Quality assurance (QA) in food and fibre production refers to the systematic processes, standards and controls implemented to ensure that products consistently meet defined quality, safety and specification requirements. QA goes beyond final product testing — it encompasses the entire production system, ensuring that quality is built into the process at every stage.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Quality assurance protects consumers, supports market access, reduces product rejection costs, and is increasingly mandatory for access to premium domestic and international markets.
Australia’s primary on-farm food safety and environmental assurance program for fresh produce growers.
Australia’s on-farm quality assurance program for beef, sheep and goat producers.
On-farm quality and food safety programs for dairy farms in Victoria and nationally.
An internationally recognised private sector standard for Good Agricultural Practice for fresh produce, aquaculture and livestock.
A systematic, preventive food safety approach used primarily in food processing:
HACCP is the basis of most food safety certification systems and is legally required for many food processing operations.
| Organisation | Role | Key Functions |
|---|---|---|
| Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) | Develops and maintains the Australia New Zealand Food Standards Code | Sets MRLs, labelling standards, food additive permissions |
| Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority (APVMA) | Regulates agricultural and veterinary chemicals | Registers chemicals, sets withholding periods, sets MRLs |
| Meat & Livestock Australia (MLA) | Industry body for beef, sheepmeat, goatmeat | Administers LPA; promotes quality through AUS-MEAT |
| AUS-MEAT | Develops and maintains grading language and standards for beef and sheepmeat | AUSMEAT Language used in domestic and export trade |
| Hort Innovation | Levy-funded R&D body for horticulture | Supports Freshcare; funds QA research |
| RSPCA Australia | Animal welfare organisation | Operates RSPCA Approved Farming Scheme; sets welfare standards |
| Australian Certified Organic (ACO) | Certifies organic producers and processors | Operates under IFOAM Organic Principles; issues Bud logo certification |
Quality assurance is underpinned by traceability — the ability to track a product backward through the supply chain:
COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes confuse quality assurance (systems to prevent defects) with quality control (testing finished products). QA is the broader system; QC (e.g. final product testing) is one component of it. Most modern QA programs focus on prevention rather than end-point testing.
STUDY HINT: Memorise at least three specific QA programs relevant to different sectors (e.g. Freshcare for horticulture, LPA for livestock, GlobalG.A.P. for export) and be able to explain what each covers and why it matters for market access.
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA may ask students to explain the role of a specific organisation (e.g. FSANZ, APVMA) or QA program in maintaining food quality. Focus on the specific function, the standards it sets, and the consequences of non-compliance.
APPLICATION: A grower of table grapes for export to Japan must hold Freshcare FSQ certification, comply with APVMA-registered chemical use and Japanese MRL requirements, and ensure grape shipments are accompanied by relevant phytosanitary certificates from the Department of Agriculture verifying freedom from declared pests. Failure at any point risks rejection at the Japanese border and loss of market access.