Close×

Birch & Waite is preparing to open a new $13 million food processing and packaging facility later this month which has been scoped to capitalise on Australia's future food trends.

Birch & Waite is a mid-tier food manufacturing company that supplies wet food products – sauces, dressings, mayonnaise and desserts – to the food service, aged care and specialist food markets.

The company has a factory in Marickville and the new facility is located in Revesby.

Designed by RMR Process, the new plant was commissioned in November last year and features Australian-first thermal processing technology as well as innovative sachet packaging technology.

According to Birch & Waite GM, David Charles, the plant has been designed as a platform to bring new food technologies to Australia.

“We have developed an agile manufacturing model to allow for flexibility and specialisation,” Charles said.

Want to know more? Find out at Future Unpacked LIVE, to be held in Sydney on 22 August, when David Charles will share the story behind this development and the innovative products it will produce.

Charles will be joined by Peter Taitoko, MD of RMR Process, who will explain how the Birch & Waite model will future-proof the business and allow for cost-effective expansion.

Birch & Waite is a multiple award-winning company, known for pioneering the fresh chilled mayonnaise category and introducing the first fresh chilled salad dressings to Australian supermarkets in 2013. In 2014, it was voted BRW's most innovative manufacturer. Among other awards, in 2017, it won Best Seafood Sauce for its Rich Tartare Seafood Sauce, in Nielsen's Product of the Year competition.

Packaging News

Three months on from the release of the Rennie Report, Australia’s packaging manufacturers and recyclers say the window for action is narrowing fast. In a PKN-exclusive roundtable discussion, industry leaders warned that without a clear signal from Canberra, local investment, sovereign capability and the circular economy ambitions government has backed with public funding could begin to unravel. Lindy Hughson reports.

Global packaging and labelling group CCL Industries is set to acquire French shrink sleeve technology specialist Sleever International, to expand its global sleeve decoration and labelling portfolio.

Australia’s pathway to a national soft plastics recycling system has taken a step forward, with APCO and SPSA announcing a new partnership aimed at simplifying how brands and retailers participate in stewardship as collection and recycling pathways expand.