
The reality
Agriculture is the most dangerous industry in Australia.
Not one of the most dangerous — the most. These are the numbers behind every Australian farm.
Figures are for Australian agriculture as a whole. See sources below.
Public companies
Your duty of care is now a disclosure obligation.
Investors, regulators and the market expect evidence, not intent. WHS performance, workforce risk and supply-chain practices are reported, scrutinised and personally owned by directors — and a spreadsheet won't stand up to any of them.
01
Personal & criminal exposure
Industrial manslaughter is now a criminal offence in every Australian jurisdiction — penalties reach ~$20 million for bodies corporate and up to 25 years' imprisonment for individuals1 — and officers carry a positive due-diligence duty under WHS law.2
02
Mandatory disclosure
Entities with revenue of $100 million or more must report annually on modern-slavery risks in their operations and workforce3, alongside growing WHS and sustainability disclosure expectations.
03
Reputation & investor trust
Agriculture is Australia's deadliest industry4; a serious incident is a market and reputational event, not just a site one.
AirAgri for public company
Defensible human-risk data, in real time.
Live, auditable safety intelligence — for the board, the regulator and the market.
Real-time worker tracking
See where every worker is — across paddocks, yards and sheds, even out of phone range, direct-to-satellite.
Man-down & duress alarms
A fall, no-movement or duress alerts the closest people for immediate response. No button to remember.
Heat & isolation awareness
Flag heat conditions and lone or at-risk workers before exposure becomes an incident.
Inductions & training
Get workers, contractors and crews competent and recorded quickly, with SOPs that are easy to follow.
Hazard & incident reporting
Capture near-misses and hazards from the field, with a full, time-stamped audit trail.
Board & ESG-ready data
Property- and role-based risk profiling, and defensible human-risk data — held onshore in Australia.
What the board gets
Governance you can evidence.
Board-ready risk data
Live, defensible human-risk reporting by site, role and contractor.
Demonstrable due diligence
Evidence that officers are actively discharging their WHS duty.
ESG & modern-slavery reporting
Workforce data that supports sustainability and modern-slavery statements.
Reduced exposure
Earlier intervention lowers the risk of the incident that becomes a disclosure.
Who it's for
Built for the boardroom and the field.
Australian agriculture is an $88 billion industry5, with a growing share held by listed and institutional owners accountable to the market.

Bringing farmers home
See AirAgri in action.
Book a 30-minute walkthrough, or call us — we'll show you how it works for an operation like yours.
Thanks — we'll be in touch within two business days. Need us sooner? Call 1800 404 694.
Sources
- Hamilton Locke, Industrial manslaughter offences now passed in all Australian states and territories (2024) — the offence applies in every jurisdiction and carries penalties up to around $18–20 million for bodies corporate and up to 25 years' imprisonment for individuals. hamiltonlocke.com.au
- Safe Work Australia — under the model WHS Act, a person conducting a business or undertaking owes a primary duty of care to workers, and company officers must exercise due diligence to ensure WHS compliance. www.safeworkaustralia.gov.au
- Attorney-General's Department, Modern Slavery Act 2018 — Australian entities with annual consolidated revenue of at least $100 million must publish an annual Modern Slavery Statement on risks in their operations and supply chains, including their workforce. www.modernslavery.gov.au
- Safe Work Australia, Key Work Health and Safety Statistics 2024 — agriculture, forestry & fishing recorded the highest worker fatality rate of any Australian industry (13.7 per 100,000 workers). www.safeworkaustralia.gov.au
- ABARES, Agricultural Commodities Report, December 2024 — the gross value of Australian agricultural production is forecast at $88.4 billion in 2024–25. www.agriculture.gov.au