New in 2024, Colliers Agribusiness is pleased to present for sale Warralakin Aggregation, a prime opportunity within the Central East Wheatbelt of Western Australia.
Key features of Warralakin Aggregation include:
• Total Landholding: Warralakin encompasses a total of 40,401 hectares with 33,591 hectares of arable land, ideally suited for cropping and livestock production.
• Strategic Cropping Enterprise of Scale: In 2024, Warralakin completed seeding 22,949* hectares of wheat and 5,182* hectares of barley, totaling 28,131* hectares. This extensive cultivation highlights Warralakin's capacity for high-volume grain production, reinforcing its pivotal role in the region's agricultural output.
• Carbon Farming and Renewables Potential: Warralakin is uniquely positioned to capitalise on the growing interest in carbon farming. The large landholding provides an opportunity for contiguous, at-scale land packages suitable for carbon development and renewable energy to operate alongside current farming operations. Potential for a tree carbon planting generating 6 ACCUs/Ha/year has been identified.
• Extensively Developed Landholdings: Warralakin benefits from extensive infrastructure and soil types conducive to high-quality grain production. Its proximity to key grain receival sites and efficient transport networks, including rail and road, ensures seamless logistics, facilitating effective transport of goods to the Port of Fremantle, Australia's largest grain terminal.
• Going Concern Investment Opportunity: Warralakin is available on a going concern basis, offering an immediate turn-key enterprise, inclusive of an extensive list of plant and equipment and fully staffed.
• Well-positioned in a Renowned Agricultural Region: Located in the Central East Wheatbelt, Warralakin is geographically well-situated in a productive agricultural region with direct access to lucrative export markets. The region is a major contributor to Australia's grains industry, with over 90% of production exported to Asia and the Middle East. The area is predominantly used for dryland cropping and is well-serviced by strategic grain receival sites at Merredin and Bodallin, efficient rail and road networks, and the largest grain terminal in Australia at the Port of Fremantle.
The eastern Wheatbelt is particularly well-suited to vegetative carbon sequestration due to its vast agricultural land, favourable soil profile, and lower land values, enabling low-cost, high-integrity carbon sequestration at scale.
For Sale by International Expressions of Interest.