CropLife Calls for Urgent Action to Modernise Agricultural Regulation at Productivity Roundtable

    12 August 2025

    12 August 2025 (Brisbane) – CropLife Australia’s Chief Executive Officer, Matthew Cossey,
    today, urged the Federal Government to act immediately to implement measures that will
    assist the Australian agricultural sector to lift its productivity.

    Speaking today at the Agricultural Productivity Roundtable convened by Minister Collins and
    Assistant Minister Chisholm in Brisbane, Mr Cossey said the meeting is a welcome opportunity;
    however, it should not be used as an excuse for delaying actions that can be taken by the
    Government now.

    “We already know that innovation has been at the core of productivity revolutions throughout
    the history of Australian agriculture. Yet we’ve seen a two-speed agricultural economy emerge
    between sectors that have access to and adopt new innovations and science-based practices
    and those who don’t,” Mr Cossey said.

    “Innovators in crop protection and new seed breeding innovations face growing delays and
    uncertainty in gaining new product approvals. This makes it harder to bring new technologies
    to Australian farmers, with our small market. This means returns for companies are often
    marginal, with some choosing to take their R&D and innovations elsewhere.

    “Already global innovator companies are publicly stating they are pulling back from investment
    in local R&D and commercialisation activity in New Zealand, citing the crippling costs of delay
    and regulatory burden.

    “Without urgent reform, Australia risks being next, leaving Australian farmers waiting years for
    tools that are already available overseas. That gap is a drag on our agricultural productivity
    that will only get wider without decisive action from government.

    “Today I raised at the ag productivity roundtable, the importance of incentivising innovation
    which comes at no cost to the Federal Government’s Budget. Failing to do so will cost the
    economy and Australians far more in the long run,” said Mr Cossey.

    CropLife’s key suggested policy initiatives are:

    1. Restore the APVMA’s on-time performance – Maintaining high regulatory standards is
    not mutually exclusive to efficient, timely and predictable regulation. It is incumbent on the
    APVMA to better utilise world leading regulatory-science to deliver on-time approvals for new
    products that will enable our farmers to continue being world-leading.
    2. Modernise Australia’s Gene Technology Scheme – Delays to implementing modern risk
    proportionate reforms to Australia’s gene technology laws have held back investment in new
    breeding techniques for almost ten years. These technologies are required to ensure farmers
    have access to newer crop varieties that are adapted to climate change and underpin healthy
    eating and access new export markets.
    3. Strengthen Australia’s IP laws to innovation – Australia’s small market for plant science
    innovation means delays in new products due to mandatory pre-market assessment, reduces
    the incentive to release new plant science technologies here. Improvement to IP laws will
    support accelerating the release of new crop protection products and crops that use genetic
    modification and new breeding techniques.

    “These aren’t new asks – the plant science industry has been presenting these solutions to the
    Government for years,” said Mr Cossey. “The solutions are on the table. Now it’s on the
    Government to implement them. Without action, Australia faces an agricultural policy and
    production crisis within the decade.”

    “Farmers can’t lift productivity alone – they need a system that gets innovation to the farm gate
    faster, more predictably, and with less red tape. Without that, we risk falling behind our
    competitors and missing out on the economic and environmental benefits these technologies
    deliver.”

    – ENDS

    Contact: Elyse Denman | 0459 550 010 | elyse.denman@croplife.org.au