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Case Glossary

Search Import Questions Import Conditions Onshore Outcomes

Case: Non-Commodity Cargo Clearance Effective 04 Dec 2019 to 04 Jan 2020

Glossary

The following provides a definition of words or phrases that are found within the text. Some of these have a special meaning in relation to the importation or treatment of goods entering Australia and may be important to understand in meeting the requirements for import.

Term Definition
Animal Material

Animal Material
Any material that originates from, or is produced by a living animal, including hair, fur, skin, faeces, shell, blood and fluids, feathers, honey, flesh and bone.

The Risks of Animal Material
Products derived from animals pose a significant biosecurity risk. All animal parts/products such as animal tissues and blood can introduce serious animal pathogens. Many viruses and bacteria are able to survive for long periods in tissue, blood and mucous.

Approved Arrangement Site (AA Site)

An arrangement approved under Section 406 of the Biosecurity Act 2015 (Cwlth) which permits a biosecurity industry participant to carry out specified activities to manage biosecurity risks associated with particular goods, premises or other things.

Biosecurity Risk Material

Biosecurity Risk Material (BRM) includes but is not limited to:

  1. Animal Material (e.g. hair, fur, skin, faeces, shell, blood and fluids, feathers, honey, flesh, bone, horn)

  2. Live Animals (e.g. rodents, reptiles, geckos, frogs and birds)

  3. Food scraps (e.g. peel, shells, skins and wrappers)

  4. Plant material (e.g. reproductive material (e.g. pollen, spores, seeds, flowers, fruits, and vegetables), fresh material (e.g. leaves, gum and stems) and dry material (e.g. pods, bark, branches, roots, straw, wood)

  5. Live plants (e.g. plants, weeds, sprouted seeds and propagatable material)

  6. Live insects (e.g. timber pests (e.g. termites, ants and larvae), stored product pests (e.g. beetles and larvae), insects seeking refuge (e.g. ants, bees, wasps, moths and spiders), hitchhikers (e.g. grasshoppers and butterflies) and plant pests (e.g. fruit flies, mites, thrips, etc)

  7. Evidence of live insects (e.g. wasps nests, mud nests, wings, shells and casings)

  8. Snails and slugs

  9. Evidence of snails and slugs (e.g. shells, eggs and trail marks)

  10. Plant pathogens (e.g. fungi, nematodes, bacteria, viruses and mould)

  11. Soil (e.g. dirt, mud, gravel, clay and sand)

  12. Water (e.g. pools of water, water in receptacles, articles used with water)

FCX

FCX is a term used to describe containerised consignments that have multiple suppliers and only one importer, these consignments are usually dealt with in the same way as normal full container load consignments.

Food scraps

Food scraps may be any biosecurity risk material of plant or animal origin and include any discarded food items that contaminate imported cargo. This includes but is not limited to fruit peelings, meat scraps, seeds and pips. Food items may carry animal or plant diseases or be infested with live insects.

full container load

Full Container Load (FCL) is a term used to describe consignments that have a single supplier/sender and a single importer/receiver.

ISPM 15

ISPM 15’ is the acronym used for ‘International Standards for Phytosanitary Measures Publication No. 15: Guidelines for Regulating Wood Packaging Material in International Trade'. The French NIMP 15 version and Spanish NIMF version of the acronym are also approved for use in international trade. This standard is available from the International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC) website

Live Animals

Animals – Live

Any animal that is alive, unintentionally entering Australia as a hitchhiker via sea or airfreight. They include but are not limited to mammals (e.g. rats), amphibians (e.g. toads and frogs), reptiles, birds and other vertebrates.

The Risks of Live Animals

Live animals can introduce exotic diseases into Australian territory. Live animals can be infested with parasites such as ticks, mites and fleas, which can act as vectors that transmit disease.

unacceptable packaging material

Unacceptable packing materials can be straw, peat, hay, chaff, used fruit and vegetable cartons etc.

unacceptable packing materials

Unacceptable packing materials include bark, chaff, hay, rice hulls, sand bags, soil bags, used empty bags, used egg cartons, used flower cartons, used fruit and vegetable cartons, used meat cartons, used tyres and compressed non-timber plant materials (including agricultural waste).