Robust Weather Stations

 

Project Funder: The Australian Government through the Preparing Australian Communities Program

Project Lead Organisation/Researcher: Riverine Plains

Project Durations: 2022-2024

Aim

The project will investigate how an integrated network of 80 on-farm weather stations across Central and Southern NSW and Northern Victoria can better support the community, emergency services and members of the farming community in bushfire and flood management. Currently, emergency services are reliant on Bureau of Meteorology Weather Stations which can be located up to 200km apart and do not provide local climate information when fires start. On-farm weather stations have the potential to fill in gaps where there is no alternative weather information.

Description and background

The Robust Weather Stations project will investigate the feasibility of bringing together five weather station and moisture probe networks (managed by the farming systems groups involved in the project), across southern Australia into a single, standardised platform. This will help inform key stakeholders on a series of localised climatic information to assist with disaster planning, such as for fires and floods. It is intended that the data provided by the Robust Weather Station network will complement the weather information provided by the Bureau of Meteorology, as the data will provide more localised information for emergency services and communities.

Climate change will cause higher average temperatures, more rapid drying of fuels and lower humidity, and increase the risk and frequency of bushfires and damage to property, livestock, infrastructure and native flora and fauna. A more robust weather station network can help farmers and communities manage the risk of fire in the region. A warmer climate is also increasing the risk of heavy rainfall events; the on-farm network of weather stations and soil moisture probes measure soil moisture, which can also help predict and measure the severity of flooding across the different regions.

A standardised platform is anticipated to provide more robust data (temperature, wind speed and direction, humidity, soil moisture data information etc) and provide an opportunity for farmers, emergency services, and local, state and federal governments to better plan and prepare for disasters and climate change in Central and southern New South Wales and Victoria.

This project builds on a network of data that is available to landholders but not currently being utilised to service the wider community, including emergency services, to help manage climatic events such as fire and flood.

The project also aims to link government and private industry to help overcome some of the existing barriers to sharing climate data with a wider audience, creating better outcomes for emergency management.

Project activities will include an audit of the weather stations, data validation, implementing data sharing agreements, standardising platforms and a feasibility study.

Through the involvement of the farming system group partners, it is expected that a broad cross section of the community will become aware of the project and potentially use the data for disaster management and prevention. This will help better inform landholders and emergency services around key climatic variables to assist in decision making, in line with the Disaster Risk Reduction Framework.

Reports & Media Releases

What does the 4G upgrade mean for my farm?

Business case for robust weather station network

Partnership

This project is led by Riverine Plains Inc. Project Partners include Birchip Cropping Group, Central West Farming Systems Inc, Farmlink and Holbrook Landcare Network.

The project is supported by the NSW Department of Primary Industries, Agriculture Victoria, the Australian Bureau of Meteorology and Griffith University.

The project also engages with the Rural Fire Services in New South Wales and the Country Fire Authority in Victoria.

Cristy Houghton

Cristy's unique career has taken her from country NSW to the city lights of Clarendon Street South Melbourne and back again. With an early career in radio as a copywriter and creative strategist, she is now a Jill of all trades as a graphic designer, website builder, blog writer, video editor, social media manager, marketing strategist and more. 

In fact, give her any task and this chick will figure out how to do it! Go on, we dare you!

No, really, we DARE you!!

Cristy has won two Australian Commercial Radio Awards (ACRAs) for Best Ad and Best Sales Promotion, and even has an 'Employee of the Year' certificate with her name on it.

Cristy and her husband James have traveled extensively through Russia, China and South East Asia, and have two fur-babies, Sooty (cat) and Panda (puppy). Cristy loves drinking coffee, meeting people to drink coffee, coffee tasting and coffee flavoured cocktails. She also enjoys road trips, TED Talks and watching cat videos on youtube.

http://www.embarketing.com.au
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