Carbon farming is alive and well and worth $25 to $30 per tonne.
That's the price currently being offered by Greening Australia through their carbon offsets program, 'Breathe Easy'.
The program is just the start of a new age of economic opportunities for farmers where the true cost of production is reflected in returns, according to Greening Australia vice president, Channel Seven weatherman and geographer, Rob Gell.
Breathe Easy aims to reward landholders who have undertaken revegetation work and links corporations wanting to offset carbon emissions with on-ground conservation.
Farmers who have fenced off and replanted gullies and creeks are set to reap the benefits of this conservation work, started more than 20 years ago through Landcare and its Victorian predecessor, the Potter Farmland Plan.
Even slow-growing mallee vegetation has been shown to store up to 200 tonnes of carbon, according to Greening Australia calculations and Kyoto rules.
That's $6000 per hectare under present prices and grown over 100 years that's $60 per hectare per year.
Greening Australia is looking to purchase certain properties but unlike other carbon schemes, prefers to work with farmers on their land.
The opportunity is set to expand as carbon prices are expected to significantly increase as carbon trading increases worldwide.
"Food prices must reflect the true cost of production, the true environmental cost and so I think farmers have a lot to look forward to in the new carbon age," Mr Gell said.
* Extract from a full report to appear in Stock & Land, Vic, September 11 edition.