Text:'Food quality and safety'. Image: farfalle pasta. Photo from iStockphoto.com/Suzannah Skelton

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Moulded plastics trays for packaging chocolates into a cardboard gift box.

We're developing a range of new packaging materials that will mean more convenient, fresher, and better-tasting food, and a longer life for medical products.

  • Cows grazing in a paddock with a virtual fence.

    The Agribusiness Group serves large and vital sectors of the Australian economy including the agri-food industry and the human health sector.

  • Windmill amongst a field of yellow canola with a blue sky in the background.

    CSIRO is improving Australia’s food production and farming systems to ensure food and fibre are delivered to Australians on a sustainable basis.

Events

 
  • Image of mixed grains, cereals and pulses.

    CSIRO is researching insect control and quality preservation of grain and stored durable products.

  • An arrange of fruit and vegetables including apples, carrot, eggplant and capsicum.

    By developing food materials science and food design technologies, Australia is staying at the forefront of new product and ingredient development to deliver foods with added health and processing benefits.

     

  • The superconducting part of this device is about one centimetre across and is mounted on a board about the size of a fifty cent piece.

    CSIRO has one of the world’s biggest groups of superconductivity scientists working on detectors for applications in geophysics, physical security, food safety and oceanography and in the frontier science of quantum engineering.

  • Clouds sweep over mountains behind a sugar cane field in the afternoon light of northern Queensland

    The tropics are home to most of the world's rainforests and coral reefs, plus around half of the world’s population, but tropical nations produce only 20% of Gross World Product. This makes sustainable management of tropical landscapes a pressing research challenge.

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  • A man holding a green bottle that has had the UV protectant applied.

    Light-induced damage is a significant problem for food and beverage products packaged in glass bottles. Using nanotechnology CSIRO has produced a solution, explained in this video. (1:00)

     

     

  • Cotton fibre.

    This article from Farming Ahead describes how researchers have closely monitoring contamination levels of raw cotton and stress that stakeholders must remain vigilant if Australia is to maintain its international standing as a high-quality producer. (3 pages)

  • Man in swamp with insect net

    This fact sheet outlines biosecurity research by CSIRO, which is helping to manage the increasing threat and damage from invasive alien species that come with globalisation. (2 pages)