Wrap It Right: What Australia's New Food Packaging Manufacturing Centre Means for Safety and Compliance in the Food and Beverage Workforce
A new manufacturing centre has just launched with the express purpose of helping small and medium food businesses improve their packaging processes and reduce waste. On the surface, it reads as an environmental win and a smart business upgrade. But for anyone working in or hiring for the food and beverage sector, there's a deeper story here — one about compliance obligations, workforce readiness, and what happens when production lines are upgraded without the people on those lines being properly prepared.
This is a food safety conversation. And it's one Australia's food and beverage industry needs to have right now.
The Packaging Centre: What It Actually Is
The recently launched manufacturing centre is designed to give SME food producers access to packaging innovation, sustainable materials, and waste reduction support that would otherwise be out of reach for smaller operators. For a sector dominated by businesses that can't afford their own R&D departments, this kind of shared infrastructure is genuinely useful.
But here's what often gets glossed over in the announcement: when you change packaging processes, you change the production environment. You introduce new machinery, new materials, new handling procedures — and with them, new risks.
The food and beverage manufacturing sector already sits in a uniquely complex compliance environment. Workers are subject to Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) requirements, Safe Work Australia workplace health and safety obligations, and in many cases, retailer-specific food safety audits on top of state-based SafeWork regulations. Add a new packaging line or a shift to compostable materials, and you've potentially created a compliance gap before a single new box has been sealed.
Why Compliance Gaps Open Up During Upgrades
This is one of the most persistent problems in food and beverage manufacturing, and it's not unique to smaller operators. When businesses modernise equipment or change their packaging supply chain, the focus naturally goes to the machines, the materials, and the cost savings. What gets underprioritised — almost every time — is workforce retraining.
Consider what a packaging change might involve:
- New heat-sealing or sealing pressure settings that require different operator handling
- Modified cleaning and sanitation protocols when new materials interact differently with food contact surfaces
- Revised manual handling requirements if new packaging formats are heavier, awkward, or require different ergonomic techniques
- Updated HACCP documentation to reflect new allergen or contamination risk points in the changed process
If the people on the production floor haven't been retrained, the risk isn't just a failed audit. It's a food safety incident — or a worker injury — waiting to happen.
As Australian Manufacturing continues to report, the food sector is navigating simultaneous pressures: rising energy costs, tightening margins, and an ongoing skilled labour shortage. That combination makes corners get cut. And in food manufacturing, the corners you cannot afford to cut are the ones involving safety and compliance.
What the Food Standards Code Actually Requires
Food businesses operating in Australia are required to comply with the Food Standards Code administered by FSANZ. This includes Standard 3.2.2, which covers food safety practices and general requirements, and Standard 3.2.2A, which since 2023 has introduced mandatory food safety management tools for certain businesses — including documentation, supervision, and food handler training requirements.
For employers in food and beverage manufacturing, this translates to some non-negotiable obligations:
Food Handler Training
Every person working with food — including those on packaging lines — must have skills and knowledge in food safety and hygiene commensurate with their work activities. This isn't a one-time induction box-tick. It applies when roles change, when processes change, and when new equipment is introduced.
Supervisory Oversight
Under Standard 3.2.2A, businesses must ensure that food handling operations are under the supervision of a person who has relevant food safety competency. If your site is adding new packaging capabilities, that supervisor needs to understand the new risks — which means they need training too.
HACCP-Based Plans
For medium to larger food manufacturers, a Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points (HACCP) plan isn't optional — it's the backbone of your food safety management system. Any process change needs to trigger a review of critical control points, and that review needs to be documented.
Failure to maintain these standards can result in enforcement action from state and territory food regulators, loss of certification, or in serious cases, prosecution under both food law and WHS legislation.
The Labour Hire Angle: Who's Responsible?
Food and beverage manufacturing is one of the sectors that relies heavily on labour hire services to manage production surges, cover absences, and staff new lines during expansion. It's an efficient model — but it creates a compliance question that too many businesses answer incorrectly.
The short answer: both the labour hire agency and the host employer carry WHS obligations. Under the model WHS laws adopted across most Australian states and territories, a person conducting a business or undertaking (PCBU) must ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health and safety of workers — including labour hire workers placed at their site.
That means:
- Labour hire workers must receive site-specific inductions that cover the actual processes they'll be working with — not just a generic safety video
- If packaging lines have changed, labour hire workers returning to that site need to be re-inducted on the new procedures
- Host employers cannot assume the agency has covered food safety training specific to their facility — because they generally haven't
This is the gap that leads to incidents. And in food manufacturing, incidents don't just hurt people — they shut down production lines, trigger regulatory investigations, and can make national news.
What Employers Should Do Right Now
If your food or beverage manufacturing site is undergoing any process or packaging upgrade — or if you're planning to take advantage of support through initiatives like the new packaging manufacturing centre — here's a practical compliance checklist:
- Trigger a HACCP review before the new process goes live, not after
- Update your site induction materials to reflect any new equipment, materials, or procedures
- Confirm food handler training records are current for all staff — including casual and labour hire workers
- Audit your supervisory coverage to ensure someone with current food safety competency is overseeing the new line
- Brief your labour hire partner on what's changed so they can flag it during pre-placement screening
- Document everything — regulators want to see records, not intentions
For workers in food and beverage manufacturing, particularly those moving between sites through labour hire arrangements, check out our salary guide to understand what competitive rates look like in compliant, well-managed food production environments — because sites that take safety seriously also tend to pay properly.
What This Means for Australian Food and Beverage Workers
If you're working on a food production or packaging line, you have rights — and responsibilities. You're entitled to proper training before operating new equipment. You're entitled to a safe work environment regardless of whether you're a direct employee, a casual, or a labour hire worker. And you should never be pressured to skip a safety step to keep production moving.
If your site has recently introduced new packaging processes and you haven't received updated training, raise it. Under Australia's WHS laws, you have the right to refuse unsafe work, and you cannot be penalised for doing so.
For those looking to build a long-term career in food and beverage manufacturing — a sector that, despite current output pressures, remains a significant employer across NSW, QLD, VIC, and SA — investing in formal food safety qualifications is one of the smartest moves you can make. A Food Safety Supervisor certificate, a HACCP awareness course, or a Certificate III in Food Processing can meaningfully separate you from the field. Register as a candidate with HBG and let us match you to employers who value that investment.
The Bottom Line
A new manufacturing centre helping food SMEs improve packaging is a genuine step forward for Australian industry. But improvement only sticks when the people doing the work are trained, compliant, and protected. The machine is only as safe as the operator. The packaging line is only as compliant as the process behind it.
For more on how innovation is reshaping food and beverage manufacturing in Australia, Australian Manufacturing continues to be one of the sector's most reliable sources of industry intelligence.
At Harrison Barratt Group, we place workers in food and beverage manufacturing environments across Australia and understand the compliance obligations that come with every placement. Whether you're an employer building a new production capability or a worker ready to move into a well-run facility, we can help you get there safely and compliantly. Request a quote to talk through your food and beverage workforce needs today.