Chapter 3 Issues raised in evidence
Overview
3.1
The Committee received submissions and heard evidence both in favour and
against the Bill. In summary, evidence tended to relate to the following:
n Concerns that the
Bill will lead to lower wheat quality. However, the Committee heard evidence
that the current Act has no direct influence on quality;
n Concern about the
abuse of market power by the bulk handling companies, if the access test is
abolished;
n The need for
information to be available to assist with strategic crop decisions and
efficient market operations. This does not form part of the Bill per se,
but the Committee was informed that a competitive deregulated market will be
dependent on access to grain stocks information; and
n General interest in
the need for continued statutory oversight, including the burden of regulation
and the provision of ‘industry good’ functions and services.
This chapter will cover
these four areas, consider a number of minor technical matters, and provide the
Committee’s findings and recommendations.
Quality assurance
3.2
As noted in Chapter 1, when it referred the Bill for inquiry, the
Selection Committee noted the link between Australia’s competitiveness and
quality assurance.[1] This was not disputed in
submissions or evidence; the quality, characteristics and performance of wheat
were universally accepted as integral.
3.3
Wheat classifications and standards provided by Grain Trade Australia (GTA)
and Wheat Quality Australia (WQA) are currently used as points of reference by
exporters and customers. GTA’s grain standards form the basis of trade for
domestic and export contracts (for ascertaining ‘receival standards’) while WQA
maintains a wheat classification system (for determining varieties and
end-product performance requirements). GTA and WQA are not government
entities; rather they are organised and mostly funded by industry.[2]
3.4
Mr Allen Grant (DAFF) said that as quality is presently managed within
the industry, coupled with the Productivity Commission’s finding that government
has no role to play, the Bill would not affect current quality control
arrangements.[3] He told the Committee:
The Productivity Commission looked in quite some detail at
the provision of industry services, including delivery of quality standards,
and basically concluded that this was an issue that the industry needed to
resolve to its own agreement and support.[4]
3.5
He concluded by saying:
...the current arrangements do not have any involvement by
the government in certifying wheat export quality standards, and the changes to
the Bill will not change that arrangement at all.[5]
3.6
The Western Australian Department of Agriculture and Food’s submission
gave a different viewpoint:
The United States and Canadian quality systems are similar to
that of Australia in that core elements include varietal registration and
functional performance, grading systems, uniformity, cleanliness and safety.[6]
3.7
The submission added:
The major difference is that the USA and Canadian systems are
currently less fragmented, possibly allowing these competitors to convey a
message that their systems are much stronger.[7]
3.8
The Department also emphasised the linkage between quality assurance and
the competitiveness of Australian wheat:
Quality assurance processes are one of a number of industry
good functions that could be improved to ensure Australian wheat remains valued
in a highly competitive world market.[8]
3.9
The NSW Farmers Association (NSWFA) submitted that performance and grain
functionality should be the yardsticks used for accreditation, as export
standards directly relate with reputational status.[9]
The NSWFA also commented that containerised wheat exports (not subject to
regulation) have become ‘a high risk to Australia’s reputation’. Furthermore,
according to NSWFA, ‘the [Productivity Commission] failed to adequately weight
the importance of wheat functionality to the value of Australia’s export
trade.’[10]
3.10
Grain Producers Australia (GPA) similarly submitted that accreditation
should be based on performance rather than character.[11] According to GPA, wheat may be contractually compliant in terms of
specification but fail to meet the end user’s functional requirements:
The US operates the Federal Grains Inspection Service and
Canada operated the Canadian Grain Commission to provide oversight and compliance
monitoring on export cargoes. These independent statutory structures provide a
high degree of confidence amongst end users and a clear accountability of the
trade.[12]
3.11
The Committee notes that in December 2011, the Canadian Parliament
passed legislation to disband the Canadian Wheat Board’s (CWB) monopoly
powers. The Marketing Freedom for Grain Farmers Act will cause the CWB
to be either dissolved or privatised within five years. This process in Canada
mirrors the course in Australia, whereby the former AWB’s monopoly powers were
repealed. The resulting Canadian regulatory situation would presumably be somewhere
between the current Australian regime and the full deregulation proposed in the
Bill.
3.12
In the United States, the Federal Grains Inspections Service (part of
the Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Administration within the US
Department of Agriculture) facilitates the marketing of US grain and related
agricultural products by establishing standards for quality assessments,
regulating handling practices, and managing a network of Federal, State, and
private laboratories that provide impartial, user fee funded official
inspection and weighing services.[13]
3.13
The Western Australian Farmers Federation (WAFF) similarly submitted
that ‘both bulk and non-bulk’ export cargoes should be monitored.[14]
Mr Graeme Foote, an agricultural marketing consultant, submitted:
Australia’s major competitors have cooperation amongst trade
and government to ensure that quality standards are maintained ensuring
constituency of grade is a paramount requirement.[15]
3.14
On the other hand, some submissions believed the absence of accreditation
would have a neutral effect on quality issues, and that government regulation
of quality would be difficult. GrainCorp submitted:
The industry is in the best position to manage quality and
should be encouraged to address remaining quality control issues of its own
accord.[16]
3.15
GrainCorp stated that the ‘perception of a decline’ could be
attributable to several factors:
n Deterioration and
variability of grain quality shipped in containers, usually by small container
packers that do not have sophisticated assets and quality systems. ...
n Grain exporters
shipping bulk wheat much closer to contracted quality specification to the
overseas customers than previously occurred. ... In a competitive grain export
market, grain exporters cannot afford to over-deliver grain against the
contracted minimum quality specification.
n Recent seasonal
factors have affected wheat quality, for example, the severe wet weather
experienced during the
2010-11 harvest....[17]
3.16
Evidence from Dr Kenneth Quail (Grain Growers Ltd) resonated the above
view:
...growers should be paid for the quality they are producing
and that that price needs to be driven all the way through to the market. That
is not happening adequately at the moment, but I do not see how regulation will
achieve that. It really has to be a market driven solution, and there are ways
to achieve that. I think that the industry is still going through a lot of
change and that we are probably working towards some of those solutions, but I
do not understand how regulation would force buyers to pay for certain
qualities or how regulation would even identify those qualities.[18]
Access test and code of conduct
3.17
As discussed in Chapter 2, the access test has been used to prevent
anti-competitive practices by integrated export companies that also have
monopoly control of key port infrastructure. The Bill proposes to abolish the
access test and offset its absence with a voluntary code of conduct to provide
for, amongst other things, port access. Documents relating to the development
of a code of conduct are included at Appendix C.
3.18
In its 2010 review, the Productivity Commission published the following
map to explain bulk wheat throughput by location. As shown below, terminal
operators are concentrated around regions of Australia.
Figure 1 Australian Bulk Wheat Terminals (2010)
Source Productivity Commission, ‘Wheat Export Marketing Arrangements’, report no. 51, July 2010,p.71.
3.19
Mr Pete Mailler (GPA) likened the supply chain infrastructure to
supermarket shelves, whereby bulk handling companies control access to port
infrastructure in the same way major supermarkets control access to shelf
space. ‘If you are a grain trader or an exporter and ultimately grow reliant
on this system you have to gain access to port terminals to get your product to
market,’ he said. Mr Mailler explained that the bulk handlers, like
supermarkets, have their own ‘house brands’. While they may pay the parent
company for access to port infrastructure, in his view, ‘it is not really a
competitive process.’[19]
3.20
CBH Group made a submission criticising some other evidence to the
inquiry:
There have been several submissions to this enquiry which
have directly accused Bulk Handling Companies, and by association the CBH
Group, of providing information on grain stocks, grain quality and grower
warehousing stocks unfairly to their associated marketing arms. These
allegations, in the case of the CBH Group, are unfounded and no such submission
has provided any verification of their claims. Disappointingly Wheat Exports
Australia has also adopted this approach of making allegations without
evidence.[20]
3.21
The Australian Grain Exporters Association (AGEA) agreed that port
access is an area ‘where the industry is not operating as efficiently as
possible.’[21]
3.22
On the other hand, the access test was criticised for creating costs for
no benefit. GrainCorp submitted:
...the benefits of the access test are diminishing and these
arrangements are now adding cost, as the Productivity Commission pointed out in
its recent report on the industry. To our knowledge, Australian bulk grain
port elevators are the only grain terminals regulated in this manner in the
world. Port terminals that service other commodities (such as coal and iron
ore) are not subject to the same constraints.[22]
3.23
WAFF submitted:
...sufficient arrangements have been put in place... and as
such the access test should be abolished on 30 September 2014, contingent on a
non-prescribed voluntary code of conduct being put in place.[23]
3.24
According to GPA:
The decision to abolish the access test should be dependent
on the confidence and assurance that the ACCC can manage the assessment of port
access arrangements in a way that provides at least an equal comfort as the
access test.[24]
3.25
Mr Mailler said that growers have ‘a very low level of confidence’ in
terms of how the code would develop as well as the consequences for not being a
signatory to the code.[25] The NSWFA agreed:
...the proposed move away from regulated port access to a
‘non-prescribed voluntary industry code of conduct’ will result in behaviour
from those operating port terminals [that] will lead to sub-optimal competition
and reduced reliability of shipping movements to customers.[26]
3.26
A code development committee (CDC) has been formed to coordinate
discussions (see Appendix C). According to Grain Trade Australia’s website,
which is currently hosting information for participants involved in developing
the voluntary code of conduct, the CDC will ‘liaise closely’ with both DAFF and
the ACCC:
The CDC will undertake a thorough examination of all the
issues in relation to the current port access requirements and will liaise
closely with key stakeholders, [DAFF] and the [ACCC] throughout the development
process.[27]
3.27
The ACCC provided the Committee with additional information about its
role in the development of codes of conduct:
The ACCC provides general guidance to industry associations
(or groups of traders) seeking to develop voluntary industry codes of conduct
intended to address competition or consumer-related issues within their
industry.
The ACCC does not have a role in approving or endorsing voluntary codes and in
many cases, may not be privy to the final version of codes that have been
developed.
3.28
The ACCC also provided the Committee with information about its
Guidelines for developing effective voluntary codes of conduct. These
Guidelines call for:
n a clear statement of
objectives
n a code administration
committee
n a complaints handling
procedure (with an appeal mechanism)
n commercially
significant sanctions for non-compliance.
3.29
The ACCC indicates that it has ‘provided general guidance on more than
50 voluntary codes to date.’[28]
3.30
Mr Peter Ottesen (DAFF) noted that the chance to shed regulation is ‘a
big incentive’ for bulk handlers to reach agreement on a code of conduct.[29]
3.31
Some bulk handlers, however, were confident that a voluntary code of
conduct could be agreed upon[30] and that it would be an
appropriate ‘pathway’ to deregulation.[31] However, Mr Mitchell
Morison (AGEA) pointed out that if a code is approved, but subsequently a
signatory elects out of the code, ‘it is unclear as to what regulatory
environment a port terminal would exist in.’[32]
3.32
Viterra’s submission stated that the pre-conditions within the Bill for
the Minister to follow before approving the voluntary code of conduct are not
understandable.[33]
This is likely to create substantial difficulty, both for the
industry in developing a code of conduct and for the Minister in determining
whether or not to approve any code of conduct.
...
In order to facilitate the development and introduction of a
code of conduct, Viterra submits that the proposed criterion in section 12(2)(c)
of the Bill... should be amended so that it focuses on efficient outcomes in
relation to the provision of port terminal services and not on matters that may
well be outside the influence of the relevant code of conduct (i.e. industry
profitability and the operation or competitiveness of other parts of the supply
chain).[34]
3.33
The possibility of including within the code of conduct rules pertaining
to the provision of market information was raised with the Committee; this is
discussed in the next section.
Market information
3.34
The Committee was informed that the wheat trade in Australia is
currently constrained by the insufficient information available to the market,
such as the quantities, qualities and location of wheat, to assist with
strategic decision making and forward planning.
3.35
Presently, sources of information on wheat include:
n The Australian Bureau
of Statistics (ABS) monthly data on wheat stocks and exports;[35]
n ABARES’ monthly crop
reports (production and yield); quarterly agricultural commodities (trends and
forecasts); monthly wheat supply and exports;[36]
n Wheat Exports
Australia report for growers; and
n Information released
by bulk handling companies, such as a daily ship roster (shipping stem),
elevation capacity and stocks at port (note, however, that information
available can vary depending on the company).[37] According to a recent
press release from the Emerald Group, it intends to ‘make comprehensive grain
stock information available to the entire industry.’[38]
3.36
According to NSWFA, the ‘asymmetry of this information increases the
market power held by the three major bulk handling companies within the
Australian market.’[39] The Victorian Farmers
Federation (VFF) submitted that inventory or stocks information is currently
‘lacking’ and is limited to ‘a few regional monopoly providers who are
custodians of the information but do not own it.’[40] Mr Andrew Weidemann (President, VFF Grains Group) explained:
Through the supply chain, we need to have transparency around
information, because no market really trades anywhere in the world without
information. Again, I will go back to the analogy of the share market and US
Wheat Associates: they all have some form of regulatory approach and
information so the market knows exactly what is there and where it is from.[41]
3.37
Mr Peter Mailler (GPA) said that the invisibility of information in the
possession of bulk handlers disadvantages growers:
Ultimately, because they withhold information and there is a
lot of obscuring of stocks information and market signals from end-users back
through the supply chain as well as a lot of hidden charges and issues around
where the efficiencies lie in ports and loading and how the system works,
growers are not seeing the correct market signals. This means we are unable to
take a position effectively in the market ourselves.[42]
3.38
He separately added that ‘We do not want to regulate the market, we want
to regulate the provision of information and the transparency,’ which he said
‘is one of the things stifling competition.’[43] The Australian Securities
Exchange (ASX)’s submission stated:
The existence of regional monopolies with inherent
information advantages inhibits the development of open markets and challenges
efficient price discovery. The current stock reporting framework needs to be
revised to address market perception concerns and avoid inherent dangers
associated with asymmetric market information. Improved market information
will help inform industry stakeholders and participants throughout the entire
supply chain.[44]
3.39
ASX’s submission provided further details in relation to the type of
information that might be collected.[45] Furthermore:
...if the WEA is disbanded as proposed without the
inadequacies of stock reporting being addressed then this will result in a
suboptimal outcome for the industry.
...
While ever there remains information asymmetry, there will be
a perception that the three major BHCs have a market advantage and it may
remain challenging to attract new competition to the market place.[46]
3.40
WAFF was less concerned; Mr Kim Simpson said:
I think most farmers understand well enough the quality of
the wheat they are growing. I would be surprised if any farmer did not
understand where his wheat fitted in the marketing scheme of things. Just how
much demand is out there for certain qualities of wheat might be something we
do not know all the time, but then, as I said, that is part of the system.[47]
3.41
However, he explained that the state of the market in Western Australia
is not the same as the Australian east coast:
In this state, virtually half the grain is sold through the
state cooperative. So farmers here probably do not fear the vagaries of the
free market quite as much as the eastern states because we have an option here
which is basically an honest one. Over there, you are in the grip of what
people call a ‘free market’, and you can get screwed by anybody.[48]
3.42
WAFF’s submission, however, stated:
The release of timely supply and demand information would
provide clearer market signals for growers and therefore make an important
contribution to their marketing decisions accordingly.[49]
3.43
By contrast, GrainCorp’s submission argued that there is no reason to
disclose more information:
The provision of additional stocks information would not
improve the efficiency of the grain market, nor would it improve grower
returns.
3.44
GrainCorp added that ‘a substantial amount of information is already
made available to the grain market’ and also observed: ‘this information is
proprietary, in the same manner as that generated by any other business.’[50]
3.45
Dr Kenneth Quail (Grain Growers Ltd) suggested that the supply of stocks
information could be included as part of the voluntary code of conduct.[51]
He added:
My understanding is that the supply of stocks information has
been volunteered as part of the code of conduct. ... I think government has a
role to play in negotiating that and helping that code of conduct form. If
that information is included in the voluntary code of conduct, it will largely
become available and continue to be supplied. The point is that it is
voluntary, and that is why it needs industry and government to work together in
the future.[52]
3.46
AGEA said there would be practical matters to be resolved, but believed
agreement could be found. Mr Mitchell Morison said:
The vast majority of stock actually sits out in the network
that supplies to the ports, and really the key issue that I think you are
hearing from grower representatives, and you would probably also hear it from
the consumer sector of the industry, is around the supply and demand
situation—how much stock exists in country, not necessarily just in the port. So
it may not be appropriate for the code to try and sort out the issue around
stock information.[53]
3.47
However, he observed that the need for information services is not
expressly contained in clause 12 of the Bill, and is therefore ‘outside the
remit of the code committee.’[54] Besides this issue, Ms
Rosemary Richards (AGEA) explained that not all relevant stakeholders are
involved with the code’s development:
Even if the code committee looks at it and comes up with some
recommendations...the signatories to that code are not going to capture
everyone who would have to be part of providing that information, so I think we
would need a broader mechanism that would capture, in an implementation sense,
people who would need to be a signatory to the code and supply the information.[55]
3.48
Mr Morison said:
Cargill, for example, operate through storage and handling in
excess of three million tonnes of grain but we operate no ports. Unless we
built or bought a port, we would not expect to be a code signatory, yet we do
have in our storage system up to three million tonnes of grain at any given
time. We would not necessarily be captured by the code in that respect—it
depends on how it is drafted.[56]
3.49
Mr Peter Woods (CEO, WEA) said:
If you look at what happens with the futures markets and with
most other markets there is a full transparency of information. The futures
markets and the ASX market operate through a system where you cannot declare
something to someone else until you do it through a centralised system so that
everyone has equal access to the information. That is not happening at the
moment. How it should happen is not up to me, but this is not about three bulk
handlers. This is about the industry. Whether the debate stretches down to the
farm level or, as suggested in John Crosby's submission, down to anyone who
stores 10,000 tonnes of grain for a fee—and have that as the cut-off—that is
the debate that needs to happen, as well as to who does it. But transparency of
information will not disadvantage anyone.[57]
3.50
WAFF’s submission suggested that a website might be established for this
purpose of hosting relevant information.[58]
Statutory oversight
3.51
The Committee heard divergent views on the desirability of WEA
continuing to fulfil its present role as well as maintaining funding through
the WEC.
3.52
Mr Peter Woods (CEO, WEA) summarised WEA’s role as being:
...to accredit fit and proper exporters of bulk wheat,
monitor those exporters and ensure continuous disclosure of the shipping stem
at wheat export terminals.[59]
3.53
Mr Woods added:
WEA has no role in storage and handling, transport,
marketing, publishing statistics—other than in our annual reports and growers
reports—setting receival standards or classifying wheat varieties.[60]
3.54
The ACCC clarified that in the future, if the Bill becomes law, its
oversight would be minimal compared to WEA. Mr Mark Pearson said:
Our role is going to be a lot simpler—nowhere near as broad
or as in depth as the WEA role is or has been with the reports they are putting
out and the fit and proper kind of role and assessment that they have.[61]
3.55
WEA has anticipated that its activities will shortly cease. Mr Woods
said:
WEA is in the process of winding up. This involves employee
assistance with career coaching and career progression; contingency plans for
the loss of employees, staff redeployments and redundancies; transferring the
monitoring of the shipping stem to the ACCC; disposal of assets; and storing
and archiving material in accordance with the national archive requirements.[62]
3.56
Mr Woods also provided the following commentary on the process to date:
WEA believes the deregulation process has proceeded
relatively smoothly, and, pleasingly, no accredited exporter has experienced
financial or other difficulties adversely impacting on its relationship with
industry stakeholders, particularly growers. Nevertheless, the Australian wheat
industry continues to face a number of critical infrastructure and competitive
challenges.[63]
3.57
Whilst not stating a position in favour or against deregulation, in
addition Mr Woods advised of ‘key areas requiring attention’ in the view of
WEA:
These are: unequal access to wheat stocks information; port
access; management of the supply chain and port capacity information; and
integrity of Australian grain exports.[64]
3.58
Several submissions recommended that statutory oversight of wheat
exports needs to continue, either by Wheat Exports Australia or a similar
entity. GPA, for example, recommended
that statutory oversight of the export wheat market should be
maintained and that the WEC should be maintained and deployed to fund this
activity.[65]
3.59
GPA also added that ‘abolition of all statutory oversight is premature’.[66] Mr Mailler said: ‘Overwhelmingly, growers are very concerned and uneasy about
further deregulation of the wheat market at this time.’[67]
3.60
The VFF indicated its disapproval of the Bill, principally because of
‘the need for a national industry authority’.[68] VFF viewed the transfer
of certain functions to DAFF as being a move away from the independence of WEA.[69]
The VFF’s submission stated:
All efficient competitive markets... have government-backed
regulatory oversight. This oversight addresses any market failings and creates
the environment for market confidence to facilitate competition and ongoing
investment in their industries. They also afford their market participants a
degree of consumer protection within the market. VFF consider the Government
is obligated to ensure a similar level of regulatory oversight and market
facilitation is retained with the Australian grains industry.[70]
3.61
NSWFA’s submission explained that market regulation protects market
participants with unequal market power, in this instance, ‘the market
participants with the least market power are grain farmers’.[71]
3.62
DAFF told the Committee that market forces would serve as the best
safeguard. Mr Allen Grant said:
We think that, in the end, the market will provide those
safeguards. People will not sell their grains to companies or exporters when
they think they are being charged for services that are not being delivered or they
are charged for services that are too costly. They will take their grain
somewhere else because the competition is there and that will put a fixed price
on their ability to compete on administration and on service. If you get those
cases—and they are reported in the media—then people will vote with their feet
in some senses, or if they are breaking the law then people have got the option
of going to the ACCC... and they will take action through the courts.[72]
3.63
Mr Grant also noted that in the event deregulation does not work, a
future government could intervene and re-establish regulation over the market.[73] Further, Mr Peter Ottesen (DAFF) said that the proposed voluntary code of
conduct ‘will also be an important determinant of behaviours.’[74]
3.64
The Queensland Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
submitted while it ‘supports the deregulation of domestic and international
marketing arrangements’:[75]
...it is premature to dismantle WEA and its funding
mechanism, the WEC... DAFF Queensland further submits that the WEA should be
retained with some enhanced functions and that its operations should continue
to be funded by the WEC.[76]
3.65
The option of deregulation and retaining statutory oversight was not
endorsed by DAFF. Mr Allen Grant told the Committee that ‘if you are
deregulating then Wheat Exports Australia is not the body that you would ask to
provide other industry services.’[77]
3.66
According to Dr Michael Southan (Grain Growers Ltd):
Wheat Exports Australia has performed a very good role over
the transition period from the single desk in the last four years in that it
has provided due diligence for growers in making sure that the organisations
who are out there buying their grain and selling it on their behalf stand up to
certain financial tests. That has happened very well, to the point where we
have seen record sales of grain to new markets internationally and no major
collapse of any of those accredited exporters.[78]
3.67
He continued:
However, four years has gone by now, and that has provided
growers with time to get to know the market, to build their confidence and to
get some experience in selling grain to new players in the market. As a
result, the system now, where we have a regulatory body, provides costs to
growers. Even though the exporters pay the costs, those costs are moved back
down the chain to growers. They are expenses to growers that they would like to
have reduced.[79]
3.68
Submissions and evidence from agribusiness expressed support for
deregulation. AGEA submitted:
The objective of increased competition in acquisition and
marketing of grain has been achieved and the current accreditation arrangements
are simply adding cost, without creating any benefit.[80]
3.69
Viterra positively asserted its support for the Bill, describing current
regulation as ‘heavy-handed’;[81] and noted:
Viterra will not support any proposal to reconstitute WEA or
expand the coverage of existing legislation to non-prescribed commodities, such
as barley, pulses or canola.[82]
3.70
Viterra’s submission stated:
In line with the findings of the Productivity Commission,
Viterra considers that there is compelling evidence which demonstrates the
success of wheat marketing reform, and that the industry is well positioned to
manage wheat exports in the same way that it manages the competitive and
efficient export of other agricultural commodities.[83]
3.71
GrainCorp indicated its support for deregulation:
Current regulation acts as a significant disincentive for
market participants to invest in improving port performance. Any investment in
additional capacity is immediately effectively ‘nationalised’ and is open to
all market participants... No organisation will invest if they do not retain
property rights over that investment or if regulation takes away its right to
use the property or investment.[84]
3.72
GrainCorp’s submission commented that it ‘does not agree with proposals
for the creation of an industry ombudsman’.[85]
Comments specific to individual clauses and details
3.73
Some submissions provided the Committee with suggestions and
recommendations to amend specific clauses within the Bill to improve its
operation, as follows:
n Making the Bill
applicable to any and all wheat bulk port terminals; two ports were named as
being exempt.[86]
n Retaining clause 86A
in the principal Act, which relates to State and Territory laws.[87]
n Broadening the
objectives of the Bill, by adding the words ‘and advances the needs of wheat
growers’ into clause 3(a).[88] Alternatively, one
submission was of the view that the objective in clause 3(a) serves no purpose.[89]
n Revising clause
9(4)(c), pertaining to access test rules, to make the rules in the Bill
consistent with or the same as those currently in force under the principal
Act.[90]
n Keeping continuous
disclosure rules the same, particularly by omitting clauses relating to a
‘loading statement’.[91]
n Changing clause 24,
to make the objective of the special account read instead: ‘improve and
promote Australian wheat quality.’[92]
Committee comment
3.74
The Committee is aware of the considerable potential in the Australian
wheat industry. Australian wheat has a good reputation overseas, and Australia
continues to export the vast majority of wheat it grows. Australian farmers
contribute daily to the global task of feeding billions of people. There are
numerous examples of Australian producers developing new foreign markets for
previously unused wheat products, broadening demand for Australia’s
agricultural produce. All submissions to the inquiry share the Committee’s
concern for keeping the Australian wheat industry strong, profitable and
responsive to its customers’ needs.
3.75
As noted in the overview of this chapter, the Committee received a
number of opposing views about different aspects of the Bill, as well as varied
opinions about the desirability of the Bill as a whole.
3.76
In respect of quality assurance, the Committee has not discerned any
particular link between the current system of accreditation and quality
assurance. No substantial quality monitoring is currently provided by government
– be it WEA or Customs - and it is hence not clear how the abolition of the
accreditation system could have a negative impact on the quality of bulk export
wheat. In the Committee’s view, it is much more likely that a deregulated
market will provide the competitive pressures necessary to give customers an
assurance of quality.
3.77
Any rogue operators exporting substandard wheat should be quickly
identified by both their customers and competitors. In a competitive industry,
others will be able to exploit the dissatisfaction of a rogue operator’s
customers, and fill their orders. Particular standards relating to wheat
functionality, variety and quality can and should be matters for contracts
between exporters and their customers. This can be supported by certification
systems, such as those provided by WQA and GTA.
3.78
However, concerns about quality in part may be a result of Wheat Quality
Australia and Grain Trade Australia having an uncertain role in a deregulated
wheat market.
Recommendation 1 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government work
with industry to overcome the uncertainty around Wheat Quality Australia and
Grain Trade Australia to develop a single industry-funded entity to deliver
industry services in the areas of quality, standards and stock information. The
Australian Government and Industry should aim to have the entity in place by
October 2014, when full deregulation occurs |
3.79
Turning to the access test and the proposed code of conduct, the
Committee is aware that the current market is geographically fragmented and
dominated by three major players. However, it is not clear that delaying
deregulation will substantially improve any of these conditions; indeed, the
entrance of new players into the market could be aided by deregulation and the
abolition of accreditation.
3.80
There are considerable expectations placed on the proposed code of
conduct, and the Committee is aware that negotiating a viable code of conduct
will be a considerable challenge for the industry. Numerous concerns raised by
various submitters to the inquiry have highlighted the complexity of developing
and assessing any code of conduct. Many of the concerns discussed in this
report will be matters for the Minister to consider when assessing the
suitability of any code of conduct.
3.81
One suggestion put forward was that the Government consider appointing a
Grains Industry Ombudsman to oversee the code. The Telecommunications Industry
Ombudsman was suggested as an
industry-funded model that the Grains Industry Ombudsman could be modelled on.
Recommendation 2 |
|
To allay grower concern as to how the voluntary code of
conduct will be monitored, the Committee recommends that the Australian Government
consider appointing for a five year period an industry-funded “Grains
Industry Ombudsman”. |
3.82
Coming to market information, the Committee sees great potential for the
wheat industry – and grains production more generally – in developing an industry-based
information publication system. As noted by many submissions, information about
grain stocks and flows is limited and of variable detail. The submission from
the ASX noted the inadequacy of current information to support the wheat
industry growing to its full potential. An information publication system
should ideally be granulated to the level of regional wheat stocks, not just
port information, and should be freely available.
3.83
The Committee believes that this should not be a government-led process.
However, the Committee also believes that the unspent WEC funds – to be placed
in a new Wheat Industry Special Account – could provide ‘seed money’ to
commence work on the development of a wheat stocks information system. Any
support should take into account – and possibly seek contributions from –
state-based grains trust funds or other industry funds.
Recommendation 3 |
|
The Committee recommends that, to improve the efficiency of
the wheat export market, the Australian Government actively encourage and
support the wheat industry in its efforts to improve wheat stocks information
sharing, possibly by allocating funding from the proposed Wheat Industry
Special Account to develop an industry mechanism, as part of the newly created
industry-funded entity. |
3.84
The Committee also received considerable evidence regarding the general
desirability or otherwise of statutory oversight of the wheat industry. However,
much of the evidence in support of regulation did not specify particular
functions, roles or aims for such oversight.
3.85
However, regulation will be continued through the ACCC’s role. The
Committee feels that the ACCC should be adequately resourced to undertake any
additional functions regarding their oversight of the wheat industry in a
deregulated market.
3.86
The Committee believes that all regulation should be targeted to
particular ends, and other means of reaching such ends should be examined
before regulation is adopted. In this case, the Committee has not received any
compelling argument not to continue with deregulation as proposed by the Bill. However,
full deregulation should only proceed if a truly workable, comprehensive and
viable code of conduct, with strong and sustainable support from industry is
developed and approved by the Minister.
Recommendation 4 |
|
The Committee recommends that the House pass the Wheat
Export Marketing Amendment Bill 2012. |
Hon Dick Adams MP
Committee Chair
5 June 2012.