The Partnering for Prosperity submission from NRM WA sets out a bold, coordinated vision for strengthening Western Australia’s natural assets and unlocking new economic opportunities. For the Northern Agricultural Region (NAR), the document reinforces what our communities know well: healthy landscapes drive regional prosperity. The paper outlines a future‑focused investment partnership that builds resilience, accelerates restoration, and seeks to demonstrate WA’s potential position as a leader in nature‑based economies.
A key tenet of Partnering for Prosperity is the need to re‑establish sustained State investment in regional NRM. WA is now the only state without core funding for its NRM organisations, reducing leverage with the Commonwealth and limiting delivery capacity. For the NAR, this means reduced ability to scale successful programs in coastal management, regenerative agriculture, biodiversity recovery, and climate resilience. Restoring a strategic partnership with the State would unlock additional Commonwealth, philanthropic, and private nature‑market investment—injecting jobs and capability directly into the NAR community.
Several proposed initiatives are especially significant for the NAR. The Coastal Resilience Initiative aligns closely with NACC NRM’s leadership in dune restoration, coastal monitoring and Aboriginal Ranger partnerships from Kalbarri to Guilderton. A coordinated, statewide drone‑based monitoring network and nature‑based coastal protection would enhance long‑term stewardship of our iconic shoreline, including hotspots such as Drummond Cove and Hill River.
The Regenerative Agriculture Program is another opportunity for the NAR to showcase landscape‑rehydration trials, soil‑health programs and farmer‑led innovation undertaken in the region by NACC NRM and our partners. The proposed region‑specific research, on‑ground trials and natural‑capital metrics proposes to build the evidence base farmers need to confidently invest in practices like contour interventions, strategic revegetation and soil‑carbon enhancement. These interventions are critical for the NAR which faces significant wind erosion risk.
The TEC Partnership Program will build the dataset and protect TEC’s occurring on private land in our region – including Banksia Woodlands and coastal heaths. The inclusion of private land in this monitoring program would support better recovery planning and stewardship agreements with local landholders and Aboriginal organisations.
Other initiatives, such as the WA Natural Capital Initiative, MRF Rehabilitation Program and Unified NRM Emergency Response Plan, further strengthen opportunities for the NAR through private‑investment mobilisation, post‑mining restoration and streamlined environmental emergency response.
Overall, Partnering for Prosperity presents an optimistic, practical pathway: building on the proven capability of WA’s NRM network to deliver measurable outcomes, while catalysing new regional investment. For the Northern Agricultural Region, it offers a chance to accelerate the great work already underway – supporting thriving communities, resilient industries, and healthy country for generations to come.