62,956 results
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2020-126
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Australian Agrifood Data Exchange (OzAg Data Exchange): Deliver an interconnected data highway for Australia's AgriFood value chain - Proof of concept

Pain point: The delay in exchange and reconciliation of catch data by fishers and processors means that there is a delay in quota accounting which impacts planning due to lack of timely information. Furthermore, with no access to pre-fishing information data to the processors means they are unable...
ORGANISATION:
Meat and Livestock Australia (MLA)
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2020-124
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Australian Fisheries and Aquaculture Statistics 2019-2020

The Australian Fisheries and Aquaculture Statistics report contains comprehensive information on commercial fishing and aquaculture in Australia covering fisheries production, trade data and consumption and employment statistics. The report is aimed at providing statistical information for the...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry
SPECIES
Environment
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Indigenous Branding in the Fishing and Seafood Industry - Economic Creation and Capture

Project number: 2020-121
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $100,000.00
Principal Investigator: Ewan A. Colquhoun
Organisation: Ridge Partners
Project start/end date: 4 May 2021 - 29 Apr 2022
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Modern fishery regulations are creating new opportunities for Indigenous people to participate in the whole seafood chain. (see the recent corporate examples noted in the Background Section).

Indigenous people are increasingly the owners of commercial fishing licenses, and the operators of fishery businesses. But in wholesale markets their harvests will have to compete on price per kilogram with every other fishers' product. If they lack business scale or are not productive and commercially agile, their commercial business will not survive.

One option is for Indigenous fishers to offer seafood attributes that are unique and attractive to consumers. If products are differentiated and also branded in unique ways, some end-consumers may value these attributes and be willing to pay higher prices, which flow back to the fisher/owner of the brand. This is the same economic pathway that every other commercial fishing and seafood business pursues.

But does this logic apply to emerging Australian Indigenous brand fisheries? That is the question this project seeks to address.
Is there substantive global and local evidence supporting the development of specific commercial Indigenous food brands in any seafood/food market? And if there are commercial branding benefits, can Indigenous fishers/producers actually capture the benefits of the investment they make in such branding, or are they dissipated along the supply chain?

This analysis should be undertaken before further FRDC and other agency or authority funds are committed to R&D or other funding that supports the development of Indigenous seafood brands.

IRG Members considered how best to approach the challenge. Members supported that the Priority 2 (Benefits of an Indigenous brand) should be funded as a project immediately.
They agreed a technical analysis of the economic benefit of such a brand should be undertaken via a desktop international audit to capture information on successes and failures using such brands, understanding the whys, the costs, governance involved and if successful where is the benefit captured (at the supplier, middle person or the end point.

Objectives

1. Identify and engage with Indigenous enterprises that manage seafood brands
2. Draw conclusions re economic impacts of Indigenous food/seafood brands
3. Document and report the economic impacts on and potential for Australian Indigenous food/seafood brands.
4. Document which stages of the supply chain accrue the economic benefit from any branding

Final report

ISBN: 978-0-6487893-3-8 Indigenous brand assessment
Final Report • 2023-09-01 • 8.91 MB
2020-121-DLD.pdf

Summary

This project was commissioned by the Indigenous Reference Group (IRG), an advisory committee to the Fisheries Research and Development Corporation (FRDC). The report provides professional advice to the IRG regarding the potential for economic impacts from branding by Australian and international Indigenous seafood enterprises in commercial markets.
The executive summary comprises three parts:
1. Research framework and limitations,
2. Issues and drivers for Indigenous seafood branding,
3. Conclusions from case studies and review.

Assessing the effectiveness of IRG R&D projects to deliver change

Project number: 2020-120
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $147,938.00
Principal Investigator: Leila Alkassab
Organisation: Land to Sea Consulting
Project start/end date: 31 Oct 2021 - 30 Jul 2022
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Within each IRG project there is always an attempt to address multiple IRG Priorities, particularly a capacity building component. However, what is often missing is an understanding of what impact the project has had and how the capacity building component from each project has led to any discernible change from a participant’s perspective. The IRG through the FRDC have funded two recent projects that were both designed to lead to an up-skilling, and hopefully a call to action in addressing Indigenous participation in fisheries areas. This project seeks to better understand the impacts these projects have made in these areas from the perspective of the project participants. Researchers will collate the experiences of participants through semi-structured interviews and develop resources suitable to communicate outcomes to stakeholders.

Objectives

1. To undertake a series of semi-structured interviews with participants of two previous FRDC IRG projects
2. To document and collate the experiences of participants from two FRDC IRG projects
3. To develop resources suitable to communicate findings of this project to stakeholders
4. To provide professional capacity building for Indigenous student in project management and research

Final report

Authors: Leila Alkassab Paris Beasy
Final Report • 2024-07-25
2020-120-DLD.pdf

Summary

This project assesses the effectiveness of FRDC IRG projects to deliver change. Using two previous FRDC IRG funded projects as case studies, the assessment evaluates the impact of research and capacity building on Indigenous and non-Indigenous participants. This is vital for advancing both strengths as well as identifying areas for improvement in future projects. The conversations we had with 20 individuals, which took place over the phone and were analysed through NVIVO, which identified and coded common themes between the interviews. Based on recurring themes, the findings and key messages are presented within this report and within additional reports which are written in accessible language and design. Reflective of our conversations with workshop attendees, this report identifies how projects were perceived, experienced and areas of improvement based on the participant’s point of view.
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