Plan to overcome economic isolation

By
Friday, 02 October, 2009

Sixty partners from government, the private sector, Aboriginal communities, non-government bodies, research agencies and universities have announced a major bid to overcome the economic disadvantages faced by a million Australians who live in remote areas of the continent.

The proposal for a national Cooperative Research Centre for Remote Economic Participation (CRC-REP) is the most comprehensive approach to the issue of economic isolation yet put forward, head of the bid Jan Ferguson said.

“The proposed research institution has three main goals:

“The remote regions of Australia generate far more export income per head and have more enterprises per head than the rest of Australia combined - but in terms of economic opportunity they often face great disadvantages and these impact directly on lives and communities,” she said.

The CRC-REP will be a ‘public good’ research organisation delivering better business models and tools to remote populations. Within 15 years, this would help achieve:

The CRC-REP will also pioneer a world-first approach to precision pastoralism that integrates pasture cover with stock management to achieve sustainable production in Australia’s - and the world’s - drylands.

Related News

Museum specimens support future biodiversity monitoring

An eDNA library has been created using museum specimens and genomic data from fish monitoring...

Flinders works on method to filter nanoplastics from water

Flinders University researchers are working on a method capable of detecting nanoplastics using...

March workshops seek to empower NT flood evacuees

In March, a workshop series will bring together researchers and community members to co-design a...


  • All content Copyright © 2026 Westwick-Farrow Pty Ltd