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Download (4Mb) - USQ ePrints - University of Southern Queensland

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Crop-biomass production<br />

• There is greater incentive in the sugar industry to integrate the supply chain with the key driver being<br />

enterprise pr<strong>of</strong>itability. Returns from mallee production in Western Australia are generally seen as<br />

secondary to the core business <strong>of</strong> wheat production and marginal so there is less incentive to optimize.<br />

• Changes to mallee farming systems are therefore unlikely while wheat production remains the main<br />

economic driver. The only changes are likely to be in frequency <strong>of</strong> harvesting.<br />

• Consideration has been given to alternative mallee field layouts. Economic modelling has been<br />

undertaken to evaluate the most effective cropping <strong>of</strong> mallee and wheat accounting for yield versus<br />

moisture competition. Changes to recommended configuration are unlikely in integrated plantings.<br />

• Consideration needs to be given to alternative denser mallee plantings in narrower alleys (10-30m) on<br />

marginal land (ie without annual crops in the alleys), close to the processor, to supplement existing and<br />

future mallee plantings that are wide-spaced belts integrated with annual cropping.<br />

• Such block plantings close to a processor will be important for large scale industry development.<br />

Planting would need to be in row configuration to improve harvesting efficiency with row spacing<br />

established to minimise suppressed growth due to competition.<br />

• Harvest efficiency will be maximised when the concentration <strong>of</strong> biomass per metre <strong>of</strong> row is maximised<br />

and distance between rows is minimised. Impact <strong>of</strong> spacing on moisture competition is however critical<br />

when determining optimum configuration.<br />

• Unlike what has occurred in Western Australia, future expansion in mallee production will be driven by<br />

the market for biomass and farming systems and layouts will need to adapt to the economics <strong>of</strong> this<br />

supply arrangement.<br />

• Sophisticated information and data collection systems have been developed in the sugar industry to<br />

manage supply areas and volumes which can be readily customised for biomass industries.<br />

• Consideration will need to be given to protocols for carbon credits under the carbon farming initiative.<br />

• In Western Australia mallee planting provides vegetative biodiversity in a wheat monoculture and the<br />

collateral benefits <strong>of</strong> this biodiversity and associated environmental dividend needs to be quantified.<br />

Key Issues and recommendations for harvesting, transport and storage systems are identified<br />

below.<br />

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