Queensland key to feeding the Brisbane 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Video games


Mooloolaba prawns, Sunshine Coast macadamias and Granite Belt olive oil on the menu on the Brisbane 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Video games may create lasting worth for native companies and communities, in keeping with a College of Queensland report.

Professor Janet McColl‑Kennedy from UQ’s Business School and Lead of the Innovation Pathways Program at Australia’s Food and Beverage Accelerator (FaBA) led the Feeding the Brisbane 2032 Video games White Paper, launched immediately. 

“Feeding the Brisbane 2032 Video games is excess of a catering problem – we wish to showcase Queensland’s clear, nutritious and distinctive produce,” Professor McColl‑Kennedy mentioned.

“The Video games are a as soon as‑in‑a‑era alternative to focus on Australian innovation, strengthen provide chains and ship a legacy for a way meals is produced, distributed and skilled.”

The report goals to capitalise on bolstered vacationer numbers, with the Paris 2024 Video games attracting greater than 700,000 spectators on a single day. 

In addition to anticipated peaks in home tourism to the Brisbane 2032 Video games, the white paper beneficial figuring out meals traits amongst customers and making Australian produce the star of the meals. 

“We may use Queensland-caught seafood on sushi and serve mezze platters with Emerald’s chickpeas, an array of greens from the Lockyer Valley and native finger limes,” Professor McColl-Kennedy mentioned. 

“Figuring out meals consumption traits is vital to success, reminiscent of customers being extra health-conscious and eager to know the place the meals is coming from. 

“In addition to meals that tastes good, many customers need personalised meals experiences, so a easy meal of freshly caught fish overlooking a river at sundown might be particular. 

“By planning early, Brisbane 2032 can stability innovation with ethics, personalise meals experiences and construct resilient techniques for producers, customers and communities lengthy after the Video games are over.” 

The report recommends collaborations with Indigenous communities to help the manufacturing of native produce, in addition to the broader agricultural business to handle employee shortages and resourcing challenges. 

The white paper attracts on a roundtable of greater than 80 leaders from business, authorities and academia to look at meals throughout the enterprise ecosystem, together with the place and the way the meals is produced, manufacturing processes, qc together with meals security, logistics and workforce capabilities. 

The report identifies challenges together with provide chain resilience, sustainability expectations, workforce shortages, local weather danger and rising prices, alongside sensible and coordinated pathways to handle them, and offers 57 suggestions for coverage and observe.

It additionally explores how applied sciences reminiscent of synthetic intelligence, digital traceability and knowledge‑enabled logistics may help personalised meals experiences whereas lowering meals waste and bettering effectivity.

UQ Vice-Chancellor and President Professor Deborah Terry AC mentioned Brisbane 2032 gave Australia a robust platform to construct long-term sustainable partnerships throughout authorities, business and the training sector that may outline the legacy of the Video games.

“Universities are residence to a few of Queensland’s greatest thinkers and drawback solvers – in areas as various as meals techniques, well being science, city planning and sustainability,” Professor Terry mentioned.

“With the precise funding and coordination, choices made now can ship a stronger, extra resilient meals system that delivers advantages for regional growth and business functionality properly past 2032.” 

The white paper is meant to tell business stakeholders, policymakers and Video games planners as preparations for Brisbane 2032 proceed.

Read the Feeding the Brisbane 2032 Games White Paper on the FABA web site.