Australian Natural Resources Atlas

Economics - Tasmania

Tasmania

Location map of Tasmania

Economics - returns to the land and water resource base and costs of degradation

New data sets have been developed through the National Land and Water Resources Audit that relate to economic aspects of natural resource management in Australia. There is a focus on resources used to support agriculture and resources impacted by agriculture. The Australia-wide report provides:

Consistent with protocols used by the Australian Bureau of Statistics and the Australian Bureau of Agriculture and Resource Economics, the database provides a new capacity to integrate natural resource information in Australia. The data sets are primarily built for the 1996/97 financial year, the year of an agricultural census. Except where stated otherwise, all dollar values given are in 1996/97 dollars.

Most of the data is represented on a 1km by 1km grid covering agricultural land. Whilst modelled at this level of spatial detail interpretation should generally occur at coarser levels. Data on downstream infrastructure costs of deteriorating water quality has been assembled by river basin.

River basin scale aggregate information may be viewed to by selecting a river basin from the menu at the top of this page or by using the links in the table or map below.

Agricultural profitability in Tasmania

Economic returns to natural resource base from agriculture are measured using profit at full equity. This is the economic return to land, capital and management after the value of labour provided by managers has been deducted. It does not include any debt payments to financial institutions. Estimates of profit at full equity differ from gross margins, a commonly used measure of agricultural financial performance, by including fixed costs of production (e.g. depreciation of capital assets, labour).

Profit at full equity measures presented in this report are derived from survey data, satellite data, government reports, gross margin handbooks and other sources. Profit has been mapped on a 1km by 1km grid covering the nation, although underlying source data is accurate at coarser levels of spatial detail. The twelve variables relating to prices, yields and costs used to derive profit at full equity are also mapped to a 1 km grid. A shortened version of the profit equation reads:

Profit At Full Equity=Price x Quantity - Variable Costs - Fixed Costs

To gain an appreciation for how economic returns to agriculture varied across Australia, profit at full equity was computed based both on 1996/97 prices and at average prices over the period 1992/93 to 1996/97.

Using 1996/97 prices and yields, the estimated total profit at full equity was roughly $6,555 million for the Nation. An area of 311.5 million hectares, 66% of agricultural land, made a loss and 159.9 million hectares, 34% of agricultural land, made a profit. The bulk of the loss-making areas were the low-rainfall sheep/beef grazing lands. The following map shows profit at full equity for 1996/97.

River basin name 1996/97 Gross revenue 1996/97 Profit at full equity 5yr (1992/93 - 1996/97) Profit at full equity
Arthur River 4,719 137 680
Coal River 11,915 1,552 1,614
Derwent River 51,828 -4,698 -2,697
East Coast 37,607 -1,870 -1,339
Flinders - Cape Barren Islands 10,646 -2,778 -1,592
Forth River 18,879 4,350 6,464
Gordon River no data no data no data
Huon River 115,553 14,701 16,160
King Island 31,139 1,486 7,380
King-Henty Rivers 247 -94 -17
Kingston Coast 2,889 -3,211 -3,012
Mersey River 115,274 24,474 33,280
Pieman River 771 -581 -322
Piper-Ringarooma Rivers 74,496 9,897 15,766
Rubicon River 57,203 18,427 26,278
Sandy Cape Coast 695 52 156
Smithton-Burnie Coast 218,271 50,659 61,568
South-West Coast 14,385 1,523 1,580
Tamar River 158,128 488 25,488

Click on the river basin name or map below to view a report on the returns to the agricultural resource base and costs of degradation.
King Island Flinders - Cape Barron Islands Smithton-Burnie Coast Arthur River Sandy Cape Coast Pieman River Forth River Mersey River Rubicon River Tamar River Piper-Ringarooma Rivers East Coast King-Henty Rivers Gordon River South-West Coast Derwent River Coal River Huon River Kingston Coast Map of TAS's river basins

Soil resources: economic opportunities in Tasmania

An assessment was made of the economic opportunities associated with managing saline, sodic and acidic soils. This assessment did not contrast current soil conditions with pristine soil conditions. Rather, it focused on the economic opportunities arising from future changes to soil condition.

In the assessment measures of gross benefit and impact cost are provided. The gross benefit is the additional profit at full equity attainable in a given year if the soil constraint were removed without cost. It can be considered an approximate investment ceiling for soil treatment. Impact cost measures the decline in profits due to worsening salinity extent and severity over the next 20 years (2000 to 2020). In addition to these measures, a benefit cost analysis of lime and gypsum application to ameliorate acidic and sodic soils was undertaken.

The table below places this State/Territory in context:

Salinity
$m
Sodicity
$m
Acidity
$m
Limiting factor
$m
New South Wales 6.3 280.3 378.7 624.1
Victoria 18.5 342.5 471.1 757.4
Queensland 10.2 180.3 232.5 392.9
South Australia 39.1 126.4 2.9 162.0
Western Australia 111.0 89.7 226.1 341.6
Tasmania 1.9 12.3 214.8 220.3
Northern Territory 0.0 3.0 58.2 61.1
Australian Capital Territory 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.2
Australia 187.0 1,034.6 1,584.5 2,559.5

Costs beyond the farm gate in Tasmania

In addition to the agricultural productivity impacts, increasing concerns are being voiced about the effects of land and soil degradation on water quality, landscape amenity values, biodiversity, the environment and other attributes. The direct market impacts of agriculture that occur beyond the farm gate fall into two categories:

Local Infrastructure Costs of Salinity and Watertable Rise

In order to estimate local infrastructure impacts, unit cost functions for salinity and water table rise were developed for three levels of impact: slight, moderate and severe for the following infrastructure categories:

The current impact of water table rise and dryland salinity in non-metropolitan Australia is estimated to range between $30 million/yr and $125 million/yr with a best-bet estimate of $89 million/yr as shown in the following table.

Table: Estimated current impacts on local infrastructure of watertable rise and salinity in non-metropolitan areas (millions/yr)
Low estimate Best-bet estimate High estimate
New South Wales 4.4 14.0 19.7
Victoria 3.9 12.2 17.3
Queensland 0.7 2.2 3.1
South Australia 4.5 6.7 8.3
Western Australia 16.3 51.8 73.8
Tasmania 0.6 1.9 2.7
Australian Capital Territory 0.0 0.0 0.0
Total 30.3 88.8 124.9

Further information

View the Australians and Natural Resource Management 2002 (theme) report.

View other Audit assessments by clicking the links below:

View "Natural Resource Economics" project and technical reports:

A project report has been prepared by CSIRO Land and Water Policy and Economic Research Unit in the development of this work:

The technical appendices of "Values of returns to land and water and costs of degradation" report contain detailed descriptions of the methods used in this work:

The technical appendices of "Values of returns to land and water and costs of degradation" report also includes a number of component project reports. These report may be viewed separately:

Case study: View or download a technical report and appendices on dryland salinity:
View "People" project and technical reports:

This report does not contain maps and needs to be read in conjunction with:

Link to the Map Maker to view economic data.

Link to the Australian Natural Resources Data Library - to download economic and social data

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