• Joyville may be a hive of activity, but the Hobart Cadbury factory will close its doors for a five week break.
    Joyville may be a hive of activity, but the Hobart Cadbury factory will close its doors for a five week break.
Close×

The Hobart Cadbury factory is preparing to close its doors for a five week break instead of two at the end of the year due to slowing sales.

The Claremont plant is said to be the largest chocolate factory in Australia and the southern hemisphere, and it underwent a $66 million upgrade that was designed to significantly increase production capacity.

Sales, however, have not kept up, according to the company’s parent, Mondelez International, which will halt production for five weeks over the Christmas period to ensure supply matches demand forecasts.

Cadbury is an iconic tourist attraction in the area and it is in line for a $16 million federal government grant for a tourism development at the facility.

Mondelez said it would maintain its tourism operations while the factory was shut down.

Packaging News

Melbourne-based Wallaby Water has unveiled a next-generation automated line dedicated to filling and capping aluminium bottles and cans – a facility purpose-built to process local spring waters, including sparkling mineral formats, with high precision and throughput.

iQRenew is supplying the recycled household soft-plastic material used to produce a satchel at the centre of a national circular clothing pilot by Australia Post and R.M.Williams.

Foodcare is set to acquire UPAC, a manufacturer and distributor of food packaging including printed bags and flexibles, in a move the company says will strengthen its offering in the packaging sector.