supporting productive farming landscapes.
Through revegetation, deep-rooted perennial groundcovers, riparian stabilisation and targeted mechanical interventions such as slowing flows and increasing ponding, we want to reduce soil erosion, improve water quality, retain more moisture in the landscape and create greener, lower-flammability corridors that can help limit fire spread during dry months. In doing so, we also aim to deliver broader benefits including healthier soils, stronger biodiversity outcomes, improved resilience for landholders and communities, and greater confidence in adopting nature-based solutions across the region.
This project is led by NACC NRM and contributes to a national program coordinated by NRM Regions Australia. We are also working with and alongside local groups and networks including West Midlands Group, Soil is Capital, Outback Beef Pastoral, and, depending on final site locations, grower and catchment groups such as Mingenew Irwin Group, Northern Agri Group, Yuna Farm Improvement Group, Moore Catchment Council and Yarra Yarra Catchment Management Group.
This project is being delivered in collaboration with NRM Regions Australia with the support of the Minderoo Foundation.


