Batavia Savanna Burning Project

Savanna Burning
  • Location

    Queensland

  • Status

    Active

  • Abatement volume

    72,458 ACCUs total units issued

Units generated:
ACCU

Purchased by:
Commercial in confidence

Verification doc
Emissions Reduction Fund Register

The Batavia Savanna Burning Project covers an area of 241,637 ha in Far North Queensland. Savanna burning is a cultural tradition amongst the Batavia Traditional Owners and has been used for many generations to manage the land.

The project activities involve strategic and planned fire management of savanna areas in the high and low rainfall zones during the early dry season to reduce the risk of late dry season wildfires. These preventative measures provide significant cultural and environmental co-benefits. They prevent wildfires from threatening cultural sites, essential infrastructure, and biodiversity by conserving vegetation, animal species, protects wetlands and control weeds

The project is situated in the 1000mm rainfall isohyet in Far North Queensland, and is managed by the Batavia Traditional Owners Aboriginal Corporation (BTOAC) and Corporate Carbon Solutions Pty Ltd.

Batavia Downs was originally established as a grazing property, it then became a Queensland State Government (Department of Primary Industries) research station, before being granted back to the Atambaya, Northern Kaanju and Yinwum People in November 2012.

A portion of the land, being Batavia National Park (CYPAL), is jointly managed by Queensland Parks & Wildlife (QPWS) and the Batavia Traditional Owners Aboriginal Corporation (BTOAC). Neighbouring properties include Steve Irwin Wildlife Reserve (north-west), Bramwell (north), Bromley (east), Lockhart River and Merluna (south), Sudley and Billy’s Lagoon (west).

Since 2023, Gondwana Carbon has acted as the agent of the Batavia Savanna Burning Project, assisting BTOAC in the development and management of their carbon project.

Project Co-benefits

Sustainable Development Goals