The Star Malaysia

Drought cripples Aussie farmers

Many forced to shoot starving cattle due to food shortage

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TAMWORTH: In better times, the dam on farmer Kevin Tongue’s property is 3m deep with water. It’s now been empty for three months.

The worst drought in living memory is sweeping through Australia’s east, the country’s main food bowl, decimating wheat and barley crops and leaving grazing land parched.

Tongue, his wife and two sons hand-feed their 300 breeding cows and 1,300 sheep with grain and fodder bought and transporte­d from other parts of the country as drought-hit local supplies run out.

“It’s been a huge financial effect on everyone. Not just buying hay and things like that, but you know, we’ve got no winter crop and that’s probably a third of our income that we won’t have,” Tongue said on his farm near the town of Tamworth about 300km inland from Sydney in the eastern state of New South Wales (NSW).

Forecaster­s have dramatical­ly cut anticipate­d wheat yields for the country’s most important crop three months before the harvest.

Glencore Agricultur­e has forecast a wheat crop in NSW of just 2.4 million tonnes, less than a third of the average annual yield of 7.4 million tonnes.

Tongue said the despair in the farming community was palpable.

“When you have some strange woman come up crying on your shoulder, saying, ‘I can’t find hay, I can’t find grain, what am I going to do?’ I’m just not in a position to say I can help you but, yeah, it is very hard.”

The east coast has received some recent sporadic rain, though it has not been enough to save crops. A sustained break of the “big dry” is required to enable grazing to resume.

NSW is the country’s most-populous state and produces a quarter of Australia’s agricultur­e by value.

On “Te-Angie”, north-east of Tamworth, Richard Ogilvie said he had lost in excess of A$40,000 (RM120,000) in income on his Hereford cattle station as grazing pastures turned to dust and feed costs soared.

This will lead to a loss of about A$200,000 (RM602,000) longer term due to the reduction in breeding cattle, he said.

Many farmers, including Ogilvie, have been forced to shoot starving cattle, which he said was putting a big strain on the family.

“The ongoing thing is not to dwell and get down too much with the ongoing days of dragging cattle out of dams and shooting the ones that can’t get up,” he said.

The federal government and the NSW state government have pledged several billions dollars in aid for drought-afflicted farmers. — Reuters

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