Soil Health Grants in Australia: Funding Regenerative Agriculture and Healthy Soils

Australia has lost significant soil fertility over two centuries of European agriculture — through clearing, over-cultivation, erosion, and inappropriate land management. Healthy soil is fundamental to food security, water quality, and climate — soils can store vast amounts of carbon (sequestering greenhouse gases) and healthy soil microbiomes produce food with higher nutritional value. Regenerative agriculture — farming that restores soil health rather than depleting it — is a rapidly growing movement in Australian agriculture. Grant funding supports research into soil health, farmer transition to regenerative practices, soil carbon measurement, and the community-level composting that builds soil health in urban and peri-urban settings.

Soil health in Australia

The state of Australian soils

  • Australia has naturally ancient, nutrient-poor soils
  • European agriculture has significantly degraded many soils
  • Soil erosion: estimated 2 billion tonnes of topsoil lost annually from agricultural land
  • Compaction: heavy machinery reduces soil pore space and biology
  • Salinity: significant in some agricultural areas, particularly WA
  • Soil carbon: many Australian soils have lost 50-70% of their original soil carbon

Why soil health matters

  • Food security: healthy soil produces nutritious food sustainably
  • Water: healthy soil absorbs rainfall and reduces erosion and flooding
  • Climate: soil carbon sequestration can make agriculture carbon neutral or negative
  • Biodiversity: soil biology (bacteria, fungi, invertebrates) is extraordinarily biodiverse

Regenerative agriculture

Regenerative agriculture practices restore soil health:
- Minimal or no tillage (preserves soil structure)
- Cover crops (keep soil covered and biologically active)
- Composting (adds organic matter)
- Mob grazing (mimics natural grazing patterns, builds soil carbon)
- Diverse cropping systems
- Reducing chemical inputs

Government soil health funding

GRDC (Grains Research and Development Corporation)

Soil research for grain farming.

MLA (Meat and Livestock Australia)

Grazing systems and soil health.

Department of Agriculture

  • Regional Land Partnerships
  • Soil carbon measurement
  • Sustainable agriculture grants

Carbon markets

Soil carbon credits — some farmers accessing voluntary carbon markets.

Philanthropic soil health funders

Australian Sustainable Agriculture Foundation

Regenerative agriculture research and transition.

The Myer Foundation

Environment including agriculture.

Landcare Australia

Community land management including soil health.

Rodale Institute (Australian programmes)

Organic and regenerative agriculture research.

Various farming community foundations

Regional agricultural philanthropy.

Types of funded soil health programmes

Farmer transition

  • Regenerative agriculture training and workshops
  • Farm demonstration sites (showing regenerative practices work)
  • Farmer peer networks (farmer-to-farmer learning)
  • Transition planning and support

Research

  • Soil biology research
  • Carbon sequestration measurement
  • Regenerative practice effectiveness trials
  • Soil health benchmarking

Soil carbon

  • Soil carbon measurement methodology
  • Carbon credit access for farmers
  • Soil carbon on-farm projects
  • Carbon accounting for agriculture

Composting and organic matter

  • Farm composting systems
  • Compost quality and application research
  • Urban-rural compost loops (urban organic waste back to farms)
  • Vermicomposting

Landcare and stewardship

  • Community soil health programmes
  • Landcare soil monitoring
  • Soil pH and nutrient management
  • Riparian revegetation (protecting stream banks)

Urban soil health

  • Community garden soil improvement
  • Composting in urban areas
  • Urban food production soil health
  • Contaminated urban soil remediation

Indigenous land management

  • Aboriginal land management practices (including fire management which affects soil)
  • First Nations knowledge of country
  • Cultural burning and soil health

Education and awareness

  • School soil education
  • Community composting education
  • Consumer awareness of food-soil connection
  • Soil biology awareness

The carbon opportunity

Australian farmland represents a significant potential carbon sink:
- Soil carbon sequestration through regenerative practices
- Avoided emissions through sustainable soil management
- Voluntary and compliance carbon markets creating financial incentives

The Carbon Market Authority has approved methodologies for soil carbon credits — giving farmers financial incentive to build soil carbon. Grant funding for soil carbon measurement, methodology development, and farmer access to carbon markets enables this opportunity.

Grant application considerations

Farmer-led

The most effective soil health programmes are farmer-led — peer learning, demonstration farms, and farmer networks outperform top-down extension. Applications with farmers at the centre are more credible.

Measurement and verification

Soil carbon claims require rigorous measurement. Applications with strong measurement frameworks — baseline, monitoring, verification — are more scientifically credible.

Whole-system thinking

Soil health connects to water, biodiversity, climate, and food quality. Applications that articulate these connections — not just yield improvement — are more compelling to environmental funders.

Urban-rural loops

Urban organic waste (food scraps, garden waste) is a valuable soil amendment — but most goes to landfill. Applications creating urban-rural organic matter loops (composting urban waste for agricultural application) address both urban waste and rural soil carbon.


Tahua's grants management platform supports soil health funders and regenerative agriculture organisations — with project tracking, soil health outcome data, carbon sequestration measurement, and the reporting tools that help soil health funders demonstrate their investment in restoring Australia's soil for food security and climate.

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