2011
DOI: 10.5172/rsj.20.3.266
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The adoption of short-rotation energy cropping as a new land use option in the New South Wales Central West

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Cited by 11 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The participants' tendency to focus on climate variability or climatic cycles rather than anthropogenic climate change is consistent with results from other parts of rural Australia (such as Baumber et al 2011, Buys et al 2012. Connor and Higginbotham (2013) found that rural Australians in particular rely on their experiences of droughts and changing seasonal patterns to back up their positions towards climate change, without detecting variations beyond the normal vagaries of the climate.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 73%
“…The participants' tendency to focus on climate variability or climatic cycles rather than anthropogenic climate change is consistent with results from other parts of rural Australia (such as Baumber et al 2011, Buys et al 2012. Connor and Higginbotham (2013) found that rural Australians in particular rely on their experiences of droughts and changing seasonal patterns to back up their positions towards climate change, without detecting variations beyond the normal vagaries of the climate.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 73%
“…The acceptance of carbon farming by landholders and surrounding communities may be influenced not only by its potential benefits, but also by the risks of the "disbenefits" being incurred. At the landholder level, potential disbenefits include negative impacts on other farm enterprises and the loss of flexibility around future land use [4,21,25]. For communities surrounding carbon farming sites, potential disbenefits include increased risks from pests and fire [26], and an increase in invasive native scrub at the expense of grass cover, which is typically associated with an unhealthy landscape by many graziers [3].…”
Section: Carbon Farming In Australiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, not all outcomes of carbon farming are viewed as positive by all stakeholders, with some representing "disbenefits" rather than "co-benefits" [2]. Some of the potential disbenefits of carbon farming that have been raised by various stakeholders include the expansion of undesirable invasive native scrub or "woody weeds" [3], a loss of flexibility for future land-use options [4], and social divisions in rural communities between those receiving payments for carbon farming and those missing out [5]. The balance between the benefits and costs, and their distribution across different stakeholders, are critical factors in determining whether emerging land-use activities, such as carbon farming, are able to obtain a "social licence to operate" from the communities affected by them [6].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, a range of potential "disbenefits" have also been identified from carbon farming that could pose threats to the future expansion of the industry as well as affecting the socio-ecological resilience of rangeland systems. These disbenefits include perceived risks of increases in invasive native scrub (INS) or woody weeds (Jassim 2018, Butler et al 2014 which have the potentilal to reduce land use flexibility due to long-term land management commitments (Kragt et al 2017) and decrease land value (Baumber et al 2011). Further disbenefts may include a perceived risk of fire and pest occurrence (Torabi et al 2016) caused by landholders shifting from pastoralism to carbon farming and moving off site (absenteeism) and social divisions which may also occur with an increasing gap between those who have eligible land for carbon farming and those who do not (Cowie et al 2019;Cross et al 2019).…”
Section: Benefits and Disbenefits Of Carbon Farming For Rangelands: Pmentioning
confidence: 99%