122,526 results

Phase 2. Designing the integration of extension into research projects: tangible pathways to enhance adoption and impact.

Project number: 2022-180
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $30,000.00
Principal Investigator: Jane Wightman
Organisation: Hort Innovation
Project start/end date: 29 Jun 2023 - 29 Jan 2026
Contact:
FRDC

Need

The investment will see the appointment of a 3rd party provider that will oversee the design and implementation of the key principle/practices that each individual RDC are interested in trialling. Each investor will be expected to nominate a recent project/program or one that is under development to trial. The appointed coordinator will work with each RDC and assist them in initiating the key principles/practices and provide support throughout the duration of the trial process. The coordinator will also collate and record the experiences of each investor and provide the collective knowledge and evaluations of the pilot outputs through a community of practice forum. This forum will provide a coordinated approach to sharing the experience of each and RDC.

Objectives

1. to demonstrate the benefits in program/ project design, delivery, and evaluation and therefore benefits to producers through adoption by funding bodies and delivery partners of the key principles and practical steps developed from Phase 1.
2. Project team members (Researchers and extension practitioners) increased their knowledge, attitude, skill, aspiration and practice (KASAP) in applying the key principles and practical steps developed from Phase 1 to their work which has a positive impact on the delivery of project outputs and beneficial outcomes for producers.
3. Increase in cross RDC collaboration in the areas of Peer to Peer learning, issue identification of common concern and investments.
4. RDC funders have initiated adoption of the key principles and practices from phase 1 into their ways of working.

Women at World Aquaculture 2023 - bursaries (WISA)

Project number: 2022-177
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $18,000.00
Principal Investigator: Kirsten Abernethy
Organisation: Women in Seafood Australasia (WISA)
Project start/end date: 6 Apr 2023 - 22 Jun 2023
Contact:
FRDC

Need

1. WISA have been invited by the WAC organisers to run the Women in Aquaculture session at the conference titled: "How can the Aquaculture Industry attract and retain women?"
Previous World Aquaculture Conferences have outlined the benefits from having greater inclusivity of women and other under-represented groups in the industry. In this think-tank session, we look deeper into the barriers women face to participate and reach their full potential in aquaculture, and towards solutions – what can individuals, small and large businesses and organisations do to attract and retain women in aquaculture? Participants will first hear from Women in Seafood Australasia (WISA) and an international representative (e.g. FAO) who will give overviews of the challenges and opportunities for women in aquaculture from a developed and developing country perspective. This will be followed by presentations from 3-4 speakers who will tell their stories from the ground - the actions they have taken as aquaculture businesses and the lessons they have learned in their journey towards gender equity. The presentation will then form the basis of an engaging and facilitated discussion between a panel of aquaculture leaders and the audience. We will discuss the deeper tensions for businesses and organisations to make change, opportunities for increasing the attractiveness of the aquaculture industry to women and other under-represented groups entering and thriving in the industry, and actionable solutions for the aquaculture industry in different environments in both the short and long term.

2. The Australian Centre for International Agriculture Research (ACIAR) have recently granted WISA $40,000 to run our highly successful bursary program for international and Australian women.
WISA’s approach is to provide an experience for women who would not normally have the means to attend a conference or event, but who would benefit enormously from the opportunity to network and develop through attending. WISA provide an immersive and supported experience for bursary holders. WISA have found that women who have experienced conference bursaries through our organisation are now highly engaged in our network, they have broadened their networks significantly, made long-lasting industry friends, and are inspired and feel confident to take on further opportunities in the seafood industry. The approach that WISA takes to bursaries requires WISA personnel to attend the conference and be available throughout the conference to provide support, introductions, and friendship to bursary holders. The ACIAR bursary holders will also be involved in WISA activities at the conference (1 & 3) and in addition to supporting them before during and after the conference, we will be hosting a welcome drinks, a bursary dinner and a wrap up breakfast.

3. Breaking the Barriers workshop
Although currently still in negotiation, the Northern Territory Government has available space for WISA to run their Breaking the Barriers workshop, first run at Seafood Directions in 2022, and funded by FRDC (2018-174). The purpose of the workshop, facilitated in partnership with Affectus, is to surface current issues that impact women in the aquaculture industry and community; facilitate open and inclusive discussion about issues that impact women in the aquaculture industry and community; problem-solve/solution-find current issues that impact women in the aquaculture industry and community; and for each participant to have the opportunity to develop an individual host/facilitate/chair template for open and inclusive discussion. The outcomes of the workshop will be a list of current issues impacting the women in the aquaculture industry and community; a solutions paper for stakeholder organisations to consider and take action on; and a deeper understanding of current issues that impact women in the aquaculture industry and community and an advocacy plan for wider industry to action. This workshop will be funded through WISA's 'Turn the Tide' project.

Objectives

1. Enable WISA's participation and attendance at WAC 2023
2. Explore options to attract and retain women in Australian aquaculture
3. Enable WISA to have a direct impact on Australian and International women

ARDC: Food Security Data Challenges: Increasing food security through liberation of fishing and aquaculture data

Project number: 2022-176
Project Status:
Current
Budget expenditure: $993,858.00
Principal Investigator: Nicole Stubing
Organisation: Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC)
Project start/end date: 19 Mar 2023 - 28 Jun 2025
Contact:
FRDC

Need

The development of digital and data systems (DSS) across fisheries & aquaculture, as well as the agriculture sector more broadly is disparate. How data is collected, how it is stored, and how it can subsequently be used is greatly influenced by factors such as sector digital maturity, or available funding to develop (or upgrade) DSS.

This project seeks to develop a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system (Activity 1), ensuring that information derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable (FAIR).
The ingestion and storage system will be bolstered by a complementary data catalogue (detailing the data sets available on the platform) (Activity 2) and analytical tools (able to gain insights without moving data outside the storage platform) (Activity 6).
The platform will be underpinned by metadata (Activity 3) and a robust governance framework (Activity 4). Use of the system will be tested through 3 case studies, supporting capacity and capability improvement of the sector (Activity 5).

The production of and use of data cuts across industry and government, and covers activities throughout the fisheries supply chain (from pre-fishing quota management, to post-fishing processing and subsequent traceability). Consequently there is no one organisation across fishing and aquaculture that is best placed to co-ordinate and trial this technology. FRDC is capable to the leadership required to ensure a fit for purpose product for end users, additionally the leverage of Australia Research Data Commons investment will contribute to the development of a nationally coherent eResearch infrastructure

This project received investment from the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The ARDC is funded by the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS).

Objectives

1. Develop a new cloud-based fisheries data storage platform to enable ingestion, management, and sharing of datasets
2. Develop a CKAN-based data catalogue, a searchable fisheries data source allowing users to browse, combine, share, and access exchangeable data assets
3. Create best practice metadata standards that will be identified, documented, and then operationalised through the data catalogue and storage platform
4. Develop and operationalise a fisheries-focused data governance framework
5. Enhance capacity and capacity to use the platform through demonstration of 3 unique case studies
6. Develop use-case relevant suite of reporting and analysis tools to allow researchers to gain insights without moving data outside the storage platform

Guide

Author: A Skinner
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.

Project products

Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
Guide • 2025-04-01 • 56.27 KB
2022-176-DLD1.xlsx

Summary

The development of a national fisheries and aquaculture data ingestion and storage system represents a step forward in the maturity of the management and utilisation of data for the sectors. The governance checklist project was designed to ensure that data derived from fisheries and aquaculture activities is not only securely ingested and stored in a way that aligns with best practice and standards but also adheres to the principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) as defined by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The FAIR principles were highlighted as essential for maximising the value of fisheries and aquaculture data, enabling it to be easily discovered, accessed, and reused by a wide range of stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, and industry participants.
People
Industry

Global review: Incentivising small and medium scale aquaculture businesses to measure and report Environmental, Social, and Governance outcomes

Project number: 2022-171
Project Status:
Current
Budget expenditure: $225,975.00
Principal Investigator: Belinda Yaxley
Organisation: Nautilus Collaboration Pty Ltd
Project start/end date: 30 Aug 2023 - 30 May 2024
Contact:
FRDC

Need

The Australian aquaculture industry is faced with a number of environmental, social and governance (ESG) expectations and challenges now and into the future as we see a growing expectation from major retailers and an investor and increasingly government focus on offsetting carbon, nutrients and land. Specific challenges include measuring and reporting on greenhouse gas emissions, disease and antibiotic use, use of forage fish in feeds, habitat destruction, fish welfare and husbandry, and effluent discharge. While larger corporate businesses and some sectors have made some progress in these areas, the small-medium business enterprises will require support given they often have little to no resources to measure, report and allocate new funding and action to address ESG challenges. This is particularly important in areas where some of the challenges will become expectation e.g. market access and carbon emissions reporting.
There is a substantial disparity on how key ESG indicators are reported and assured across different sectors of the seafood industry, which is dependent on many different factors. These can include (but are not limited to):

- the size of the enterprise;
- local, State or Federal legislation;
- third-party certification requirements;
- global best practices;
- investor expectations
- export market requirements
- company policies

Consistency of reporting across the industry is vital to improve ESG policy and practices, ensure accountability of organisations, and increase consumer confidence of the seafood sector. A review of ESG challenges, and existing reporting frameworks/incentive programs both nationally and internationally will be key to developing a centralised reporting framework that both satisfies compliance and regulation and leads to tangible improvement outcomes for SME in the ESG space.

Objectives

1. Desktop Review – ESG Challenges in Australian Aquaculture SME’s.
2. Global Review on incentive schemes
3. Provide recommendations on actionable steps
Industry

Bringing the iconic Australian Herring (Arripis georgianus) to the food service and retail market – phase one

Project number: 2022-166
Project Status:
Current
Budget expenditure: $70,000.00
Principal Investigator: Robert A. Bell
Organisation: Blueshift Consulting
Project start/end date: 30 Apr 2023 - 9 Jun 2024
Contact:
FRDC

Need

This Australian Herring FRDC project is a strategic initiative to promote the recently recovered commercial Herring fishery. Blueshift and the commercial sector – represented by Fins Seafood and Albany Seafoods, are strong supporters of benefiting the commercial herring industry through increased demand and production. Fins Seafood focus on locally sourced seafood and have the experience and are passionate in this area, solidifying their undeniable importance to be a part of this project.

The project is needed to reaffirm the presence Australian Herring within the seafood market as commercial landings increase over the coming decade. If Australian Herring is successfully marketed, there is a potential for success within the local domestic market and potentially for export, if export approval is granted by the Australian Government. Furthermore, it is designed to address these challenges by providing investment for research, development, and extension initiatives aimed at improving the sustainability and profitability of the Australian Herring fishery. If successful, this proposal aims to obtain an accurate sense of the market appetite and consumer demand, as well as the potential to value-add by using local seafood processors.

Effective marketing through potential branding, introduction of new products and developing the presence of Australian Herring locally will be beneficial to industry and consumers. Furthermore, successful utilisation of all associated fish waste will bring more value and benefit to industry.

Objectives

1. Identification of the current market demand and future demand forecasts for Australian Herring.
2. Transition Australian Herring from bait to the higher-value human consumption market.
3. Development of three value-add Australian Herring products.
4. Identification of methods of full utilisation of Australian Herring waste products.
5. Development of effective market strategies to introduce value-add Australian Herring products to the retail market.
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