The newly-formed Wheat Growers Action Group (WGAG) is taking its fight for the single desk to the United Nations.
WGAG chairman, Peter Cannon, Peak Hill, NSW,says the group has written to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation in order to highlight their grievances with the new wheat legislation due to pass through the Senate later this month, before taking effect on July 1.
The group's prime concerns centre around dismantling of what they call the "orderly marketing" system which it claims will lead to exploitation from foreign-owned multi-national trading houses.
Mr Cannon accuses the Rudd government of hypocrisy in claiming to be working to alleviate the world food security crisis while enacting legislation he claimed would negatively impact the Australian wheat industry.
"A similar deregulatory action in South Africa a decade ago saw the country's wheat industry decimated and it become a net importer of wheat," he says.
Mr Cannon has called on the Prime Minister, Mr Rudd, to withdraw the Bill and says that by writing to the FAO, his group hopes to win support for their cause.