Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026. Hosted by the Australian Furnishing Industry Stewardship Council, Australian Furniture Association and RMIT University.

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Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026. Hosted by the Australian Furnishing Industry Stewardship Council, Australian Furniture Association and RMIT University.

Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026 brought together leaders from Australia’s furnishing, forestry, materials and manufacturing sectors to shape a more sustainable and resilient industry. Hosted by the Australian Furnishing Industry Stewardship Council, Australian Furniture Association and RMIT University, and running over February 24 and 25, the Forum built on the momentum of recent Commonwealth and State-funded research projects that have identified key recommendations for industry growth over the next three to five years.The Forum explored priorities for implementing these recommendations through collaboration between industry leaders, researchers and policymakers. The two days featured panels, discussion and networking, with a focus on short-, medium- and long-term industry needs, with a strong emphasis on sustainability, circularity and responsible growth.

  1. 5

    Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026. Panel: What a bloody rip-off

    Hosted by the Australian Furnishing Industry Stewardship Council, Australian Furniture Association and RMIT University, and running over February 24 and 25, Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026 built on the momentum of recent Commonwealth and State-funded research projects that have identified key recommendations for industry growth.This episode is from a day one panel session, including guests Simon Dorries, CEO at Responsible Wood; Robert (Bob) Panitzki, Business Development Manager  at Furntech-AFRDI; Mark Lazarus, Director at Lazarus Legal; and Amma Boakye, Practice Project Officer at IP Australia.  The moderator is Patrizia Torelli, CEO, The Australian Furniture Association  Episode guide0:25 – Introduction to panellists. 5:20 – The first things businesses should do to protect their intellectual property. 6:29 – Types of different IP. 8:08 – Some of what’s patentable, copyright-protectable, trademarked. And why you might not need all of these. 9:33 – The role of IP Australia and some of the tools its website offers. 10:40 – A recap of patents, trademarks and design patents. 11:50 – Plant breeders’ rights. 12:55 – Responsible Wood Australia, Standards Australia, and these labels being used in a misleading way. 13:43 – When deception on standards has fatal results. 15:05 – Where certification chain of custody comes in. 16:50 – Countering greenwashing that wrongly uses RWA certification. 18:10 – The types of certifications AFRDI issues and how it deals with forgeries. 19:25 – The example of a plastic monoblock chair. 20:50 – Clients claiming compliance to the full standard when only being part-way there. 24:10 – Checking that what’s sourced is legitimate. 25:14 – Unfortunately we live in a world where there’s not a lot of enforcement. 26:40 – How the AFA can go into bat for those that have been unfairly treated during a procurement process. 27:30 – The imported knockoff chairs that removed the toes of a cafe-goer in Queensland. 29:02 – Why it would be difficult to take action against a non-compliant overseas manufacturer in the above case. 34:17 – A tolix bar stool copy was identical to what it was based on, but made with thinner steel and featuring a dangerous shear point. “But outside of that you probably couldn’t tell the difference.” 36:02 – Voluntary standards and ones that are policed. 36:50 – A question from the floor about standards discussions across countries. 37:52 – Alignment across countries on intellectual property. 39:18 – A question from the floor on shifting liability to a supplier, and why a well-drafted indemnity provision is definitely enforceable. 42:40 – A question from the floor about tools to check on suppliers’ certification credentials. 44:50 – A question from the floor on the economic conditions in China and how they’re playing out for importers. 47:50 – The collapse of the Chinese domestic construction market. Timber and other products have flooded the market as a result. 

  2. 4

    Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026. Panel: Going around in circles

    Hosted by the Australian Furnishing Industry Stewardship Council, Australian Furniture Association and RMIT University, and running over February 24 and 25, Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026 built on the momentum of recent Commonwealth and State-funded research projects that have identified key recommendations for industry growth.This episode is from a day one panel session, including guests Esther Bailey, Chief Operating Officer at Rebuilt; Damien Crough, Executive Chairman at prefabAUS; Rosanna Iacono, CEO, The Growth Activist; Lisa McLean, Managing Director & CEO, Circular Australia; Kylie Roberts-Frost, CEO, Australian Bedding Stewardship Council.The moderator is Michelle Thomas, Chief Operating Officer, AFISC.Episode guide 0:02 – Introduction to the session. 1:52 – Introduction to the panellists. 4:52 – Why procurement is important to lifting circularity outcomes. 5:45 – Australia's “ridiculously low” current circularity rate. 8:22 – Prefabrication/modern methods of construction as an enabler of profitability in the building sector.  9:00 – Design for manufacture, assembly and disassembly in construction. 10:05 – You take waste out by working with your supply chain. 11:20 – The smart building value chain and the seven links within that, led by design and planning. 14:20 A project between prefabAUS and RMIT University for architects developing a tool for architects to make better purchasing decisions.  14:45 – The issue of mattress waste and voluntary vs mandated stewardship. 16:55 – Where the burden of waste stewardship sits. 17:50 – What mandates mean for commercial sustainability.  19:40 – An explanation of EPR. If you’re responsible for what happens at a product’s end of life, then you’ll design it accordingly. 21:05 – Embodied carbon and reporting and how it’s changing expectations. 22:40 – The importance of peak bodies in the circularity/decarbonisation discussions. 27:10 – Using sustainability credentials strategically to differentiate from fast furniture.  30:05 – Starting with the big picture before narrowing down to practical implementation. Plus four pillars to stewardship. 32:02 – The importance of a maturity audit. 33:20 – Getting into “pilot scale and repeat” mode. 34:25 – “If it’s not in your design guidelines and not in your procurement guidelines, it’s just a wish.” 35:40 – The importance of ESG in talent engagement, attraction and retention. 37:02 – A question from the floor on latex mattresses, recyclability and EPR. 40:40 – A question from the floor on mattresses and a servitisation business model. 42:39 – Circular businesses, products-as-a-service and financial measures. 44:12 – The sources of embedded carbon in products. 45:20 – Why servitisation is the future. 47:50 – “The end of ownership” and attitude shifts among young people. 48:50 – Taking back products and closing the loop, and some of the difficulties around this. 51:10 – The challenges around logistics and costs have seen steel amounting to “over 3,000 tonnes in Queensland in the last 12 months” landfilled rather than recycled by Infrabuild, Bluescope or others. “A national disgrace.” 52:50 – “Recycling is the hero of the linear economy”. 53:10 – A question from the floor on recycling claims versus what is actually recycled. 54:30 – “One of the biggest examples of greenwashing we have in the retail space...” 56:55 – Remanufacturing is inexplicably tied to local recycling. An example of this in the fashion industry, plus the importance of a precinct strategy in this.   

  3. 3

    Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026. Panel: Current State of Play – Supply Chain. Import. Export. Competitors. Risks. Opportunities.

    Hosted by the Australian Furnishing Industry Stewardship Council, Australian Furniture Association and RMIT University, and running over February 24 and 25, Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026 built on the momentum of recent Commonwealth and State-funded research projects that have identified key recommendations for industry growth.This episode is from a day one panel session, including guests Tom Clark, CEO, Workspace Commercial Furniture; Boaz Shiponi, CEO, Nexus Point; Arnold Jorge, CEO, Export Council of Australia . The moderator is Marcus Downie, Partnerships and Government Relations, The Australian Furniture Association.Episode guide 0:02 – introduction to the session. 0:52 – introduction to panellists. 3:36 – Some thoughts on supply chains and their operation.  7:42 – The opportunity that exists relating to overcapacity in shipping and an approaching of “rock-bottom prices”. 9:08 – If you import raw materials, now is the time to pock in prices. 10:38 – Why the Suez Canal matters. 11:50 – The overall cost of freight to a business, a common hidden cost,.and why companies sometimes overpay duty when importing from FTA countries. 13:30 – Tariff concessions and duty planning. 14:24 – Most people do not explore the costs of their freight forwarder, to their detriment. 16:40 – What exporters should consider regarding the US market at the moment. 17:42 – The size of the US furniture market, as well as the current risks attached to selling into that market. Customs officers are taking a “very conservative approach” at the moment, and declaration errors are being treated harshly. 20:30 – A question from the floor on exporting to the US as a raw materials supplier to the furniture industry and the biggest barrier in this. 21:02 – The possible usefulness of a furniture product passport to Australian exporters to the US. 23:10 – Why Workspace Commercial Furniture deliberately decided not to go to the US. 24:14 – Other markets that hold potential for those considering exporting.  25:18 – The upcoming EU FTA, and some of the considerations regarding things such as waste management obligations. Features the example of Bundaberg Ginger Beer sales in Germany. 26:40 – The importance of collecting as much data as possible throughout your supply chain to remain internationally competitive.  27:40 – The adoption of traceability technology in Vietnam. “Almost every small farmer in Vietnam actually uses blockchain.” 29:20 – Auditing a supply chain and the usefulness of this. Why Workspace chose to own its supply chain and why this is critically important. 32:25 – The advantage of Workspace owning its own fleet of delivery trucks. “At the end of the day, if it’s damaged, we did it.” 34:20 – Launching a circular economy division at Workspace and the role in their freight network in this. 36:58 – The tyranny of distance versus export opportunities. 37:42 – Supply chain business development work that overseas countries are doing, specifically China. 39:20 – The skills that are needed currently. Apprentices are the biggest challenge. 40:47 – A question from the floor on sustainability credentials and upstream suppliers.   

  4. 2

    Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026. Keynote from Professor Oliver (Oli) Jones

    Hosted by the Australian Furnishing Industry Stewardship Council, Australian Furniture Association and RMIT University, and running over February 24 and 25, Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026 built on the momentum of recent Commonwealth and State-funded research projects that have identified key recommendations for industry growth.This episode is the keynote from day one.Episode guide0:02 – An introduction to the speaker, Professor Oliver Jones. 1:55 – Public concern over PFAS. 2:27 – A background in environmental, analytical and biological chemistry and the perspective this brings. 3:45 – PFAS hit the stage with the film Dark Waters.  4:28 – What PFAS are, the broadness of the category, some of their uses, and what led to their development. 5:24 – The role of the USS Forrestal incident in this story. 6:10 – Some of the things PFAS are blamed for. 7:45 – PFOA was a type of PFAS that gained attention in Dark Waters and the book Exposure, it’s not the only type. 8:19 – The OECD’s revised definition of PFAS gives maybe 7 million possible chemical combinations.9:01 – The US EPA definition of PFAS. 9:30 – One reason PFAS are resistant to degradation. 10:01 – A reason PFAS chemicals can be useful in pharmacology, plus a reason the US EPA decided against an argument on regulations with the FDA, resulting in another definition of PFAS. 11:36 – The Canadian classification, which is similar to the OECD definition bar one difference. 12:28 – Different drugs are regulated differently because they have different risks attached. 13:05 – On “forever chemicals” and why it’s a catchy but misleading description. 14:02 – Exposure data across Australia and USA over time. 15:15 – Testing data being collected in Australia and some of the limitations of this. 16:20 – We’ve never made PFAS in Australia. It’s all been imported.  16:50 – There’s “surprisingly little data on the effects of environmentally-relevant concentrations”.  18:08 – The importance of context when you’re talking about toxicology. All chemicals are potentially toxic at high enough doses. 19:50 – How can you evaluate risks if you don’t have proper data? 21:08 – Issues of accumulation. 22:05 – Some of the varied uses of PFAS, and issues outside of environmental ones, such as at the Winter Olympics. 24:20 – Goretex and greenwashing. 25:30 – Teflon is a fluoropolymer, inert, and doesn’t have any proven biological effects.  26:10 – a big issue with the carpet industry in the US. 27:43 – The Senate inquiry into PFAS. 28:30 – Claims in Australia brought by landholders regarding defence sites. 30:05 – Food packaging and cosmetics. 31 – A personal recollection of noise-induced hearing loss claims in England. A lesson that – whatever the merits – people will often try and get money from a large company when there’s an incentive for themselves and lawyers. 31:55 – Legal cases, unfortunately-impacted claimants, sympathetic, non-scientific juries, and payouts. 33:05 – A prediction that there will be more PFAS-related litigation in future. 34:30 – Advice on how to approach the issue of PFAS and potential related liabilities at a company. 35:10 – The furniture industry and what it could do on the subject. 38:02 – If you’re able to track your products, their lifecycle, their inputs etc., then there’s value in that. 40:02 – Let’s just be careful to not repeat past mistakes. 41:15 – The example of BPA being replaced by BPS, which we know less about toxicologically. 42:30 – Questions from the floor.

  5. 1

    Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026. Day one introductory remarks from Patrizia Torelli, Group CEO of the Australian Furniture Association

    Hosted by the Australian Furnishing Industry Stewardship Council, Australian Furniture Association and RMIT University, and running over February 24 and 25, Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026 built on the momentum of recent Commonwealth and State-funded research projects that have identified key recommendations for industry growth.These are the opening remarks from day one, given by Patrizia Torelli, Group CEO of the Australian Furniture Association. Episode guide0:02 – Welcome to the event. 1:29 – Work so far between the Australian Furniture Association and RMIT University. 2:10 – A brief history of the AFA and some of the forces shaping its work. 3:10 – The program ahead. 5:18 – A few thought-provoking points on government support, furniture industry waste, imports, and chemicals of concern to set the scene. 6:30 – An introduction to the event's keynote speaker, Professor Oliver Jones. 

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Grow. Promote. Protect. Forum 2026 brought together leaders from Australia’s furnishing, forestry, materials and manufacturing sectors to shape a more sustainable and resilient industry. Hosted by the Australian Furnishing Industry Stewardship Council, Australian Furniture Association and RMIT University, and running over February 24 and 25, the Forum built on the momentum of recent Commonwealth and State-funded research projects that have identified key recommendations for industry growth over the next three to five years.The Forum explored priorities for implementing these recommendations through collaboration between industry leaders, researchers and policymakers. The two days featured panels, discussion and networking, with a focus on short-, medium- and long-term industry needs, with a strong emphasis on sustainability, circularity and responsible growth.

HOSTED BY

Brent Balinski

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