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Opinion
Home / The Country / Opinion

Australia’s food system at risk: Climate change, flooded highways and now a fuel crisis – Analysis

Opinion by
Anja Bless and Milena Bojovic
Other·
24 Apr, 2026 03:35 AM5 mins to read

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Stronger and more frequent heatwaves, floods, droughts and bushfires are taking a toll on Australian farmers and their livestock. Photo / Unsplash, Josh Marshall

Stronger and more frequent heatwaves, floods, droughts and bushfires are taking a toll on Australian farmers and their livestock. Photo / Unsplash, Josh Marshall

Australia has long been proud of its food production. The nation produces enough to feed 75 million people – and exports 70% of its produce.

But this position isn’t guaranteed. Intensifying climate change is putting Australian agriculture and its food system at risk.

The Australian Government last year published its National Climate Risk Assessment, showing food systems already face increased risks.

Stronger and more frequent heatwaves, floods, droughts and bushfires are taking a toll on farmers, livestock, crops and fisheries.

Climate change isn’t the only risk. Fuel and fertiliser shortages in the wake of the Iran war are driving up food prices.

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Increased competition for water in the Murray-Darling Basin, disruptions to supply chains, the dominance of major supermarkets, and the rising cost of food are also all taking a toll as many Australians go hungry.

These challenges mean Australia can no longer take its food security for granted.

How does Australia do on food security?

A country with strong food security is one where everyone has the right to access safe, nutritious and appropriate food at all times, and the food system is sustainable.

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You might think Australia would do well here. But in 2025, one in five households skipped meals or went whole days without eating.

Australians also tend not to eat enough nutritious food.

In 2022, 36% of children and adolescents and 56% of adults fell short of their daily fruit and vegetable intake.

Of all calories consumed, 42% come from ultra-processed foods, which can lead to higher risks of cancer, heart disease, and early death.

Australia’s supermarket sector is one of the world’s most concentrated, as Coles and Woolworths take 67% of sales.

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This so-called duopoly has long been accused of keeping prices too high.

One area where Australia performs well is food availability. But this advantage is being eroded.

After decades of growth, farm productivity is now declining due to more extreme climate variability, more plant and animal diseases, pressure on water supply and other resources and other factors.

Natural disasters also restrict access by cutting off crops or livestock from markets.

The end result: food gets more expensive.

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Climate change is already at work

As floods become more extreme, farmers are now taking serious hits – especially in Queensland.

In 2019, floods and sticky mud trapped and killed up to 500,000 cows.

In 2022, record-breaking floods caused a national lettuce shortage.

In 2023, floods hit banana, mango and avocado crops.

In 2025, more than 100,000 cows died in outback Queensland because of flooding.

This summer, it happened again. More than 48,000 cattle are dead or missing after extreme flooding in northwest Queensland.

Rising temperatures also make life harder for the animals and plants we rely on.

Heat stress is on the rise in livestock. When animals are too hot, their health can suffer, and milk and meat production fall.

As a recent report from the government research agency CSIRO shows, heat stress leads to smaller vegetable yields and worse crop quality, as well as triggering painful economic and labour market shocks.

In poultry, shifting bird migration patterns are increasing the risk of diseases such as avian influenza. A recent outbreak meant egg prices spiked.

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The waters of the Murray-Darling Basin are becoming less reliable.

These rivers support 40% of Australian farms, 8400 irrigated businesses and produce $30 billion in food and fibre annually.

Climate change is intensifying competition for scarcer water resources, adding to the long-term mismanagement of the basin’s environmental health.

What can Australia do to boost food security?

One overlooked response is to preserve and create more local and diverse food supply chains – especially for major cities.

Sydney once supported its population with local food production. But as the suburbs have expanded, much of this has been lost – especially in the north and southwest regions.

The city of 5.5 million still produces 20% of its own food in the Sydney Basin. But under projected housing development scenarios, this would fall 60% by 2031, leaving the city only 6% self-sufficient. Local fresh vegetable and egg supply would fall by more than 90%.

Melbourne’s food bowl faces similar development pressure.

At present, farms around the city of 5.4 million meet around 41% of its food needs.

For instance, the Yarra Valley to the northeast supplies 78% of Victoria’s strawberries, and Casey and Cardinia shires in the city’s southeast produce 90% of Australia’s asparagus. These regions are all under pressure from new housing developments.

Intensified natural disasters could also block the transport of food from further afield.

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If Sydney’s main food transport routes were cut, reserves of fresh food would last only a few days.

Looking forward

When floods devastated Lismore in 2022, the New South Wales town had empty supermarket shelves for months after main roads and freight lines were cut.

But farmers’ markets reopened within a week. As one farmer’s market manager told experts: “supermarket shelves were completely empty [but] we had all this produce”.

Lismore’s experience shows how a sudden hit from a climate change-linked disaster can weaken resilience in a food system already reliant on concentrated markets and limited local diversity. But it also points to how communities can respond faster than authorities.

As we face an uncertain future, we will need much better food security planning across the continent.

Boosting resilience comes in many forms, from better water and soil management to diversifying supply chains to supporting local food producers and distributors and protecting farms on the urban fringe.

Investing in more sustainable agriculture practices can cut farm emissions, reduce reliance on synthetic fertilisers and pesticides and improve resilience to climate change.

A legislated right to food could also help ensure all Australians can access healthy and sustainable food well into the future.

Anja Bless is a lecturer in sustainability and international relations and Milena Bojovic is a lecturer in sustainability and environment, both at the University of Technology Sydney.

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