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HomeNewsFree Innovate to grow program for farmers

Free Innovate to grow program for farmers

Australia’s national science agency, CSIRO, is calling on farm and food innovators to apply for its latest Innovate to Grow program — helping small-to-medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) turn big ideas into research-driven solutions.

The free, eight-week online program is designed to help SMEs turn early ideas into clear R&D plans, build innovation capability and connect with the right research expertise — empowering them to seize new opportunities and reduce risk.

Dr Ingrid Appelqvist, Senior Principal Food Material Scientist at CSIRO, said the program comes at a pivotal time for the sector as new digital, biological and advanced manufacturing technologies reshape Australia’s food system.

“We’re seeing rapid transformation across farm and food technology, including advances in areas like AI and process digitisation,” Dr Appelqvist said.

“SMEs play an important role in this transformation, but many are still navigating how to progress early-stage ideas, reduce risk and access the right expertise. Innovate to Grow gives them the tools, networks and confidence to turn emerging opportunities into well-defined R&D pathways.

“From sustainability and waste optimisation to new value-add products and more resilient supply chains, Australian food and agriculture businesses are well-positioned to lead — and programs like this help them get there.”

Since launching in 2020, CSIRO’s Innovate to Grow has supported more than 750 SMEs across a range of sectors. The program provides participants with expert facilitators, self-paced learning modules and networking opportunities to turn emerging ideas into actionable research plans.

One recent participant, Esther Rupenovic, founder of Tasmanian business Jack and Chelo, joined Innovate to Grow in 2024. Her company creates chef-prepared, nutritionally balanced meals for dogs — developed with pet nutritionists and delivered via subscription.

Esther said the program unlocked practical research pathways she hadn’t previously considered, helping her see how science could scale the business.

“This is a fantastic program that has opened my eyes to research teams available for small businesses — I never knew they existed,” Ms Rupenovic said.

Applications are now open and close 15 February 2026.

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