The Cairns Post

Woes watered down Rains boost confidence but more needed

- ALEX DRUCE

MUCH-NEEDED spring rain has lifted rural confidence from a 12-year low, but not enough to significan­tly restore hopes on the droughtrav­aged east coast.

Four in 10 farmers in Australia are still pessimisti­c about the year ahead, according to yesterday’s quarterly rural confidence survey from Rabobank, with recent rain- fall arriving too late to bolster winter crop prospects, and more needed soon if the drought is to break.

Seasonal difference­s aside, 94 per cent of the 1000 farmers surveyed in November indicated they felt prepared to navigate the impacts of drought.

More than 50 per cent reported they are more prepared now than ago.

“Producers have become more proactive, rather than reactive, in the way they manage drought,” Rabobank Australia chief executive Peter Knoblanche said.

“But even the best strategies become harder to execute the more prolonged, and severe, the drought is and five years there are parts of Queensland and New South Wales that have been facing adverse seasons for a number of years now.”

It is a vastly different story in the west, as Western Australian producers look to reap half of the nation’s winter grain crop.

Farmer confidence has showed positive signs of improvemen­t Rabobank Australia CEO Peter Knoblanche on primary producers’ sentiment following recent rains across most of the country, with Queensland posting the biggest recovery.

However, Mr Knoblanche acknowledg­ed that recent catastroph­ic bushfires and extreme heatwave conditions would have knocked farmer confidence since the survey was in the field.

Mr Knoblanche said the more positive sentiment in the eastern states had come off the back of good rains, with some drought-affected areas receiving their best falls for the year.

“If it were not for the late break in the season over in Western Australia, we would be harvesting the smallest winter crop in two decades – with grain production more than halved in New South Wales and Queensland,” he said.

 ??  ?? Producers have become more proactive, rather than reactive, in the way they manage drought … But even the best strategies become harder to execute the more prolonged, and severe, the drought is.
Producers have become more proactive, rather than reactive, in the way they manage drought … But even the best strategies become harder to execute the more prolonged, and severe, the drought is.

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