It includes the roles and responsibilities of all the parties, including how joint activities will be cost shared.
The GIA partnership currently has 14 partners from across Government and the wider primary sector, who have agreed to work together to jointly manage biosecurity threats.
"The GIA partnership welcomes the signing of this agreement as a positive step forward for both Government and the kiwifruit sector," says GIA secretariat manager Steve Rich.
"This agreement provides a prime example of how biosecurity will come to be managed in New Zealand under GIA - with industry and the Crown working together to achieve the best possible outcomes."
The agreement covers the four most common threats to the kiwifruit sector, and other pests and pathogens can be added to the agreement as they are identified.
The kiwifruit and kiwiberry sector operational agreement is the second of its kind.
The first agreement was the multi-sector agreement for the management of fruit fly in New Zealand and agreements for brown marmorated stink bug are currently in development.
Over time, further operational agreements for specific biosecurity threats, and sectors represented under GIA, will be executed between the partners to GIA.