Nurturing nature – cultivating culture
A plan for improving Queensland’s natural resources 2024 – 2028
Queensland is facing big challenges
Queensland is a place of extremes, with diverse landscapes and unpredictable and intense weather. Our communities and natural assets are vulnerable to the impacts of these extremes.
Our farming communities must meet new standards to access global markets while contending with increased biosecurity threats. And a growing population brings with it new challenges managing our land and water assets sustainably.
Queensland’s NRM sector has a solution
To meet these challenges, Queensland’s regional NRM organisations have worked with their communities to develop regional NRM plans that inform a $196.4 million program of activity. We’re aming to deliver big outcomes for biosecurity, climate resilience and adaptation, Indigenous people, land condition, biodiversity and waterways and coasts.
We know that to have an impact on our most precious places and to ensure we can continue to produce food and fibre we must work together, we must think strategically and we must invest appropriately.
$196.4 million over four years
619 jobs created (258 direct jobs)
63 Indigenous direct jobs
43 threatened species
86 First Nations engaged
31 community + research partners
24 local government collaborators
What we’re proposing
Halt the decline of Queensland’s threatened species
8 projects, $32.8 million
First Nations Stewardship: revitalise land and Culture
9 projects, $27.9 million
Protect and restore Queensland’s aquatic environments
6 projects, $33.6 million
Biosecurity: safeguard biodiversity, agriculture and human health
4 projects, $18.8 million
Improve land condition for agriculture, biodiversity and the economy
6 projects, $40.4 million
Climate adaptation and disaster resilience
8 projects, $31.8 million
Statewide policy and coordination
5 projects, $11.1 million
About Queensland’s regional NRM organisations
Science and data-driven
Track record delivering billions of government dollars
Regionally-based with statewide coverage
Trusted from paddock to parliament
Community engagement experts
25+ years delivering outcomes on the ground
Partner Testimonials
For more information
Chris Norman
CEO NRM Regions Queensland
0419 790 943
chris@nrmrq.org.au
Our impact
Reducing the impact of fire on endangered Carpentarian Grasswren – Southern Gulf NRM
A Mount Isa based NRM organisation is leading the charge to protect Carpentaria Grasswren from wildfires in North West Queensland.
Supporting stronger soil health in Queensland’s Northern Gulf – Gulf Savannah NRM
Gulf Savannah NRM’s Healthy Farming Futures project is improving soil health in a region where intensive agriculture is worth $72+ million to the economy.
Carp numbers down in Ramsar wetlands – Southern Queensland Landscapes
According to the National Carp Control Program, carp populations can make up to 80% of the total fish present in some parts of the Murray-Darling Basin, yet in Currawinya National Park, the invasive species is in decline.
Sandringham Wetlands Complex – Reef Catchments
Improving the ecological function and condition of the Sandringham Wetland Complex and threatened ecological communities within the region.
Weeding out invasive species – Cape York NRM
In April 2022 a multi-agency taskforce arrived in Cooktown in Far North Queensland in an unprecedented show of unity to assess the prevalence of Gamba Grass, control its spread and raise community awareness about this invasive weed.
Investing in NRM: economic benefits and ROI
Investing in regional natural resource management creates jobs, boosts the economy and results in leveraged funds. Investing in on-ground works also results in a significant return on investment. In 2021, consultants EY quantified some of these economic impacts for Queensland’s NRM sector.