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Water and Energy Conservation Strategies

Agricultural and Horticultural Studies
StudyPulse

Water and Energy Conservation Strategies

Agricultural and Horticultural Studies
01 May 2026

Sustainable Water and Energy Management in Agriculture and Horticulture

Overview

Water and energy are finite resources critical to agricultural and horticultural production. Sustainable management means using them efficiently, minimising waste, reducing dependence on non-renewable sources, and adopting systems that can function long-term without depleting the resource base. With climate change reducing rainfall reliability and energy costs rising, conservation strategies are increasingly central to the economic and environmental sustainability of food and fibre enterprises.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Sustainable water and energy management reduces costs, builds resilience against climate variability, and minimises environmental impacts — making it essential for viable long-term production.


Water Conservation Strategies

Australia is one of the driest inhabited continents, and agriculture accounts for approximately 65% of national water use. Managing water sustainably is fundamental.

1. Efficient Irrigation Systems

Irrigation Type Efficiency Best Use
Flood irrigation 40–60% Water-tolerant crops, large paddocks (being phased out)
Sprinkler irrigation 60–80% Broadacre crops, orchards, turf
Drip/microjet irrigation 85–95% Orchards, vegetables, vineyards, horticulture
Subsurface drip 90–98% High-value crops; eliminates evaporation from surface

Moving from flood to drip irrigation can reduce water use by 30–60% for the same yield.

2. Irrigation Scheduling

Scheduling irrigation based on actual crop demand rather than calendar-based approaches:

  • Evapotranspiration (ET) data: Uses weather station data to calculate daily crop water use (ET₀ × crop coefficient Kc)
  • Soil moisture sensors: Capacitance probes, tensiometers; irrigate only when soil moisture falls below a set threshold
  • Digital irrigation management platforms (e.g. irriSAT, irrimate): Integrate satellite NDVI data, weather and soil models for paddock-specific recommendations

3. Water Harvesting and Storage

  • Farm dams: Capture surface runoff; legal entitlements govern volumes captured in licensed catchments
  • Rainwater tanks: Collect roof runoff from sheds and greenhouses
  • Contour banks: Capture and slow surface runoff, increasing soil infiltration

4. Water Recycling and Re-use

  • Effluent re-use: Dairy, piggery and feedlot effluent treated and re-used for irrigation (applying N and P as a resource)
  • Recycled water schemes: Treated municipal wastewater available for irrigated horticulture in some regions
  • Glasshouse condensate recovery: Recovering transpired water from enclosed growing structures

5. Reducing Water Demand

  • Mulching: Reduces evaporation from the soil surface by 30–50%; maintains soil moisture
  • Variety selection: Drought-tolerant cultivars and rootstocks achieve acceptable yields with less water
  • Controlled environment horticulture: Greenhouses eliminate rainfall losses while allowing precise irrigation management

EXAM TIP: When evaluating water conservation strategies, consider: (1) water saving per hectare; (2) cost-effectiveness; (3) feasibility for the enterprise type; and (4) water quality considerations for recycled effluent.


Energy Conservation Strategies

Agricultural energy inputs include diesel (machinery), electricity (pumping, refrigeration) and embodied energy in inputs (fertiliser, chemicals).

1. Reducing Machinery Fuel Consumption

  • Precision agriculture: GPS-guided machinery eliminates pass overlaps, reducing fuel use by up to 10–15%
  • Controlled Traffic Farming (CTF): Fixed wheel tracks reduce compaction, decreasing draught forces and fuel use
  • No-till / minimum tillage: Eliminating tillage passes saves substantial fuel (typically 20–40 L/ha per pass avoided)
  • Auto-steer technology: Reduces operator fatigue errors and optimises field coverage

2. Renewable Energy Adoption

Technology Application Benefit
Rooftop solar PV Powering sheds, irrigation pumps Reduce electricity costs; energy independence
Solar-powered irrigation pumps Remote pumping Eliminate diesel/grid electricity cost
Wind turbines Large-scale on exposed ridges On-farm electricity generation
Biogas (anaerobic digestion) Dairy/piggery effluent → electricity + heat Waste-to-energy; reduces effluent management costs

3. Irrigation Pumping Efficiency

Irrigation pumping is often the largest single energy cost on irrigated properties:

  • Variable speed drives (VSDs): Adjust pump speed to match actual demand; energy savings of 30–50%
  • Gravity-fed systems: Use topographic advantage to reduce pumping requirements
  • Pump efficiency audits: Identify and replace worn impellers; match pump curve to system requirements

4. Protected Cropping and Energy Use

Greenhouses and controlled environment agriculture can have high energy costs. Sustainable approaches include:

  • Passive design: Orientation, thermal mass and double-glazed cladding to reduce heating/cooling loads
  • Heat pump systems: More energy-efficient than gas or electric resistance heating
  • LED grow lights: Replace high-pressure sodium lights, using 30–50% less energy
  • Thermal screens: Reduce heat loss at night in glasshouses

5. Carbon Accounting and Benchmarking

  • Calculating the carbon footprint per unit of product identifies the most energy-intensive processes
  • Benchmarking against industry averages highlights areas for improvement
  • Government programs (ARENA grants) provide financial support for energy efficiency improvements

COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes treat renewable energy as inherently sustainable without considering the full life-cycle. Solar panels require raw material extraction and manufacturing (embodied energy). Sustainable energy management considers both operational and embodied energy.

STUDY HINT: VCAA questions about energy in agriculture focus on why energy efficiency matters for sustainability (cost, emissions, resource depletion) and what practical strategies producers can adopt. Link each strategy to its sustainability benefit.

APPLICATION: A vegetable grower in the Yarra Valley facing rising water costs could implement: (1) subsurface drip irrigation with soil moisture sensor-based scheduling; (2) rainwater tank installation on the packing shed; (3) solar PV on the shed roof to offset pumping and cool-room electricity costs; and (4) mulching all beds to reduce evaporation. This integrated approach addresses both water and energy simultaneously.

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