CATTLE

Cattle body commits to international reporting standards

Peak body set to introduce new reporting standards for cattle producers.

Staff writer
 Cattle Australia has committed to a new international reporting standard for beef production. Photo: Mark Saunders.

Cattle Australia has committed to a new international reporting standard for beef production. Photo: Mark Saunders.

The commitment followed a meeting held late last year of more than 50 industry leaders from across the supply chain in Rockhampton, Queensland.

Cattle Australia chief executive officer, Dr Chris Parker, said the sector recognised it needed to be part of the solution in providing a clear, evidence-based definition of deforestation and biodiversity for the Australian landscape.

"Our incredibly ancient landscapes have evolved over the past 50 million years, meaning our land, its soils, plants, animals, and ecological systems are incredibly unique," Dr Parker said.

"It's just not feasible to compare Australia's land management practices for beef production with other jurisdictions, so we need to develop fit-for-purpose, regionally specific indicators for global reporting that recognise our inherent ecological differences."

Dr Parker said Australia's more than 40,000 grassfed cattle producers, and farmers more broadly, had a strong history of innovating and developing land management practices to suit the environment in which they operate.

"While we haven't always got it right, we have a proven history of learning and evolving our practices as science and research and development has improved," he said.

Extensive research undertaken across Australia's diverse bioregions that has informed the Australian Government's Monitoring, evaluation, reporting and improvement tool (MERIT) will be used to develop a national definition of deforestation for the Australian context, which is globally accepted for use in the supply chain and by financial institutions.

In addition, the information will be used to create a voluntary and market-driven minimum sustainability standard on environmental stewardship for use in traceability systems.

Dr Parker said with more than 6000 global companies having aligned with the Science Based Target initiative (SBTi), a European-driven not-for-profit organisation requiring companies to set public reporting targets for reduced emissions, zero deforestation and demonstrated improvements to biodiversity within their supply chains, the importance of verified ecological credentials would continue to grow.

By 2024, these companies will be required to report progress against these targets through mandatory public disclosure.

"With 70 per cent of Australia's beef exported to global markets, we are committed to providing greater transparency and traceability throughout the supply chain to both customers and consumers," he said.

Cattle Australia is expecting the framework to be developed by the end of the 2024 calendar year to meet SBTi guidance requirements for 2025.

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the farming sector, brought to you by the Kondinin team.

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the farming sector, brought to you by the Kondinin team.

editions

Research Report: Side-by-side Vehicles (November 2025)

Kondinin Group’s research team dives into the side-by-side market for this report, looking at popular diesel models, a few petrol versions and a couple of electric vehicles.

editions

Research Report: Farming Inputs (October 2025)

Inputs are unavoidable in any farming system. This Research Report focuses on several key farming inputs with a view to maximising outputs, production and profit.

editions

Research Report: Self-Propelled Sprayer Testing (September 2025)

Kondinin Group’s Mark Saunders, Ben White and Josh Giumelli have rounded up five of the latest self-propelled sprayers to cast a discerning eye over them for this month’s Research Report. The sprayers were run over our regular test track and thoroughly inspected to see what makes these million-dollar machines tick.

editions

Research Report: Sealable Storage Options (August 2025)

Kondinin Group researchers in collaboration with the GRDC Grain storage extension team test dozens of gas-tight sealable grain storages to Australian Standard AS2628-2010 identifying best and worst features in the ultimate grain storage buyers guide.