81 paragraphs found in AASB 141
Biological transformation comprises the processes of growth, degeneration, production, and procreation that cause qualitative or quantitative changes in a biological …
Costs to sell are the incremental costs directly attributable to the disposal of an asset, excluding finance costs and income taxes. …
A group of biological assets is an aggregation of similar living animals or plants. …
Harvest is the detachment of produce from a biological asset or the cessation of a biological asset’s life processes. …
The following are not bearer plants: (a) plants cultivated to be harvested as agricultural produce (for example, trees grown for use as lumber); (b) plants cultivated to produce agricultural produce when there is more than a remote likelihood that the …
When bearer plants are no longer used to bear produce they might be cut down and sold as scrap, for example, for use as firewood. Such incidental scrap sales would not prevent the plant from satisfying the definition of a bearer …
Agricultural activity covers a diverse range of activities; for example, raising livestock, forestry, annual or perennial cropping, cultivating orchards and plantations, floriculture and aquaculture (including fish farming). Certain common features exist …
Biological transformation results in the following types of outcomes: (a) asset changes through (i) growth (an increase in quantity or improvement in quality of an animal or plant), (ii) degeneration (a decrease in the quantity or deterioration in quality …
The following terms are used in this Standard with the meanings specified: …