The state Labor government has copped a barrage of criticism from farming organisations in the wake of its review into the 2018 Queensland bushfires.
Queensland's Inspector-General of Emergency Management recently completed a review of the fires that razed more than 520,000 hectares late last year.
Green Shirts campaign director Bryson Head said the review was a "tick and flick" bureaucratic exercise that failed to address key land management issues.
"These fires began due to the incompetent and dangerous ignorance of basic land management practices within the Palaszczuk government," Mr Head said.
In the aftermath of the fires last year, landholders said high fuel loads on government land exacerbated risks around Central and North Queensland.
The failure to look at the state's own land management practices was one of the most worrying aspects of the review, AgForce chief executive Michael Guerin said.
"The Government's failure to manage undergrowth and fuel loads in National Parks and State Forests - whether due to lack of resourcing or ideological design - undoubtedly contributed to the ferocity of the firs and the unusual difficulty in putting them out once they reached private land," he said.
Mr Guerin backed a call by the review to "reassess" how vegetation management policies were impacting the bushfire mitigation activities of Queensland land holders.
"We applaud the IGEM for the thoroughness and honesty of his review and can only hope the Government reflects on and implements - not just 'in-principle' accepts - the recommendations," he said.
"In particular, his conclusion that frequent and regular changes to the VMA over many years have left landowners confused as to what they can and cannot do to prevent fires without breaking the law is frightening."
Emergency Services Minister Craig Crawford said the reviews had concluded there was an exceptional response to both the flooding and bushfire disasters.
"It's there in black and white - 'exceptional' - and the way our emergency workers, communities and councils came together is truly worthy of the word," he said.
Acting Emergency Services Commissioner Mike Wassing said Queensland Fire and Emergency Services would be "stronger than ever" following the reviews.