SGS acquires Australian agribusiness ASC to boost global grain safety

GENEVA, SWITZERLAND, and QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA — Global inspection provider SGS, which provides outsourced safety, quality, and sustainability services, has acquired Australia’s Australian Superintendence Company (ASC). The move expands SGS’s footprint, specifically in outsourced agricultural inspection and quality assurance.
The acquisition integrates ASC’s 40 specialist experts and its 54-year legacy in grain inspection into SGS’s portfolio, directly supporting the Group’s “Strategy 27” growth plan.
SGS global TIC reach meets ASC’s Australian grain expertise
SGS has more than 2,500 facilities in 115 countries that offer reliable testing, inspection, and certification services, enabling clients to achieve high-quality and sustainability standards.
With a 145-year history and employing close to 100,000 people, the Swiss-based giant supports its market presence by providing more specialized outsourcing services, such as IT and knowledge process outsourcing, which generate billions of dollars in annual revenue.
On the other hand, Australian Superintendence Company (ASC) has built a focused reputation since 1969 by providing essential testing and inspection services specifically for the agricultural export sector.
Operating from all major grain export ports and a full-service laboratory in Brisbane, ASC ensures the integrity of commodities such as wheat, barley, and pulses, generating revenue by meeting both domestic and international regulatory requirements for producers and shippers.
Strategic expansion into critical agricultural assurance
The combination with ASC will see SGS not only acquire an additional company but also acquire decades of experience in the inspection and laboratory testing of major Australian export products such as grains, legumes, pulses, and oilseeds.
This move directly enhances SGS‘s capacity to safeguard the health and safety standards of essential food products from a major exporting nation.
The transaction is explicitly framed as supporting SGS’s “Strategy 27 – Accelerating growth, building trust,” which focuses on expanding services that protect health, safety, and well-being. Bringing ASC’s 40 specialist experts into the Group provides SGS with a dedicated, experienced team to immediately bolster its service offerings in this sector.
This acquisition will enable SGS to provide a more integrated range of assurance services to the agricultural trade, thereby enhancing its status as the global testing, inspection, and certification company.
Enhancing global standards and influence
The move will provide SGS with first-hand insight into ASC’s role in shaping international commodity standards.
ASC has also been actively engaged in developing international protocols for the sampling and analysis of grains and oilseeds through its membership in key standard-setting organizations, as well as through its long-standing membership in those same organizations.
These are the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), the Grain and Feed Trade Association (GAFTA), and the Federation of Oils, Seeds and Fats Associations (FOSFA).
The deal’s terms suggest that SGS will not only gain operational capability but also inherit a significant share of soft power and technical power within the global agri-trade ecosystem. The reputation ASC has built over the years, and its input into international standards, makes SGS sounder.
It gives it a greater voice in setting quality and safety standards. As a result, the merger increases SGS’s influence on the structures within which global agricultural trade is conducted and enables it to shape the best practices introduced within the organizations that set them.

Independent




