![Federal agriculture minister, Murray Watt, launching the 2023/24 Australian-grown Horticulture Sustainability Framework last November. Picture supplied Federal agriculture minister, Murray Watt, launching the 2023/24 Australian-grown Horticulture Sustainability Framework last November. Picture supplied](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/F96xjWybVc3FcQiiSwA3u6/71b7e90f-54b5-407b-b2af-0fd68aa8205b.jpg/r0_762_4032_3029_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
THE push to ensure horticulture is ticking all the right boxes for sustainability continues with a new tool to help producers.
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Last November, federal agriculture minister Murray Watt launched the 2023/24 Australian-grown Horticulture Sustainability Framework, a tool to help the horticulture sector share its sustainable, ethical and safe farming practice stories with stakeholders.
Developed through Hort Innovation, the resource equips growers to proactively manage sustainability now, and in the future.
The launch came around the same time International Fresh Produce Association (IFPA) hosted sustainability workshops in Brisbane, Melbourne and Auckland aimed at bringing together members to explore the benefits and the process of becoming a sustainability-certified horticulture business.
In March 2022, the inaugural Horticulture Sustainability Summit was held in Sydney where key decision-makers from the horticulture, technology, transport and retail sectors gathered.
It followed on from the release of the Australian-Grown Sustainability Framework in 2021.
The recently launched Sustainability Framework has identified four areas significant to the sustainable production of fruits, vegetables, nuts and amenity horticulture in Australia:
- Nourish & Nurture: This recognises the role of Australian horticultural produce in improving diets, health and wellbeing by providing safe, quality food and greenlife.
- People & Enterprise: This identifies the strong links between the people, enterprises, communities and economic value of Australian-grown horticulture.
- Planet & Resources: This focusses on sustainable agricultural practices by reducing any impacts on the natural environment and on the dependence of horticultural production on resources, biosecurity.
- Climate & Waste: This is about reducing all forms of waste in horticultural production and resilience to climatic variability.
Mr Watt said the framework provided a sustainability roadmap for the horticulture sector.
"Being able to demonstrate sustainability is becoming increasingly important to domestic consumers and our international trading partners," he said.
"A strong, sustainable hort sector produces nourishing food, fulfilling employment, and helps protect our environment now and for future generations.
"This Sustainability Framework initiative unites the horticulture sector in its journey to monitor the sustainability issues that matter to its stakeholders."
Hort Innovation chair, Julie Bird, said the framework was the culmination of an extensive consultation process to understand the horticulture sectors' sustainability priorities for the future.
"Hort Innovation has worked with more than 600 stakeholders to deliver the framework, which promotes sustainable and responsible care for our natural environment and provides a vital roadmap for a stronger Australian farming future," Ms Bird said.
National Farmers Federation Horticulture Council executive officer, Richard Shannon, said the horticulture sector was now looking at how it can harness the framework and start telling its story.
"The council, on behalf of its members, supports the 2023/24 Australian-grown Horticulture Sustainability Framework as an important tool for growers to translate their practices, which in many cases are already leading edge, into a language their buyers, consumers and the public understand," Mr Shannon said.
"While horticulture, like any industry, has room to improve, we also have a strong and proud history of proactively providing assurance for consumers and the public where concerns arise, including around food safety and more recently fair employment practices.
"The framework captures this existing work and gives us a guide for our future efforts."
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