Project Information

Darling River Conservation Initiative Site 12

Human Induced Regeneration

For Christine Ferguson, the landholder of Myrnong near Bourke in New South Wales, the biggest benefit of running a carbon project has been income diversification. The additional revenue created by the project allows for more flexibility, reducing reliance on stock and even enabling her to remove stock when needed during dry spells.

Christine has used funds from the project to repair boundary fencing on the property, allowing her to run a light stock of cattle with rotational grazing strategies. While the project is fairly new, having only begun in 2020, Christine plans to continue upgrading the station, and her other properties, taking learnings from Myrnong so that she can sustainably graze there as well.

Christine reports that there has already been an increase in plant diversity at Myrnong as a result of the carbon project, with emerging kangaroo grass, new shrubs and sprouting mulga trees. For the first time in Christine’s life, she has seen two young rosewood trees growing on the property.

There has also been a significant increase in birdlife, with birds of prey such as peregrine falcons, wedge tail eagles, owls and grey falcons as well as water birds such as ducks and herons, all sighted around the property. With the cattle doing particularly well in the environment, and the native flora and fauna thriving, Myrnong’s success has already prompted Christine to set up another project at a different property.

Key Benefits

Carbon sequestration to mitigate climate change
Regeneration of native forest and protection of habitat for 100 years
Improving sustainable land management practices and supporting a productive agricultural enterprise
Improved infrastructure to support rotational grazing and feral animal control
Improved financial security and business resilience
Improved land condition and drought resilience
Improved biodiversity

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

November 2020

Project area

15,588 ha

Permanence

100 yrs

Location

Bourke, NSW

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] Forest cover assessment date has the same meaning as that given by section 9AA(6) of the CFI Rule.
[7] Guidelines on evidence, stratification and records 8 May 2019
[8] Guidelines on evidence, stratification and records 8 May 2019
[9] Carbon Credits (Carbon Farming Initiative) Rule 2015 Section 9AA(6)