The limitations of environmental management systems in Australian agriculture.

The efficacy of government-supported programs to encourage improved management of land and water systems associated with agricultural land in Australia has been mixed. The broad approach of Australian governments is reviewed briefly. Evidence is presented from case assessments of a program to promote adoption of environmental management systems (EMSs) to improve environmental outcomes from agricultural practices. EMSs are systems implemented to manage the environmental impacts and ameliorate environmental risk associated with business activity. Data are presented on reported EMS activity and experience of four selected groups of farmers in Victoria, south-eastern Australia, representing broad-acre cropping, beef and dairy farming. The pro-environmental behaviours of farmers were mediated through voluntary adoption of government and industry sponsored EMSs, often with financial incentives and other support. Findings from the study were that adoption of EMS practices with sufficient public benefits is unlikely to occur at sufficient scale for significant environmental impact. Farmers more readily adopted practices which were financially beneficial than those which had a positive environmental impact. Although the focus on voluntary market-based instrument (MBI) type programs is popular in western countries, enforcing regulation is an important, but usually politically unpopular, component of land use policy. The comparative advantage of EMSs differed for the industries studied, but overall there were insufficient market drivers for widespread EMS adoption in Australia. Environmental outcomes could be more effectively achieved by directly funding land management practices which have highest public net benefits. Having a clear and unambiguous management objective for a particular land management policy is more likely to achieve outcomes than having multiple objectives as occurs in a number of international programs currently.

[1]  Stefan Hajkowicz,et al.  The evolution of Australia's natural resource management programs: Towards improved targeting and evaluation of investments , 2009 .

[2]  A. Roberts,et al.  Trialling a web-based spatial information management tool with Land Managers in Victoria, Australia. , 2009, Journal of environmental management.

[3]  P. Kristiansen,et al.  Selling Australia as 'Clean and Green' , 2006 .

[4]  Lawrence M. Corbett,et al.  Environmental management systems in the New Zealand plastics industry , 2000 .

[5]  A. Roberts,et al.  Piloting a systematic framework for public investment in regional natural resource management: Dryland salinity in Australia , 2009 .

[6]  Nicole Darnall,et al.  Environmental Management Systems: Do They Improve Performance? , 2003 .

[7]  L. Pahl Adoption of environmental assurance in pastoral industry supply chains – market failure and beyond , 2007 .

[8]  D. Pannell Public Benefits, Private Benefits, and Policy Mechanism Choice for Land-Use Change for Environmental Benefits , 2008, Land Economics.

[9]  A. Boland,et al.  Improving environmental management in Australian horticulture: critical factors for the implementation of EMS , 2007 .

[10]  G. Marshall,et al.  Understanding and promoting adoption of conservation practices by rural landholders , 2006 .

[11]  M. Delmas The diffusion of environmental management standards in Europe and in the United States: An institutional perspective , 2002 .

[12]  Till Requate,et al.  Dynamic incentives by environmental policy instruments—a survey , 2005 .

[13]  E. Seymour,et al.  Assessing the role of a four-stage approach for improving the compatibility of Environmental Management Systems and Quality Assurance , 2007 .

[14]  Michael Jay Polonsky,et al.  Environmentally sustainable food production and marketing: Opportunity or hype? , 2006 .

[15]  A. Roberts,et al.  Australia’s National Action Plan for Salinity and Water Quality: A Retrospective Assessment , 2010 .

[16]  Erwin Schmid,et al.  On the choice of farm management practices after the reform of the Common Agricultural Policy in 2003. , 2007, Journal of environmental management.

[17]  J. Cary The Nature of Symbolic Beliefs and Environmental Behavior in a Rural Setting , 1993 .

[18]  G. Robinson Ontario’s Environmental Farm Plan: Evaluation and research agenda , 2006 .

[19]  A. Mackay,et al.  Environmental whole farm management plans: their character, diversity, and use as agri-environmental indicators in New Zealand. , 2007, Journal of environmental management.

[20]  Cary Coglianese,et al.  Regulating from the Inside: Can Environmental Management Systems Achieve Policy Goals , 2010 .

[21]  Neil Gunningham,et al.  Incentives to improve farm management: EMS, supply-chains and civil society. , 2007, Journal of environmental management.

[22]  J. Smithers,et al.  Environmental farm planning in Ontario: exploring participation and the endurance of change , 2003 .

[23]  Anthony J. Jakeman,et al.  A review of nitrogen and phosphorus export to waterways: context for catchment modelling , 2006 .

[24]  J. Powell,et al.  Nutrient budgeting as an approach to improving nutrient management on Australian dairy farms , 2007 .

[25]  C. Kling,et al.  Environmental Conservation in Agriculture: Land Retirement versus Changing Practices on Working Land , 2004 .

[26]  James W. Jones,et al.  Use of ENSO-related climate information in agricultural decision making in Argentina: a pilot experience , 2002 .

[27]  A. Prakash,et al.  EMS-based Environmental Regimes as Club Goods: Examining Variations in Firm-level Adoption of ISO 14001 and EMAS in U.K., U.S. and Germany , 2002 .

[28]  M B Galan,et al.  ISO 14 001 at the farm level: analysis of five methods for evaluating the environmental impact of agricultural practices. , 2007, Journal of environmental management.

[29]  Jørgen Primdahl,et al.  Current use of impact models for agri-environment schemes and potential for improvements of policy design and assessment. , 2010, Journal of environmental management.

[30]  Silvia Secchi,et al.  Least-cost control of agricultural nutrient contributions to the Gulf of Mexico hypoxic zone. , 2010, Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America.

[31]  E. Seymour,et al.  Toward Environmental Management Systems in Australian Agriculture to Achieve Better Environmental Outcomes at the Catchment Scale , 2005, Environmental management.

[32]  David J. Pannell,et al.  Agricultural land management strategies to reduce phosphorus loads in the Gippsland Lakes, Australia , 2012 .

[33]  Paul J. Ferraro,et al.  Voluntary development of environmental management systems: motivations and regulatory implications , 2007 .

[34]  What motivates farmers to participate in the Nova Scotia environmental farm plan program? Evidence and environmental policy implications. , 2009, Journal of environmental management.

[35]  A. Ridley Preparing Australian broadacre agriculture for environmental scrutiny using Environmental Management Systems: implications for extension services , 2007 .