CHS Broadbent – Toowoomba Packing Facility
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Description
A northern export-packing hub in the Darling Downs grain corridor
CHS Broadbent’s Toowoomba Packing Facility is the company’s northern grain container-packing base, located on Heinemann Road at Charlton in Toowoomba’s western industrial and freight precinct. CHS Broadbent says its northern operations are based around this Toowoomba grain container packing facility, and that the site is supported by the company’s transport fleet servicing the Darling Downs, Central Queensland and northern New South Wales. That makes this location best understood as a site-specific export and logistics hub rather than a traditional country receival site alone.
For grain-industry visitors, this is an important distinction. The Toowoomba facility sits in the part of the supply chain where grain is assembled, packed into export containers, and linked to onward transport. CHS Broadbent says it operates two modern grain container packing facilities in Australia, one in Toowoomba and one in Ballarat, and that these packing plants work alongside storage and handling facilities, a truck fleet, access to fast rail and an experienced grain-marketing team to connect Australian farmers directly with consumers around the world.
How this site fits into CHS Broadbent’s broader grain network
CHS Broadbent presents itself as a grain supply-chain company with more than 70 years of history, tracing its origins to 1952, later expanding into grain marketing, storage, logistics and export packing. The company says CHS Australia joined as a partner in 2014, and that the business rebranded to CHS Broadbent in 2017. Today it operates across Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland, with facilities that cover storage, handling, freight, marketing and export.
That broader network matters when looking specifically at Toowoomba. The packing facility is not a standalone shed doing isolated container work; it is part of an integrated chain that includes grain marketing, trucking, storage and export services. CHS Broadbent’s logistics page says its freight operations are based in Ballarat and Toowoomba and include 54 trucks, 86 bulk trailers and 26 container trailers, specialising in the delivery of grain, fertiliser and other bulk commodities across Victoria, South Australia, New South Wales and Queensland. For a site like Toowoomba, that helps explain why it is strategically important: it sits where packing, freight and export execution come together.
What the Toowoomba facility appears to do
The clearest published function of the Toowoomba site is container packing for export grain. CHS Broadbent’s export-services page explicitly identifies Toowoomba as one of its two grain container-packing plants, while a current careers listing for Toowoomba-based MC truck drivers says the role involves cartage of export containers to export terminals. Taken together, those details show that the site is directly involved in export-container workflows rather than only grain accumulation or office administration.
The company also notes an important operational requirement: the Toowoomba site is a PRF (Pesticide Residue Free) site, and grain delivered there must not have been sprayed with contact pesticides, although gas pesticides are acceptable if label withholding periods are followed. That is a meaningful detail because it suggests the facility is handling grain for markets where residue controls and export-quality standards matter. In practical terms, the Toowoomba Packing Facility appears geared toward quality-sensitive export pathways, not just generic bulk transfers.
Why Toowoomba and Charlton are such logical locations
The site’s location in Toowoomba makes strong commercial sense. Grain Trade Australia’s regional definitions identify Toowoomba within the Darling Downs grain zone, one of Queensland’s key grain-trading regions. Business Queensland’s broadacre-crops overview shows that Queensland’s cropping system includes wheat, barley, sorghum, maize, chickpea, faba bean, soybean, mungbean, sunflower and canola. Those crops align closely with the commodities CHS Broadbent publicly markets and exports, including wheat, barley, canola, sorghum, pulses and oats.
That regional fit is especially important for a container-packing facility. Because CHS Broadbent says the Toowoomba site services the Darling Downs, Central Queensland and northern New South Wales, it is reasonable to see this facility as a practical export outlet for grain moving out of a very large northern production footprint. Exact site-by-site commodity flows are not publicly mapped in detail, so some local crop emphasis must be treated as grounded inference rather than a published receival schedule. Even so, the site’s role appears particularly relevant to northern grains and pulses such as wheat, barley, sorghum, chickpeas and faba beans, given the overlap between CHS Broadbent’s commodity list and the surrounding production regions.
Commodity and market relevance
CHS Broadbent says it buys and sells wheat, barley, canola, sorghum, pulses and oats. Its commodity pages also note that pulses including chickpeas, lentils and faba beans are largely export-oriented for human consumption, and that it exports barley in both bulk and containers to markets across Asia and the Middle East. That is a useful clue when interpreting Toowoomba’s role: as one of CHS Broadbent’s two container-packing plants, this site appears especially important for crops and parcels suited to containerised export trade rather than only bulk-vessel pathways.
The site is therefore most relevant to growers, traders and exporters who need a packing and logistics link between inland production and container export channels. While CHS Broadbent does not publish a Toowoomba-only commodity matrix, the company-wide evidence strongly suggests the facility is part of the route to market for cereals, oilseeds and pulses moving out of southern Queensland and connected northern growing regions.
Reputation and operating profile
CHS Broadbent’s public positioning is built around being a complete grain supply-chain partner. Its website and LinkedIn profile describe the company as a grain supply-chain business with receival, storage, marketing, logistics and export capability, and say its sites are widely recognised by growers and grain marketers for reliable, dependable service. That is company-published language rather than an independent rating, but it is consistent with the structure of the business and the way the Toowoomba facility fits into the network.
Overall, the Toowoomba Packing Facility stands out as a strategic inland export-packing site for CHS Broadbent’s northern operations. It matters not because it is a giant public bulk terminal, but because it gives grain from the Darling Downs, Central Queensland and northern New South Wales a containerised pathway into domestic and overseas markets, backed by CHS Broadbent’s freight, marketing and wider storage network.
Features
- Located at Heinemann Road, Charlton QLD 4350.
- One of only two CHS Broadbent grain container-packing plants in Australia, alongside Ballarat.
- Supported by CHS Broadbent’s northern transport fleet servicing the Darling Downs, Central Queensland and northern NSW.
- Part of an integrated supply chain that combines packing, storage and handling, trucking, grain marketing and export.
- Toowoomba-based freight operations form part of a wider fleet of 54 trucks, 86 bulk trailers and 26 container trailers.
- Site is listed as PRF (Pesticide Residue Free), with specific pesticide restrictions for incoming grain.
- Particularly relevant to grain and pulse flows from the Darling Downs, Central Queensland and northern NSW.
- CHS Broadbent’s published commodity mix includes wheat, barley, canola, sorghum, pulses and oats.
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