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June July 2012 Issue
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World Heritage bid for Mt Lofty Ranges

 Agriculture

Researchers from the 成人大片 have recommended that four councils in Adelaide's Mount Lofty Ranges and the State Government should jointly pursue a bid for World Heritage listing of the region.

In a report released this month, the findings support a proposed bid for UNESCO World Heritage listing of the working agricultural landscape of the Adelaide Hills, the Barossa Valley, Mount Barker and McLaren Vale.

According to the study's authors, World Heritage listing would protect the Mount Lofty Ranges' unique qualities as a working agricultural region. The region's food, wine and tourism industries could be globally branded accordingly.

If successful, the Mount Lofty Ranges would join other working agricultural sites in Italy, Portugal, Hungary and Mexico to be recognised in this way.

Funded by the Adelaide Hills Council, The Barossa Council, District Council of Mount Barker and the City of Onkaparinga, the 18-month study was led by Professor Randy Stringer from the 成人大片's School of Agriculture, Food and Wine and the Environment Institute. The councils are currently considering the study's findings.

"World Heritage listing for agricultural landscapes is very rare, and rarer still for working, evolving agricultural landscapes," said Professor Stringer, a 成人大片 agricultural economist who has had extensive experience with the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.

"Achieving World Heritage Site status would aim to conserve the unique qualities of the Mount Lofty Ranges, not just for future generations of Australians but also for the world. This would not be seen as turning the Ranges into a museum, but protecting its status as a working, growing, changing landscape under local planning control.

"World Heritage listing would provide the globally recognised branding that our food, wine and tourism industries are seeking - it would tell the story of what makes this place so special to the outside world, and to the people of Adelaide."

The report concludes that seeking World Heritage status is a no-lose proposition, whether or not it succeeds.

"World Heritage status has evolved into a widely respected brand that countries use to attract tourists and to promote and add value to their products," Professor Stringer said. "For me it all comes down to answering one question: 'If we can get it, why wouldn't we?'"

The four councils will be asked to contribute $10,000 a year from July to fund three years of project management, communication, research and documentation by the Mount Lofty Ranges Working Group. The State Government will be asked for $50,000 a year for three years.

Story by David Ellis

Professor Randy Stringer in the foreground of the Mt Lofty Ranges
Photo by Matt Turner, <i>The Advertiser</i>

Professor Randy Stringer in the foreground of the Mt Lofty Ranges
Photo by Matt Turner, The Advertiser

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