Project Information

Darling River Eco Corridor 8

Human Induced Regeneration

Located near Bourke in Western New South Wales, this project isn’t just regenerating native forest, it has also secured the future of the farm.

By their own admission, the current owners purchased the property in a very bad state. It had been hugely overgrazed, internal fences were non-existent, and there was barely any infrastructure in place to manage stock or feral animal populations.

To support the regeneration of the farm, the owners turned to carbon farming to help provide desperately needed funding for infrastructure changes, and secure the financial backing needed to turn both the property and the farming operation around.

Nearly half a million dollars later, the property has new fences, water points, machinery and shedding, as well as around 30km of new boundary fencing. As a result, the property is now a productive farm again, with seven paddocks to rotate stock, plus stock and trap yards.

The pasture has improved because sections of the land can be left to seed, giving the grasses the opportunity to build up a strong root system, which in turn improves overall soil heath and productivity of the land.

Key Benefits

Carbon sequestration to mitigate climate change
Delivers important ecosystem services for the area
Promotes biodiversity
Supports infrastructure upgrades including new water points, fencing and yards
Enables management changes and land regeneration
Supports feral animal population management
Delivers investment back into the local community
Improves business viability and resilience

UN Sustainable
Development Goals

Statistics

Methodology

Human-Induced Regeneration of a Permanent Even-Aged Native Forest – 1.1 Methodology Determination (2013)

Registered ID

Date registered

April 2016

Project area

11,293ha

Permanence

100yrs

Location

Bourke, New South Wales

Footnotes

[1] Carbon Credits (Carbon Farming Initiative) Act 2011 Section 27
[2] Carbon Credits (Carbon Farming Initiative) (Human-Induced Regeneration of a Permanent Even-Aged Native Forest—1.1) Methodology Determination 2013  c3 Section 4
[3] Carbon Credits (Carbon Farming Initiative) (Human-Induced Regeneration of a Permanent Even-Aged Native Forest—1.1) Methodology Determination 2013  c3 Section 28
[4] Guidelines on evidence, stratification and records 8 May 2019
[5] Guidelines on evidence, stratification and records 8 May 2019
[6] The initial stratification was reported on prior to the public release of the Guidelines on stratification, evidence and records in May 2019. These guidelines also set out administrative arrangements for projects that have previously reported, including a pragmatic approach that will be taken in situations where additional evidence is required to meet these guidelines. Additionally, the project is defined as an existing project in accordance with Section 9AA of the CFI Rule 2015.
[7] Forest cover assessment date has the same meaning as that given by section 9AA(6) of the CFI Rule.
[8] Guidelines on evidence, stratification and records 8 May 2019
[9] Guidelines on evidence, stratification and records 8 May 2019
[10] Carbon Credits (Carbon Farming Initiative) Rule 2015 Section 9AA(6)