From jonahsullivan79 at gmail.com Wed May 4 18:23:59 2022 From: jonahsullivan79 at gmail.com (Jonah Sullivan) Date: Thu, 5 May 2022 11:23:59 +1000 Subject: [OSGeo Oceania] VACANCY: Catchment Rehydration Selection Tool Message-ID: *Interesting opportunity with a mate of mine. He's looking for some help with geospatial Python work. Remote work is available. Pay is negotiable. Let me know if you want to see the longer version of the Project Briefing (6 pages). Contact is luke at themullooninstitute.org .* *Regards,* *Jonah Sullivan* *Project Briefing* The Mulloon Institute (TMI) has entered a contractual partnership with NSW DPI Agriculture for the development of a Catchment Rehydration Selection Tool. Funded as part of the DPI?s Climate Smart Pilots Project, Demonstrating Adaptation Program, the selection tool will be designed to evaluate catchment scale regions across NSW for the feasibility of implementing landscape rehydration practices which have been successfully demonstrated by TMI at the Mulloon Creek catchment, Bungendore, NSW, and other catchments around Australia. Direct benefits arising from implementing landscape rehydration practices are the improved utilisation of water resources - slowing stream flow velocity, increasing groundwater/aquifer recharge, increasing the degree and duration of soil water content and improving biological diversity in the riparian and flood zones. Subsequent indirect benefits, particularly when combined with other regenerative and sustainable farm practices, have positive impact at the farm and regional level - improvement in soil health, enterprise productivity, ecological diversity and resilience in the face of drought, floods and bushfires. The Catchment Rehydration Selection Tool will provide a spatial output akin to a ?heat map? which grades agricultural regions of NSW according to their potential for effective adoption of landscape rehydration practices. The enormous breadth of benefits from rehydration means several players will have an interest in use of the Selection Tool. Stakeholders are likely to include, but not be limited to: ? farmers and farm advisors, ? catchment communities, ? government agencies with interests aligned with Sustainable Development Goals, ? investors seeking to achieve scale for aggregation in environmental credits programs, ? regulators, ? insurers in the evaluation of risk, and ? LGA?s for evaluation of water access and quality. Widespread adoption of the catchment rehydration approach will require the Selection Tool to meaningfully account for the risk and return profile associated with deployment of the new practices. Therefore, the model development phase will draw on requisite expertise to establish a methodology for assessing the potential effectiveness of rehydration. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: