Skip to main content

Salubris aiming for Indigenous outcome

September 19, 2024
In The News
  • Brendon Grylls and Marlinyu Ghoorlie group representative Maxine Dimer Brendon Grylls and Marlinyu Ghoorlie group representative Maxine Dimer

Executive Director Brendon Grylls recently sat down with Mark Pownall to discuss how we’re challenging traditional carbon abatement practices and creating carbon credits that deliver more value. Published in the September issue of the Business News Magazine, the article highlights how we’re targeting low-value land with innovative land management initiatives and establishing exemplar Indigenous partnerships to maximise outcomes and empower local communities.

Please see a preview of the article as below –

Salubris aiming for Indigenous outcome

Managing the land could challenge tree planting when it comes to carbon credits.

Brendon Grylls may have moved on from politics to commercial life, but he remains firmly involved in regional development.

Most recently, that involves a business that wants to help Indigenous groups earn income from managing their own land.

The former Nationals WA leader, who was the architect of the Royalties for Regions scheme and responsible for its implementation as regional development and lands minister more than a decade ago, has taken a leadership role with carbon credit group Salubris, backed by investment adviser Argonaut.

Salubris already owns the 200,000 hectare Gindalbie station in the Goldfields. Here, it earns carbon credits through increasingly common techniques such as destocking, as well as feral animal and weed suppression, allowing the native flora to recover in what is referred to as human-induced regeneration.

– Mark Pownall, Business News

Business News subscribers can read the full article as published in the September issue of the Business News Magazine here.

Other News