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Test your smart farming idea with Rural Professionals Fund help

June 28, 2021 by Simon Edwards

The Rural Professionals Fund, established in 2020 by the Our Land and Water National Science Challenge, is now accepting applications for a second round of funding to support projects that could benefit farming communities.

This is a unique research fund, specifically designed for farmers and farm advisors, to enable them to rapidly test smart ideas that could create real benefit for New Zealand farming communities, our land, or our water.

Successful projects will be funded up to $75,000, to be completed within a nine-month timeframe. Last year the fund received 31 applications, of which 15 projects were funded.

“We need to encourage more ‘mavericks’ to test smart ideas that challenge our patterns of behaviour,” says Stephen Macaulay, chief executive of the New Zealand Institute of Primary Industry Managers (NZIPIM), a key partner in the fund.  

“Farmers and their rural professionals often try out new ideas and apply different farming practices because they are curious to see what will happen. Wouldn’t it be great to see some of these promising ideas move beyond the farm gate?”

Project teams must include a rural professional, and a farmer or grower. The team also must include a person with relevant scientific or technical expertise, mātauranga Māori, or kaupapa Māori research expertise (this may be the rural professional in some cases).

Projects must align with the Our Land and Water objective: to improve Aotearoa’s land and water quality for future generations, while enhancing the value of the primary sector to New Zealand.

“We are particularly interested in projects that will help diversify land use and practices, effect behavioural change and create new ways of doing things across the agri-food and fibre system,” explains Richard McDowell, chief scientist for Our Land and Water.

“We want to see concepts emerge that can generate evidence and move into action quickly, The Rural Professionals Fund allows us to quickly explore a lot of options, and encourage and resource more innovators and entrepreneurs to test their good ideas.”

Communicating the results of both successful and unsuccessful projects to the wider rural profession and farming community is a crucial part of the process.

“If projects show promising results they could apply for other research funding for further examination. Should the opposite occur, we can fail fast, learn from the experience and move on to the next exciting prospect,” says Macaulay.

Last year, the fund received 31 applications, of which 15 projects were funded and are now close to completion (see them at ourlandandwater.nz/RPF2020). These projects encompassed a wide variety of farm systems, industries and ideas, tackling questions including:

  • Does pure, clean drinking water improve milk production in cows?
  • What horticulture and arable options are suitable for hill country?
  • Does regenerative-style farming produce higher quality meat?
  • Are banana plants a suitable feed for cows?
  • Should we grow more trees in pastures?
  • Which soil characteristics correlate with high avocado yield?
  • Can we make it easier for farmers to prioritise mitigations?
  • Are farmers likely to accept the use of drones for environmental monitoring?

The projects all have one thing in common: if the concept was proved, it could create real benefit for New Zealand farming communities, our land, or our water.

Find out more and apply for funding: ourlandandwater.nz/RPF-apply (applications close on Friday 13 August 2021)

Filed Under: Agri Business, Agri Tech, National

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Federated Farmers is New Zealand’s leading independent rural advocacy organisation.

The federation’s aim is to add value to the business of farming for our members and encouraging sustainability through good management practice.

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