AGRICULTURE is set to receive a publicity boost with farmer and climate advocate Anika Molesworth named one of four finalists for the NSW Young Australian of the Year.
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The awards celebrate the achievements of Australians who champion issues and ideas for the benefit of the whole nation.
One NSW finalist will be selected to be in the running for Young Australian of the Year, with the national award to be announced on Australia Day 2017.
“From those who study life under microscopes to those who spend their days in dusty sheep yards, people who are involved in agriculture are inquisitive, innovative and committed to continual improvement,” Anika says.
“It’s highly rewarding to work with people like this and fantastic that this award recognizes these people’s contribution.”
Anika, 28, may have grown up in suburban Melbourne but when her family purchased Rupee Station at Broken Hill in 2000 she found her niche in agriculture.
The year 2000 was the start of the decade long Millennium drought and as she found her feet she grew to love not only the beauty of farming in an arid environment but the challenges it presented.
“Last summer was one of the worst for us in the Far West,” she said, “but, never one to accept things will always be a certain way, I decided to hold a seminar bringing together famers, researchers and the local rural community of Broken Hill to discuss the changes and challenges occurring.
“The event was a huge success and I would like to take it to other rural communities, giving all stakeholders the opportunity to shape their future.”
Anika has a Bachelor of Science (Agribusiness), a Masters of Sustainable Agriculture and is currently studying a PhD looking at optimising soil fertility in water constrained environments and comparing Australian conditions to those found in Cambodia and Laos.
She attended the United Nations Conference on Climate Change (COP21) in Paris last year, and her efforts to promote sustainable farming were recognised when she was awarded the 2015 Young Farmer of the Year.