Intelligence; Optimised Podcast
Australia's agricultural sector faces simultaneous failures in fuel, fertiliser, and labour inputs. This is Part 2 of Todd Crowley's conversation with Kate Banville — journalist, former soldier, and reporter who covers agriculture and national security as interconnected risks. Todd and Kate dissect the labour crisis: the sector employed 247,000 on average last year, down over 10% year-on-year. Hours worked hit the lowest ever in August 2025. The Food Supply Chain Alliance flagged a 172,000 worker shortfall. Median farmer age tops 53; beef exceeds 60. The PALM scheme patches backpacker gaps from COVID but falls short and adds dependency — importing Pacific labour to harvest imported-input crops on foreign fuels and vessels. They frame the stakes: one input failure is policy-manageable. Two is systemic threat. Three at once, sans buffers, is existential. Kate concurs; we're there now. Community livability (childcare, hospitals, pubs) drives rural decline; farms can't run without viable towns. Kate draws COVID lessons: better fuel stocks then, no shortages despite lockdowns. Australia has untapped options — North Queensland biofuels from cane, domestic fertiliser alternatives — held back by funding, viability, policy. Farmers ration now; decisions lag to yields (6-12 months) then shelves. Supply fails before demand; resilience buys time, but 12-24 months starves operations. Episode closes reframing sovereignty: not just growing food (Australia produces enough for 3x population), but inputs sans fragile chains. Tanks sit empty. Find deeper briefs inside Vaxa Bureau at vaxabureau.com.
69 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y forma parte de la comunidad de Intelligence; Optimised Podcast!