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Department of Agriculture

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Biosecurity and trade
  3. Pests, diseases and weeds
  4. Plant pests and diseases
  5. National Plant Health Policies
  6. Official control of plant pests and diseases

Sidebar first - Pests diseases weeds

  • Plant pests and diseases
    • National action plans
    • Banana phytoplasma diseases
    • Barley stripe rust (exotic strains)
    • Bees (Apis spp.) (exotic species)
    • Begomoviruses and vectors (exotic strains and species)
    • Blood disease and moko disease of banana
    • Bursaphelenchus spp. and exotic sawyer beetle vectors
    • ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ complex
    • Citrus canker
    • Dutch elm disease
    • Fire blight
    • Fruit flies (exotic)
    • Grape phylloxera
    • Grapevine leaf rust
    • Huanglongbing and vectors
    • Invasive snails (exotic species)
    • Karnal bunt
    • Khapra beetle
      • Urgent actions to protect against khapra beetle
        • Measures for plant products under the khapra beetle urgent actions
        • Measures for sea containers under the khapra beetle urgent actions
        • Measures for seeds for sowing under the Khapra beetle urgent actions
      • Khapra beetle in imported goods
      • Khapra beetle bulletin
      • The khapra beetle story
    • Longhorn beetles (Anoplophora spp.) (exotic species)
    • Mites of bees (Apis spp.)
    • Myrtle (eucalyptus) rust (exotic strains)
    • Panama disease
    • Phytoplasmas 16Srl group
    • Pine pitch canker
    • Plum pox virus
    • Potato cyst nematode (exotic strains)
    • Potato late blight (exotic strains)
    • Southern armyworm
    • Spongy moth
    • Spotted lanternfly
    • Spotted wing drosophila
    • Stem borers of sugarcane and cereals (Chilo spp.) (exotic species)
    • Stink bugs
    • Sudden oak death (airborne Phytophthora spp.)
    • Texas root rot
    • Tobamoviruses (exotic strains)
    • Ug99 wheat stem rust
    • Xylella and exotic vectors
      • International Symposium on Xylella fastidiosa

Official control of plant pests and diseases

Australia has a nationally agreed policy on the official control of exotic plant pests and diseases.

The focus of the policy is to:

  • help contain and control new plant pests that have limited distribution
  • allow the Australian Government to continue to regulate imports for the pest to prevent further pest entry
  • facilitate exports, so growers can send their products to overseas markets.

Are you a grower in Australia’s horticulture, grains or timber industries? You need to be aware of the policy, know what ‘official control’ means and when it could apply to you.

What official control means and when it applies

On occasion, an exotic plant pest or disease may enter Australia that cannot be eradicated. If this happens, the pest or disease is managed by industry and the government of the state or territory in which it occurs.

When ‘official control’ is applied, the state or territory government puts in place mandatory activities to contain and control the pest or disease. These mandatory activities include:

  • containment or suppression activities (mostly involves destruction, disposal and decontamination)
  • surveillance in the area where the pest or disease could establish
  • movement restrictions so the pest or disease does not spread to an area that is not affected.

Official control can be applied at a regional or national level. If it is national, it must be harmonised across all states and territories.

How official control protects Australia and helps trade continue

New pests and diseases disrupt Australian agricultural industries and the environment. Australia also has international obligations in relation to global spread of pests and diseases.

Australia imports and exports plants and plant products. These products must meet certain conditions to be allowed into or out of Australia. Exports must also meet the conditions set by the country that is importing them.

When an exotic pest or disease enters Australia and is officially confirmed, the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry notifies the International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC).

The confirmed presence of the pest or disease in Australia can trigger other countries to impose trade bans or restrictions on our exports. They may also request we review our current import conditions.

If a pest or disease is under official control, the Australian Government can:

  • justify continuing to regulate international imports to prevent pest entry
  • negotiate with trading partners to accept plants or products (either from areas in Australia not affected by the pest or disease, managed in accordance with IPPC standards, or both).

Official control has costs relating to containment, surveillance and movement restrictions. State and territory governments, in consultation with peak industry bodies, must decide if official control is cost-beneficial or if other options are more appropriate.

Read the policy

Official Control of Plant Quarantine Pests National Policy 2025

  • Download PDF - 458 KB
  • Download Word - 776 KB

If you have difficulty accessing these files, contact us for help.

Supporting information and important links

  • ISPM 1 Phytosanitary principles for the protection of plants and the application of phytosanitary measures in international trade
  • ISPM 5 Glossary of phytosanitary terms
  • ISPM 11 Pest risk analysis for quarantine pests
  • National Policy on Regulated Non-Quarantine Pests
  • National Policy on Pest Freedom Programs and Pest Absence

General enquiries

Email us at Nationalpestpolicy@aff.gov.au for further information.

General enquiries

Call 1800 900 090

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Page last updated: 30 April 2026

We acknowledge the continuous connection of First Nations Traditional Owners and Custodians to the lands, seas and waters of Australia. We recognise their care for and cultivation of Country. We pay respect to Elders past and present, and recognise their knowledge and contribution to the productivity, innovation and sustainability of Australia’s agriculture, fisheries and forestry industries.

Artwork: Protecting our Country, Growing our Future
© Amy Allerton, contemporary Aboriginal Artist of the Gumbaynggirr, Bundjalung and Gamilaroi nations.

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