Skip to main content

Agricultural Crops

Rise in extreme weather events putting huge strain on food charities helping struggling families

Food charities helping struggling families put food on the table can no longer rely on excess produce being available as farmers count their own cost of extreme weather events.
A handful of carrots.

Young couple call time on gourmet mushroom business amid tough economy, failing infrastructure

The business a young couple crowdfunded to grow a head-turning array of tasty, colourful fungi closes as failing machinery and crop losses due to constant rain prove too much to overcome.
A split image of a young man and woman in a cool room, and the view inside a box full of colourful mushrooms.

Almonds are now Australia's most valuable horticultural export, but one shelled nut takes 8 litres of water to grow

Experts warn a water shortage is inevitable as almonds become the biggest crop by area planted on Australia's longest river.
Updated
A hand holds almonds growing on a tree.

Bitter news for wine exporters as more people choose not to drink to save money — and health

Australian wine exports have been hit by a global trend in people drinking less alcohol and cutting costs, but hope remains for the re-opening of a major market.
A hand reaches for a glass of wine. A Harry Potter book is on the coffee table

Copper thieves trigger three-week Telstra outage, pipeline blowout in NSW wine country

One business owner had his water pipes blow out because he was unable to monitor the pressure of his 140-kilometre-long system.
A power police with three wires, one of which has been cut.

Crop losses and heartache as Queensland towns flood for third time in three years

Emergency alerts have been issued for parts of the state, where residents are witnessing the all-too-familiar sights of flooded businesses, roads and paddocks.
A flooded country town, as seen from above.

Farmers spared major damage from cyclone 'still looking skyward' as clean-up begins

Some inland Queensland farmers are relieved, others disappointed, by lower than expected rainfall from ex-Tropical Cyclone Kirrily.
Updated
Bill Camm stands in front of a barb wire fence with a green paddock in the background and grey clouds.

Weather-obsessed farmers now have a dedicated agriculture decision support team at BOM

Talking about the weather is a farming pastime, and it's dominating conversations after summer storms hit. A new Bureau of Meteorology team dedicated to agricultural decision-making will give farmers even more to talk about.
Updated
Damian and Angela Stock stand arm-in-arm in front of debris and flood water in their paddock

Battling green ants and falling through roofs, picking mangoes in backyards for 45 years has left Henry battered and bruised

It's a small-scale operation, but it brings a golden bounty. Henry Petersen reckons he's one of the last backyard pickers in north Queensland. 
Updated
a man with a mango picker peering into the trees

Consumers may face more hot-chip potato shortages as heatwaves become more widespread

The humble vegetables are susceptible to storms, heavy rainfall and high temperatures. Frequent extreme weather events make the crop vulnerable.
Terry Buckley kneels in a potato field holding some freshly harvested potatoes.

First medicinal cannabis-growing course offers sustainable careers in thriving industry

Federation TAFE introduces an accredited training course as modelling estimates that by 2028, nearly 250,000 Victorian patients are expected to demand medicinal cannabis.
A cannabis plant growing indoors in Canberra.

You can't call it tequila, but Australian agave could soon be in your margarita

The success of the country's first commercial-scale agave farm could mean big things for an emerging Australian alcohol industry.
Bartender mixing tequila on table.

'Hempcrete' is sustainable and eco-friendly, but producers say regulations need to ease up

Tasmania's only hemp stalk processing factory is producing "hempcrete" — an uncommon, but highly sustainable building product. The industry says regulation is blocking access to a multi-billion-dollar market. 
Updated
Portrait of a lady in a pink high-vis vest looking at the camera.

Paradise Dam operators warn 60,000 people living downstream that its 'safety standards' fall short

Tens of thousands of Queenslanders living downstream are told the poor quality of concrete used in the 300,000-megalitre dam's spillway means it cannot be safely mended or reinforced, as the state government prepares plans to rebuild it.
Water flows over the spillway of Paradise Dam near Bundaberg in southern Queensland in March 2013.

January rain a 'game changer' for outback Queensland graziers with more to come as monsoons develop in the north

It is usually fireworks that ring in the new year — but for farmers and graziers across Queensland, 2024 has been welcomed in with lightning, thunder and much-needed rain. 
Dark storm clouds swallow blue sunlit skies

Controversial Queensland dam is suffering 'too many issues' and will have to be completely rebuilt, operator says

After lowering Paradise Dam's wall due to safety concerns, its operator Sunwater now says a $1.2 billion plan to restore it won't be enough to make Bundaberg's main agricultural water store safe.
Water sitting in a dam with green grass around it.

'Still living out the remnants of that anxiety’: Twelve months later, farmers still feel impact of floods

Farmers like Alexandra Westlake and Meiqing Lin were left devastated when the River Murray flooded. A year on, the emotional and financial toll is just being realised.
Updated
A smiling blonde woman, Alex, smiles, with beef cattle in the background on her lush paddock.

Palmerston Highway closure lifts the cost of bringing Far North produce to consumers

Far North Queensland farmers say their transport costs have skyrocketed due to flood damage closing the Palmerston Highway and, while some are trying to absorb the costs, they warn it is not sustainable in the long term.
A massive crack in a bitumen road with vegetation behind it

Family businesses find sweet success in fruit and vegetable export market

What's in a name? When it comes to Bundaberg, plenty — and producers of everything from ginger beer to strawberries are capitalising on it.
A photo of the PM holding a bottle of ginger beer smiling, surrounded by a group of smiling and laughing people.

Fruit growers plead for help from consumers, prime minister as flooding cleanup begins

Far North Queensland growers are reporting major losses to Cyclone Jasper and torrential rain as the tropical fruit season peaks for Christmas, including sweeping damage across mango orchards.
Updated
A woman in a black t-shirt and white hat holds a papaya fruit

World's largest sandalwood producer winds up 30 per cent of plantations after review finds them 'unviable'

Sandalwood giant Quintis has taken action on its plantations in the face of millions of dollars in losses.
Updated
An aerial photo of a sandalwood plantation next to an irrigation channel

Peonies are prized flowers. But it's their roots that have farmers interested

With short seasons and fragile crops, the cut flower market can be high risk for farmers but new research is hoping to open a new revenue stream for the growers of one popular plant — the peony. 
Updated
Peony flowers and stems are loaded into a sorting conveyer belt by three workers.

Napping cats have taken over this Thailand rice farm

A Thai rice farmer has worked with an artist and hundreds of helpers to turn his property into works of art. 
A drone shot of a cat napping holding a salmon drawn with rice plants. 

Rain gives SA farmers confidence boost as they head into new year

The improvement in the results is mostly due to increased livestock prices and solid grain yields across the state, Rabobank says.
Farmer's hand feels ripe yellow barley

Company linked to Seinfeld actor launches takeover bid of Australia's biggest cotton processor

A global agriculture giant that was founded by Seinfeld actor Julia Louis-Dreyfus's great, great grandfather wants to up its stake in Australia's biggest cotton processor from 17 per cent to 100 per cent ownership.
Updated
A farmer in a blue shirt and cap standing in front of a white cotton crop