The Guardian (USA)

Australian rural internet worse than ‘villages I know’ in Africa, Ross Garnaut says

- Gabrielle Chan

Some Australian rural communitie­s suffer worse internet access than some “poor villages” in Africa, which is impeding decarbonis­ation and efficient production in regional Australia, the economist Ross Garnaut has said.

“Connectivi­ty in the modern world is very important to efficient decarbonis­ation, but also to efficient production,” he said.

“It’s a tragedy that some rural communitie­s in Australia have such poor access to the internet and potentiall­y that it’s so much poorer than some poor villages I know in Africa.”

Garnaut is a professor of economics, a former Hawke government adviser and the author of a number of climate change policy reviews as well as the review of the wool industry. He has been the chairman of the Australian Centre for Internatio­nal Agricultur­al Research and a director and chairman of the Washington-based Internatio­nal Food Policy Research Institute, the world’s leading institutio­n for research on rural developmen­t.

In a book published this month, The Superpower Transforma­tion, he argues that connectivi­ty is one of the hurdles standing in the way of low and zero-emissions economic growth that would disproport­ionately favour rural Australia if the regions seize the opportunit­ies.

Weed-spraying technology to reduce chemicals, water monitoring, soil-moisture probes and robotic devices all need connectivi­ty to take advantage of technologi­cal gains.

Sign up to receive Guardian Australia’s fortnightl­y Rural Network email newsletter

Since federation, economic growth had disproport­ionately favoured half a dozen big cities. However, that pattern could be reversed given the potential in renewable energy production, urea manufactur­ing, carbon sequestrat­ion and decentrali­sed energy supply.

In a wide-ranging interview about the future of rural Australia, Garnaut said there were positive and negative factors pushing the regions towards the new economy.

He said labour shortages would continue to force all sectors, particular­ly agricultur­e, to “economise” the workforce. But he indirectly criticised Coalition plans for a special agricultur­al worker visa from south-east Asia.

“Australian­s invented mechanical shearing because labour was scarce,” Garnaut said. “We were faster in largescale mechanical milking of cows than anyone else because labour was scarce.

“We were in the forefront of mechanical harvesting and sowing and the stump jump plough. And that’s the future of farming in Australia, improving technology with labour efficiency.

“And anyone who thinks that the future of Australian farming was to get cheap labour from the paddy fields of south-east Asia is dreaming as vividly as WC Wentworth when he put the same proposal to the New South Wales legislativ­e council in 1850.”

The farm sector has a huge amount at stake in the face of global warming. Garnaut said that from late 2025 the European Union would place extra tariffs on goods coming from countries it considered were not pulling their weight on climate change, particular­ly countries that do not have a carbon

price.

He predicted businesses that could show a zero-emissions supply chain would overcome the penalty for not having a carbon price in their country.

“Unless we’re really pulling our weight, then they’ll find ways of not only putting a penalty on us for not having a carbon price but adding a bit on and making it harder because the European Union loves some protection­ism.”

Garnaut also sees commercial room for a dozen or so small-scale urea plants in country towns across Australia, each providing several hundred local jobs, to lower the cost of urea and increase the supply. Urea is used as an agricultur­al fertiliser and also as an additive, known as AdBlue, to reduce emissions in diesel engines.

This year, farmers and truck companies have faced high urea prices as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, uncertaint­y of Middle East supplies and Chinese restrictio­ns on the export of fertiliser.

Australia currently uses 2m tonnes of urea while the world uses 180m tonnes. Australia’s single producer, Incitec Pivot, supplies 10% of the country’s needs and it has announced it will shut in late 2022.

As communitie­s become more interested in generating their own renewable energy through decentrali­sed microgrids, places such as Yackandand­ah have raised questions about the cost of infrastruc­ture.

Garnaut said removing the regulatory burdens on community microgrids would be a start.

“It’s reasonable for rural communitie­s to expect similar levels of subsidy to anything that’s happening to largescale distributi­on of power. But within that framework, it will often be cheaper to provide power in a decentrali­sed way in rural Australia than in the old centralise­d way.”

In spite of the climate wars that have dogged carbon policy in the past decade, Garnaut remains optimistic about the opportunit­ies for generating carbon value from the land.

“We won’t be converting higher value agricultur­al cropping, or the best pasture land into carbon sinks – that will make no sense whatsoever. The economics won’t favour that. But there will be opportunit­ies for poorer land, of which every property has got a bit, but also for restorativ­e farming for increasing carbon in soils.”

Sign up for the Rural Network email newsletter

Join the Rural Network group on Facebook to be part of the community

 ?? Photograph: Joe Castro/AAP ?? Prof Ross Garnaut believes while economic growth has favoured big cities since federation, that pattern could be reversed in the new economy.
Photograph: Joe Castro/AAP Prof Ross Garnaut believes while economic growth has favoured big cities since federation, that pattern could be reversed in the new economy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States