Toasting team taking on overseas trade

The Hon David Littleproud MP
Minister for Agriculture and Northern Australia
  • $500,000 Agricultural Trade and Market Access Cooperation (ATMAC) grant awarded to the Australian Food and Wine Collaboration Group
  • Brings together agricultural peak bodies and R&D corporations to promote Australian food and wine in key Asian markets
  • A $500,000 grant to the Australian Food and Wine Collaboration Group will promote premium Australian food and wine in South Korea and several South-East Asia markets.

    Minister for Agriculture and Northern Australia David Littleproud said the grant will benefit Australian dairy, wine, meat, horticulture, and seafood industries by promoting Australian food and wine to international markets.

    “It is exciting to see our clean, reliable and sustainable Australian produce celebrated on the world stage, and to showcase the talents of our farmers, exporters, and supply chain stakeholders,” Minister Littleproud said.

    “We’re helping international buyers find out more about our premium Australian food and wine in four key export markets and strengthening visibility of Australian branding across manufacturing, food service and retail.

    “I want international markets to think of Australia as a supplier of high-quality food and wine with high standards of food safety.

    “This Team Australia collaborative project brings together rural RDCs and peak bodies across the five sectors. It also leverages an industry-government partnership including the overseas network of DAWE, Austrade and DFAT.”

    Australian Food and Wine Collaboration Group spokesperson Charlie McElhone said the joint promotion will look to improve market access and demand for Australian food and wine exports.

    “There are real benefits in collaborating and leveraging each other’s expertise to engage with overseas markets,” Mr McElhone said.

    “Working together, we will use a “Team Australia” approach to create cut-through with messaging about Australian premium food and wine on global markets.

    “Initially, the South Korean market will be targeted in a six-month pilot. If successful, a similar approach will be adopted in Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, and other high-growth Asian markets.”

    Fast Facts:

    • The project will harness resources and knowledge of the four RDCs (Dairy Australia, Meat & Livestock Australia, Hort Innovation and Wine Australia) and a peak industry body (Seafood Industry Australia) to deliver the promotions.
    • The project uses a ‘Team Australia’ approach to leverage the strengths of each RDC and peak body. This sees Australian industries working together to take on their competitors.
    • ATMAC grants are part of the Australian Government’s now $85.9 million Agri-business expansion initiative.

    /Public Release. View in full here.