Launch of the Food Industry's Pantry List
Mitchell Library (State Library of NSW)
Macquarie Street, Sydney
Thursday 28 February, 11.15am
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Acknowledgements
- First, may I acknowledge the traditional owners of the land we meet on - and pay my respects to their elders, both past and present.
Other Acknowledgements
- Chair - Dick Wells, Chief Executive of the Australian Food and Grocery Council
- Dale Cleaver, Acting CEO Australian Red Cross Society (also speaking)
- Steve Newton, Chair of the Retail Action Working Group
- Members of the Food Chain Infrastructure Assurance Advisory Group
Introduction
- I'd like to start by thanking Dick Wells for inviting me here today, and also acknowledge him as Chair of the Food Chain Infrastructure Assurance Advisory Group and a member of the Critical Infrastructure Advisory Council.
- The Council provides me with advice on the national approach to protecting critical infrastructure - the food chain, of course, being a key element of that picture.
Avoiding a Shock to the System
- I'm guessing some of you are old enough to remember the days when all shops were closed over Christmas.
- No supermarkets or corner stores traded.
And service stations, if they were open, had soft drinks and ice-creams and that was about it. - In the days leading up to the shutdown, supermarkets would be filled with shoppers.
And afterwards, the shelves would look like a swarm of locusts had swept through. - Even though we knew the shops were only going to be closed for a short time, there was still an element of anxiety - a fear that we may have to go without.
- And this was the era when many households grew and preserved their own fruit and vegetables, and had a pantry that was pretty well stocked.
There was little danger of anyone going hungry. - Nowadays we live in a very different society.
Busier lives, constantly trying to achieve work-life balance. - We have more single parent families and more families where both parents work outside the home.
- This has left many people increasingly time-poor and looking to shop only when they can fit it in.
- I'd say most of us have become accustomed to 'just in time' 24/7 shopping:
- buying dinner on the way home from work, or
- driving down to the local service station late at night for a litre of milk.
- We also no longer have to organise our shopping around public holidays.
- Even though the larger supermarkets may still close on Good Friday and Christmas Day, it's a rarity for all stores to be closed.
- We have come to expect that food, drink, and other household staples will be available whenever we need them.
- Of course, the food industry has had to keep up with these changes.
Driven by shifting customer habits, the industry has adjusted the way it stocks and distributes its goods. - But there is a downside to this expansion in consumer choice.
- The market driven reality of this convenience is slender stock holdings and systems that operate at maximum capacity.
In turn, this can mean diminished resilience. - Resilience is a word we hear a lot in critical infrastructure protection circles. We all know that the faster the recovery time after a crisis, the less long-term financial and psychological impact there is on society.
- A major key to resilience is self-sufficiency and the food industry has taken a helpful step in providing guidance to households on how to be self-sufficient in a crisis through the Pantry List.
The Pantry List
- I'm also very pleased that Emergency Management Australia, a division in my Department, has updated its publication Preparing for the Unexpected.
- To date, the publication has been very successful, with some 50,000 copies being requested and supplied to the Australian public.
- I'm pleased to say that it now includes additional advice from the food industry, and gives a link to the Pantry List website for those wanting further information.
- Although Australia has a first class emergency management system, the simple fact is that any emergency puts strain on the system.
- The more individuals can do to be prepared, the better the emergency services and emergency management volunteers can direct their resources to where they're needed most.
- One thing we know for sure is that a calm response to any emergency achieves the best results.
- But a calm response does not happen by chance.
It is the result of preparation and planning. - The Pantry List and Preparing for the Unexpected help in this regard by informing the community how to take reasonable steps to prepare for emergencies.
Conclusion
- I'd like to congratulate Dick Wells, and the food industry as a whole, on this initiative.
- I know the Pantry List is the culmination of a lot of hard work and collaboration between businesses from the industry, in particular the retailers.30. I congratulate you on your efforts.

