AMT DEC 2021

Page 89

AGRICULTURE, FOOD & BEVERAGES

Strong growth for food, grocery manufacturing amid export gains Australia’s food and grocery manufacturing industry has grown by 4% to almost $133bn, according to new data from the Australian Food and Grocery Council (AFGC), with a rise in the value of exports driving the performance. Releasing the latest State of the Industry report, which analyses data for 2019/20, AFGC CEO Tanya Barden said the increase in food and grocery exports – up 7.9% on the previous financial year to $41.3bn – showed the importance of export markets to local manufacturers. “In a period affected by drought, bushfires and the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, Australian food and grocery manufacturers demonstrated their resilience and resourcefulness by growing the value of this vitally important industry, particularly in overseas markets,” Barden said. On the domestic front, COVID lockdowns spurred an increase in consumption through super-market channels, although this was dampened by a reduction in sales through food service channels such as restaurants and convenience stores. “While the lift in sales is a positive for the industry, it hides the fact that businesses have in-curred increased costs due to several factors including the COVID-related expenses of maintain-ing safe workplaces, operational changes to meet increased demand and address supply chain disruptions, a tripling of sea freight charges and increases in commodity and packaging prices,” Barden said. “These cost increases follow a decade where costs have grown at double the rate of wholesale prices and there is a need for the industry to recoup costs going forward to main-tain viable operations.”

• A 12.1% increase in the value of imports to $39.9bn. • A slight increase in food and grocery’s share of total Australian manufacturing, up 0.4% to 32% • A slight decline (0.2%) in total industry employment to 270,801 people. Growth in sales to China were a key driver of exports, with a significant increase in meat ex-ports and a notable 18% increase in human pharmaceutical products, lifting the value of that high-value-added export to $6.6bn. Barden said increasing exports of high-value products is a key goal for Australian food and grocery manufacturing, as outlined in the Sustaining Australia report.

The State of the Industry report also shows a 5.2% increase in capital investment in the period, but despite this modest increase, capital investment is still well below the levels needed to achieve the vision of doubling the size of the industry by 2030, as set out in the Federal Gov-ernment’s Modern Manufacturing Strategy Food and Beverage Roadmap, and in AFGC’s report, Sustaining Australia: Food and Grocery Manufacturing 2030.

“The State of the Industry data adds to indepth analysis of the industry done by the AFGC and provides a clear picture of the challenges and opportunities for Australia’s food and grocery manufacturers,” she said.

The AFGC’s State of the Industry represents a detailed analysis of Australian food and grocery manufacturing performance and this latest edition provides a snapshot of the industry in the early stages of the COVID19-related disruption.

“We have said that, with the right policy settings to encourage investment, Australian food and grocery manufacturing can double in value to $250bn by 2030,” she said. “Important decisions to encourage investment need to be made now so that the industry can secure a strong future and help the Australian economy rebound from the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Among key findings of the report are: • A 7.9% increase in the value of exports from the food and grocery manufacturing indus-try to $41.3bn.

Reversing a decade-long trend of stagnant investment in the industry is critical to longterm success, Barden said, as is ensuring near-term stability with a more rational approach by retail-ers to cost pressures than had occurred over the last decade.

www.afgc.org.au

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MANUFACTURING HISTORY: A look back in time

4min
pages 120-122

AMTIL FORUMS

17min
pages 108-111

Lockheed Martin partners with Omni Tanker

4min
page 106

Integra Systems – What is Circularity by Design?

3min
page 102

Foamex: Recycling polystyrene & closing the loop

2min
page 103

A smarter way of dealing with plastic

4min
pages 104-105

Recycling pioneer named NSW Australian of the Year

4min
page 101

Autowell – Vices for any machining setting

2min
page 99

Improving plastic recycling with hyperspectral imaging

4min
page 100

Haubex: Lang Technik’s latest innovation

3min
page 98

Sharp Tooling commissions large Okuma machine

2min
page 97

TAFE NSW gets tooled up with Suhner

3min
page 96

AM case study: AGCOM

5min
pages 92-93

COMPANY FOCUS: Agerris – Pioneers in their field

7min
pages 94-95

Meeting the need for extremely dry compressed air

7min
pages 90-91

Strong growth for food, grocery manufacturing

3min
page 89

ONE ON ONE: Dr Mirjana Prica

15min
pages 84-87

The impact of alignment on steel turning processes

5min
pages 82-83

Upton Engineering – Performance through precision

17min
pages 76-81

Metals leader partners with ipLaser

15min
pages 72-75

Tool for safer human-robot collaboration

4min
page 68

Perfume robots

4min
page 69

Press brakes – Why you need a seven-axis machine

6min
pages 70-71

Lorch – Bringing cobot welding to ANZ

5min
pages 66-67

Forklift safety: Is hi-vis the best we can offer?

6min
pages 64-65

Hangsterfer’s: A racing finish

6min
pages 62-63

Where can F1 in Schools take students?

14min
pages 58-61

EVOS: EV charging, made in Brisbane

4min
pages 56-57

What can we learn from the great chip famine?

5min
pages 52-53

Simulation speeds rollcage design process

7min
pages 50-51

How 3D printing makes McLaren go faster

8min
pages 54-55

Aussie aftermarket sector steams ahead

11min
pages 44-49

From the CEO

4min
pages 12-13

VOICEBOX: Opinions from the manufacturing industry

27min
pages 30-35

PRODUCT NEWS: Selection of new products

22min
pages 36-43

INDUSTRY NEWS: Current news from the Industry

27min
pages 20-29

From the Ministry

4min
pages 14-15

Advances in CNC tech fuel need for digitised tools 7

2min
pages 8-9

From the Industry

4min
pages 16-17

From the Union

4min
pages 18-19
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