The Morrison Government has awarded grants to a series of research projects to further explore how new feed technologies for cattle and sheep can help to reduce emissions.
Six projects will receive $4 million in grants from Stage 1 of the Methane Emissions Reduction in Livestock (MERiL) program, supporting Australian producers to trial low emissions livestock feed technologies such as the seaweed Asparagopsis.
Minister for Industry, Energy and Emissions Reduction Angus Taylor said each project would collect data to help support research and development of new feed technologies and understand their impact on productivity and the environment.
"Australian farmers have always been at the forefront of innovation and environmental management," Minister Taylor said.
"These successful projects will increase our understanding of the benefits of these technologies and help farmers make informed decisions on technology adoption in their day-to-day operations.
"We are backing technologies which have the potential to reduce emissions while increasing productivity because we know that is the key to meeting and beating our targets without imposing new costs on households, businesses or the wider economy."
The projects aim to quantify the emissions reduction and productivity benefits of low-emissions livestock feed technologies, including using Asparagopsis seaweed and the organic compound 3-nitrooxypropanol (3-NOP) as feed supplements for cattle and sheep.
Successful grant applicants are:
• Bovine Dynamics, in partnership with Sea Forest and Stockyard Feedlot (Kerwee), was awarded $1,000,000, to trial the use of the seaweed Asparagopsis in a large-scale commercial feedlot for Angus beef near Toowoomba, to understand its impacts on emissions and productivity including meat quality;
• CSIRO, in partnership with Mort & Co Lot Feeders, Australian Agricultural Company and Northern Australia Pastoral Company, was awarded $800,000 to trial the compound 3-NOP in tropical and northern beef cattle grazing systems. Trials will be conducted in Townsville and grazing properties in northern Queensland;
• Agrimix, in partnership with CSIRO, University of Tasmania, The University of New England and James Cook University, was awarded $700,000 to trial the forage feed Desmanthus - a non-bloating tropical legume - in grazing paddocks in three commercial grazing operations across New South Wales and Queensland;
• FutureFeed, in partnership with Meat and Livestock Australia, the University of New England, Australian Country Choice Holdings, Woolworths, Corporate Carbon Advisory, GrainCorp and Bovine Dynamics, was awarded $500,000 to test Asparagopsis seaweed in beef cattle in the University of New England's Tullimba feedlot;
• The University of New England, in partnership with Australian Wool Innovation, and Sea Forest, was awarded $500,000 to trial the use of Asparagopsis seaweed in sheep in northern New South Wales; and
• GrainCorp, in partnership with Agriculture Victoria, Future Feed, Australian Lot Feeders Association, Midfield Meat International and Bovine Dynamics, was awarded $500,000 for laboratory trials to test Asparagopsis seaweed stability in livestock feed and on-field trials to determine methane emission reductions in livestock. Trials will be conducted at the Agriculture Victoria Research Ellinbank SmartFarm.
Grant guidelines for Stage 2 and Stage 3 of the MERiL program will be released on Monday 21 February. These stages will support the development of technologies to deliver feed supplements to grazing livestock.
Stage 2 will provide $5 million to develop and determine the feasibility of the proposed technology with grants between $250,000 and $1 million available for projects running up to 12 months.
Stage 3, which will consist of two funding rounds, will provide $15 million to undertake trials to validate the technology and demonstrate its emissions reduction and productivity impacts.
The MERiL program is one of two major new initiatives the Government is delivering to help the agriculture sector access low emissions technologies without imposing new costs.
Successful applicants for feasibility study grants under the $50 million National Soil Carbon Innovation Challenge will be announced shortly and applications for development and demonstration grants opened on 3 February 2022. The goal of the Challenge is to reduce the cost of soil carbon measurement to less than $3 per hectare per year.
Stage 1 of the MERiL program is part of the $95.4 million King Review Technology Co-Investment Fund, announced as part of the 2020-21 Budget, which supports businesses in the agriculture, manufacturing, industrial and transport sectors to adopt technologies to increase productivity and reduce emissions.