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MLA and GRDC join forces in $2.1m initiative to support mixed farming businesses

15 August 2024

A new $2.1 million, four-year pilot project designed to put more dollars in the pockets of mixed farming businesses has been launched by Meat & Livestock Australia (MLA) and the Grains Research & Development Corporation (GRDC).

The joint project is targeting businesses producing both livestock and grain across Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania and Western Australia.

The goal of the project is to showcase to primary producers how new or alternative management practices, along with key learnings from scientific research and development, could benefit commercial mixed farming operations.

As a first step, the project coordinators are calling for preliminary applications for producer demonstration sites (PDS) across Australia. Applications open on Thursday, 15 August and close on Wednesday, 25 September.

MLA’s Project Manager for Producer Demonstration Sites, Alana McEwan said that partnering with GRDC was a critical and collaborative step in delivering better outcomes for mixed farmers.

“The close linkages between MLA’s PDS program and GRDC’s National Grower Network in delivering impactful, on-farm, locally relevant projects created an opportunity to develop a partnership demonstration site program targeted towards mixed farming systems,” Ms McEwan said.

“This partnership program will support groups of producers to demonstrate, adapt and validate the benefits of integrating new management practices, research and development outputs, and associated skills within the context of their commercial production systems.”

GRDC’s Senior Regional Manager South, Stephen Loss, said the project was an important opportunity for industry collaboration that would help support on-farm practice change and peer-to-peer learning and deliver production and profitability gains.

“We know it can be challenging for producers to translate R&D into actionable practice change in the context of their local environment and farming system,” Dr Loss said.

“This partnership between GRDC and MLA will see the development of six PDS projects that will provide producers with a hands-on and guided experience to implement research on-farm which highlights profitability and productivity benefits to drive practice change.”

The MLA/GRDC Partnership PDS Program aims to have producer groups aligned with these six projects and in action by early 2025. These groups will be able to access the PDS sites to demonstrate, adapt and validate the benefits of integrating new management practices, along with research and development outcomes within commercial farming systems.

Mixed farming operators interested in being involved or hosting a PDS should:

  1. Access the Terms of Reference, preliminary application form and PDS guidelines for more information on applying. Preliminary applications are to be submitted via email to pds@mla.com.au by Wednesday, 25 September 2024.
  2. Sign up for MLA’s quarterly PDS update for the latest news and progress on each MLA/GRDC Partnership PDS Program.
  3. Access MLA’s PDS search tool - users can search all active and completed PDS projects. The tool can be used to search for sites by topic and/or state/region of relevance – making the findings of each PDS more accessible and allowing producers to incorporate the outcomes into their own production systems.