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Essays address climate change in the Murray-Darling Basin

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Different scenarios for the Murray-Darling Basin in climate change are explored in new reports. Photo by JohnCarnemolla

A series of new reports focuses on climate change impacts across the Murray-Darling Basin and the ramifications for agriculture and people living in the basin.

The Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering urged a suite of actions and investments to protect the future of the Murray-Darling Basin in the face of climate change, which is threatening the river’s health and sustainability

In a new essay series A thriving Murray-Darling Basin in 50 years: Actions in the face of climate change, the body urges more investment in technologies to monitor the river for climate impacts and in sustained governance with regional and rural communities at the centre, coupled with evolving our agriculture industry in the face of decreased water availability and accepted water sharing policies.

ATSE president Katherine Woodthorpe said the future of the Murray-Darling Basin is recognised to be at severe risk and that comprehensive action across federal, state and territory governments will be decisive to safeguard its biodiversity, social and economic importance to Australia.

“The Murray-Darling Basin covers one-seventh of Australia’s landscape and is responsible for delivering a significant share of Australia’s Gross Domestic Product,” Dr Woodthorpe said.

“But more importantly, to safeguard and protect this resource for the future, Australia must take urgent action in the face of increasing climate change.

“To inform evidence-based decision making, we need a central data custodian for all water quantity and water quality monitoring data, which is transparently shared with all stakeholders.

“Managing the basin effectively will also require a review of institutional arrangements that govern property rights at a territory, state and Commonwealth level for consistency as well as climate-proofing.

“At the heart of this plan, we need to ensure institutional governance benefits rural and regional communities including addressing the cultural water rights of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples.

“It is time for a long-term approach to managing our most important water resource.”

To read the essay series, go to: https://www.atse.org.au/