[Terrapreta] Fwd: Next on 4 Corners

Michael Bailes michaelangelica at gmail.com
Fri Mar 14 02:49:18 CDT 2008


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: 4 Corners <4cornerslist at your.abc.net.au>
Date: 14 Mar 2008 16:03
Subject: Next on 4 Corners
To: michaelangelica at gmail.com

*"WINDS OF CHANGE" – 4 CORNERS MONDAY 17 MARCH*

*Next on Four Corners: Will climate change revolutionise Australian
agriculture? As vast tracts of land grow drier and harder to farm, will
struggling farmers get out, or get smart? *

On the flat yellow plains surrounding Birchip, in north-western Victoria,
drought is a familiar if detested visitor that always overstays.

The farmers and townsfolk of Birchip have seen little of the rains that have
flooded other parts of Australia. It's likely to stay that way.  For Birchip
is bang in the middle of the swathe of southern Australia that is forecast
to dry out as temperatures rise, cutting farm production by as much as 10
per cent in the next 20 years. Some farms in now productive areas may become
marginal; small farms on marginal lands could become unviable, eventually
being swallowed up by bigger operators or abandoned to nature.

Around Birchip, farmers are increasingly doing it tough. Four Corners goes
there to track the shifting fortunes of five farming families as they face
the vagaries of drought and the new reality of climate change.

Some farmers here eke out a small profit or break even. Others traipse off
to their bank managers, digging deeper into debt, hoping that the next hand
deals them a good season. "*You just get sick of borrowing, borrowing,
borrowing* ," one tells Four Corners.

It's a cruel game of calculating and maximising odds – should they forward
sell the crop now or punt on the price rising later? Will computer modelling
of their soils boost their yields? Can they hang in long enough to rack up a
few good years and offset the bad?

*"(The bad years) have been character-building* ," says farmer Anne
McClelland, her humour dry as the paddock, "*but I didn't really want my
character built in that way* ."

McClelland, her husband and her neighbours know that survival is not only
about getting enough rain at the right time, or getting government aid if it
doesn't. It is a Darwinian process that relies increasingly on technological
adaptation to drought. Climate change threatens to sort losers from winners.


Filmed over several months as seasons change and their hopes rise and fall,
farmers in this Four Corners program agree that climate change is real – but
for most of them it is not quite here and not right now. They see this dry
as just a natural climate variation, not a creature of climate change - and
no one can prove they are wrong.

"*We wouldn't be farmers unless we were optimists* ," says John Ferrier.
Others wonder how long it can last. "We've probably produced off this land
enough food, fibre, meat to feed many, many hundreds of thousands of
people," says one veteran about his district, "*and we have dust storms and
all that sort of thing and I think we're just pushing this land too hard
trying to stay afloat financially* ."

As Four Corners reveals, if climate change does force these small farmers
from the land, bigger operators – including secretive international players
with hundreds of millions at their disposal – are waiting at the front gate.


Quentin McDermott follows* "Winds of Change" - 8.30 pm Monday 17 March on
ABC1.*

*This program will be repeated about 11.35 pm Tuesday 18 March; also on ABC2
at 8 am Tuesday* .

*For a preview of Monday night's show* * go to the 4 Corners website*
<http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/>

================================================
*FOUR CORNERS VIDEO ON DEMAND*

Four Corners presents broadband video available on demand for selected
programs.

*4 Corners Video on Demand <http://abc.net.au/4corners/specials.htm> *

================================================

If you wish to unsubscribe from the Four Corners mailing list, please visit
our website: http://abc.net.au/4corners/subscribe.htm

================================================


-- 
Michael the Archangel

"You can fix all the world's problems in a garden. . . .
Most people don't know that"
FROM
http://www.blog.thesietch.org/wp-content/permaculture.swf
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: /attachments/20080314/38d89d82/attachment.html 


More information about the Terrapreta mailing list