Australia joins global conventions to protect workers’ rights and safety

Australia has now ratified all ten International Labour Organization’s (ILO) Fundamental Conventions, reaffirming the Albanese Government’s commitment to protect workers’ rights and safety.

The final Fundamental Convention – Promotional Framework for Occupational Safety and Health Convention 187 – was ratified by Australia overnight [29 October] in a tripartite ceremony in Geneva, Switzerland, with representatives of the Australian Council of Trade Unions and the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

The Convention promotes nationwide policies, systems and programs to support a safe and healthy working environment, and prevent occupational injuries, diseases and deaths.

This achievement underscores the Government’s belief in upholding international rules, norms and standards, and securing a safe and healthy working environment for all.

Ratification ensures Australian Governments continue to promote labour standards and protect workers from occupational harm, in line with international best practice.

For more information on the ILO’s Fundamental Conventions, see International Labour Standards.

Minister for Foreign Affairs, Penny Wong:

“While our Government is making sure that Australians make more and keep more of what they earn, we are also ensuring that their working conditions are safe and supportive.

“This is a major milestone for Australian workers. We are demonstrating Australia’s leadership and ongoing commitment to workers’ rights, as well as internationally agreed rules, norms and standards.”

Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations, Murray Watt:

“By ratifying these conventions, Australia sends a powerful message: we respect the fundamental rights of all workers.

“As such, Australia upholds all fundamental international labour rights and is a fair, safe and secure place to work and do business.

“Through the Albanese Government’s workplace law changes and ratifying these Conventions, we are delivering secure jobs and better pay to Australian workers.

“Australia is committed to workplace health and safety as a fundamental principle and right at work.”

Pandemic report states the obvious

Anthony Albanese’s worthless inquiry into the nation’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic has this week delivered a report that tells us nothing we don’t already know. It validates One Nation’s demand for a Royal Commission.

It says human rights were “restricted” (read: violated). It says responses across jurisdictions were “varied” and that this “undermined public confidence and trust.”. It says these “differences were not easily explained, and no rationale was provided,” including “unilateral” state border closures that “lacked consistency and compassion.”.

The report argues for greater transparency in future pandemic responses while noting “economic, social, and mental health and human rights impacts were not always understood or considered” in 2020. Let’s say that again, with feeling: human rights were not considered.

The report—more than 800 pages—was critical of “control measures” implemented by the authorities without sufficient explanation, which “fed the perception that the government did not trust the public to understand or interpret the information correctly and contributed to the decrease in trust.”.

The report admitted that COVID-19 vaccine mandates and other public health restrictions had the biggest negative impact on trust: “The combination of mandatory measures and the perception people had that they were unable to criticise or question decisions and policies has contributed to non-mandated vaccination rates falling to dangerously low levels.”.

It’s nothing that One Nation wasn’t saying during the pandemic itself. That was the time to implement a coordinated, consistent approach. That was the time to act to protect human rights that were being routinely violated by state and territory authorities—not two years after the pandemic, but during the pandemic.

The report doesn’t name the premiers and chief ministers who were responsible for it, all of whom have since moved on except the ACT’s Andrew Barr. The report does nothing to reveal the ‘expert’ health advice that led to the lockdowns and mandates. As we said it would be, the report is essentially worthless, just like the enquiry that preceded it because it would hold no one accountable.

The Albanese government’s response is straight out of the Labor playbook: create another agency, in this case an Australian centre for disease control, at a cost of $251 million. More unelected bureaucrats and health ‘experts’ telling us what to do, funded with yet more taxpayers’ money. There’s no problem that Labor doesn’t think it can fix by spending even more of your money to create a new agency.

Centre for disease control? Why do we get the feeling that really means ‘centre for social and political control’?

Only a comprehensive Royal Commission into the management of the pandemic will have the power to compel the information that Australians have every right to see and hold to account the authorities and state and territory leaders who gleefully trampled all over the rights they had a duty to protect.

Net Zero Manufacturing Tafe Centre of Excellence in the Hunter

The Albanese and Minns Labor Governments are jointly investing more than $60 million over five years to establish the Hunter Net Zero Manufacturing Centre of Excellence at TAFE NSW’s Tighes Hill campus in Newcastle.

Both the Albanese Government and Minns Labor Governments are investing $28.1 million, with a further $5.27 million in federal funding to support the centre.

This will accelerate the development of a Higher Apprenticeship model focused on the advanced skills required for net zero manufacturing.

The upgraded Centre will play a pivotal role in building up new skills for workers across the Hunter, investing in their future.

This will enable access to jobs in the Hunter-Central Coast Renewable Energy Zone, and delivering the skilled workforce required to support the renewable energy sector.

The Centre of Excellence will:

  • Grow the workforce to support the renewable energy industry through technology-integrated learning, increasing access to training in regional and remote areas of northern NSW via mobile training units
  • Establish a National Renewable Energy Microskills Marketplace, enabling TAFEs across Australia to share and access renewable industry-related digital non-accredited courses
  • Implement a higher apprenticeship model, integrating vocational education and training (VET) and higher education by combining critical trade skills like electrotechnology, welding, and fabrication, with higher-level units in emerging areas such as digital technologies.

The Centre will also build on partnerships between TAFE NSW, universities and local industry to pilot qualification models that deliver a parity of status between VET and higher education. 

This follows the September announcement of the Western Sydney Advanced Manufacturing Centre of Excellence and is the second of three TAFE NSW Manufacturing Centres of Excellence, boosting skills training in advanced manufacturing and rebuilding onshore manufacturing capabilities.

Increasing the number of apprentices – particularly in trades such as electrotechnology, engineering, manufacturing and mechatronics – is vital to ensure NSW and Australia have the skills to transition mining, energy and manufacturing industries to a clean energy economy.

This will help it meet the demand for net zero training to support decarbonising mining and manufacturing sectors as Australia transitions to net zero by 2050.

The Centre will also support both Government’s commitment to rebuilding our local manufacturing capacity, including delivering the skilled workforce required to build and maintain the NSW Tangara fleet locally.

The Albanese Government is investing $325 million under the five-year National Skills Agreement, which began on 1 January, to establish a network of up to 20 TAFE Centres of Excellence in areas of high skills needs.

These centres will help deliver a skilled workforce for strategically important industries to meet national challenges.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“Investing in a Future Made in Australia means investing in the skills and training industry will need in the years to come.

“The Hunter has a proud history of industry and manufacturing – which is why this is the perfect place for this Centre of Excellence.

“This builds on the skills that are already a part of this region’s DNA.”

Premier of NSW, Chris Minns

“We are getting on with the job of delivering three TAFE Centres of Excellence in NSW, a key part of our commitment to provide fully subsidised training to an additional 1,000 apprenticeships a year in advanced manufacturing and related industries. 

“The Hunter region is a powerhouse for energy and manufacturing and we are proud to partner with the Albanese Government to deliver this training centre so the local community and industry have the skills needed to benefit from the energy transition. 

“This is part of our plan to deliver affordable reliable energy and drive down emissions.”

Minister for Skills and Training, Andrew Giles

“The Hunter Net Zero Manufacturing Centre of Excellence is a great example of the Australian Government partnering with states to place TAFE at the heart of the VET sector.

“This Centre of Excellence in Net Zero Manufacturing will strengthen the VET system by providing high-quality and responsive skills training in the clean manufacturing economy.

“This will strengthen collaboration between universities and the VET sector. It will deliver the skills and knowledge our manufacturing labour market requires, as we accelerate our ambitions of Net Zero and a Future Made in Australia.

“I look forward to working with the NSW Minister for Skills, TAFE and Tertiary Education, Steve Whan, as together we build a high-performing, more equitable and more dynamic VET sector, to skill Australians for the future.”

NSW Minister for Skills, TAFE and Tertiary Education, Steve Whan

“Skilled workers are critical to support NSW’s transition to net zero and clean energy and to boost our onshore manufacturing capabilities in resources, aviation, defence and transport. 

“The second of three TAFE NSW Manufacturing Centres of Excellence, the TAFE NSW Net Zero Manufacturing Centre of Excellence – Newcastle / Hunter will provide opportunities to upskill our workforce so they are able to take full advantage of the opportunities that renewable manufacturing provides.

“The Minns Government, like the Albanese Government – has a core focus on building more in Australia, from our energy transition right through to making sure we have the skills to build our next trains here in NSW. That’s what it’s all about.”

Release of the Covid-19 Inquiry Report

Australia was one of the most successful nations in its pandemic response, but an investigation by the independent COVID-19 Response Inquiry finds the country was not adequately prepared for a pandemic.

The Inquiry is a reminder of the incredible service and sacrifice of so many people, not just frontline workers, but every single person in Australia.

It was a time of great uncertainty and adversity. Thousands of Australians lost their lives. Borders were closed. Australians were asked to stay in their homes.

The Albanese Government believes we need to be transparent about how the response to COVID-19 was managed and learn the lessons to inform the management of future public health emergencies.

The independent Inquiry says Australia went into the pandemic with stretched health and aged care systems, no clear national management plan, and deficiencies in the National Medical Stockpile.

The Inquiry finds the economic response to the pandemic was critical in achieving the desired public health outcomes.

But mistakes were made, and those mistakes were costly, and inflationary.

Modelling cited in the report says peak inflation could have been reduced by at least 2 per cent if the economic policy settings during the pandemic had better matched the public health restrictions.

Global supply shocks contributed to substantial inflationary pressures in the Australian economy, but the impact was clearly compounded by some poor policy choices during the pandemic and its immediate aftermath.

The Inquiry found that trust in governments and in science has waned as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and the responses of Australian Governments.

The report says that rebuilding community trust and maintaining it needs to be an immediate and ongoing priority, because a key partner in any pandemic response is the Australian public.

The Inquiry was established in September 2023 to consider Commonwealth responses to the pandemic, including vaccines and financial support. The Inquiry also considered the role of National Cabinet.

It was led by an independent panel with significant experience in public health and economic policy – Ms Robyn Kruk AO (Chair), Professor Catherine Bennett and Dr Angela Jackson.

The Inquiry has 9 guiding recommendations and 26 actions for both short term and longer-term work to improve Australia’s preparedness for future pandemics.

The Inquiry received 2201 submissions from organisations and individuals, conducted interviews and roundtables, and commissioned research to understand the experiences of those most heavily affected.

Stakeholder interviews included the former Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, Health Minister Greg Hunt, and Minister for Indigenous Australians Ken Wyatt, as well as a majority of the former State Premiers and Chief Ministers.

The Government will release a response after careful consideration of the Inquiry’s findings and recommendations.

In the interim, the Albanese Government will deliver a new Australian Centre for Disease Control, which is one of the central recommendations of the independent Inquiry.

The report is available at: COVID-19 Response Inquiry Report

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“The pandemic was an extremely difficult period for many Australians, with its impact still being felt. Given the magnitude of this crisis, I determined that it was in the national interest to review what worked and what we can do to be better prepared in the future.

“I thank the panel members for their dedicated work. I also thank the many individuals and organisations who shared their experiences of the pandemic.

“The Australian Government is committed to doing all that we can to ensure Australia is fully equipped and prepared to face future pandemics. We will release a response after careful consideration of the Inquiry report.”

Minister for Health Mark Butler

“This inquiry will be the blueprint to ensure Australia is better prepared for the next pandemic – and there will be a next pandemic.

“As the Inquiry makes clear, Australia lacked sufficient planning and preparation for a pandemic. There are a lot of lessons.

“The establishment of the Australian CDC will help ensure we are prepared next time.

“Within the next 24 hours, I’ll be discussing the Inquiry with my health minister colleagues. Those discussions will continue over coming months.”

Treasurer Jim Chalmers

“The pandemic showed us the best of Australians’ resilience, but it had a profound and lasting impact on our nation’s economy that we are still repairing today.

“The Inquiry has told us that big decisions were taken, and big mistakes were made. These mistakes were costly and added fuel to the inflationary fire.

“The report, and the progress we’ve made since, are proof of why our responsible economic management is so important. It’s why we’re so focused on fighting inflation, delivering responsible cost of living relief, and repairing the budget mess we inherited.”

Investing in innovation, jobs and a future made in Australia

The Albanese Labor Government is backing home-grown innovation, regional jobs and a Future Made in Australia – with the country’s first commercial Concentrated Solar Thermal (CST) heat plant to be built in Victoria.

The development of the plant at the Mars Petcare facility in Wodonga will be backed by more than $17 million in funding from the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA).

This project will secure jobs in the region, reduce emissions through clean, renewable energy and show what’s possible for the future of manufacturing in Australia.

Concentrated solar power technology is a well-known technology for electricity generation, but its application in providing renewable heat for industry is new.

Manufacturing often relies on using large volumes of heat in different processes.

Fossil fuels have traditionally been the only way to generate sufficient heat – however technology breakthroughs mean renewable, clean energy can now be used.

CST uses mirrors to concentrate sunlight to produce thermal energy (PDF 1 MB), that’s then stored as pressurised steam and used in the manufacturing process.

This project will:

  • Include an 18 MW thermal CST plant, with up to 10 hours of thermal storage
  • Reduce 50% of the facility’s gas use – equivalent to the average annual gas use of over 2,000 households
  • Create around 80 jobs during construction

Construction will kick off this month, with completion and full operations expected by 2026.

The Albanese Labor Government is supporting real reliable renewables projects right now.

Peter Dutton’s only plan for Australia’s energy system is to introduce the most expensive form of energy – nuclear – in two decades time.

It’s up to the Coalition to detail the costs of their risky nuclear plan and explain why they’re against a Future Made in Australia.

The Mars Petcare Wodonga project will demonstrate CST as a viable option for businesses seeking reliable, renewable heat solutions to decarbonise industrial processes.

The new CST project will complement Mars Wodonga’s Electric Thermal Energy Storage technology which allows the facility to generate low-cost renewable electricity during off-peak times to produce and store heat for later use.

The company is committed to the facility’s transition to 100% renewable energy in 2 years.

The Wodonga facility is the largest Australian manufacturing site for producing pet food brands such as Pedigree and Whiskas.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“Creating jobs, investing in our regions and reducing emissions – this is a perfect example of a Future Made in Australia.

“Australia has long and proud energy story.

“Projects like this are part of a new chapter which shows what we can do right across Australia, not just here in Wodonga.”

Minister for Climate Change and Energy Chris Bowen

“Our regions have powered the Australian economy for a decades, and will continue to do so in a net zero world, with a future made in Australia.

“This is a great demonstration of the potential for renewable technologies like Concentrated Solar Thermal to drive decarbonisation and create regional Australian jobs.

“The Albanese Government is implementing a Reliable Renewables Plan right now, while Peter Dutton and his colleagues have nothing but a nuclear scheme that could cost $600 billion and deliver less than 4 per cent of Australia’s energy needs.”

State of the Beaches Report for Ballina electorate 2024

Most of the Ocean beaches in Byron Shire and Ballina Shire have been given excellent grades in this year’s State of the Beaches report. Water quality assessment indicated that 100% of monitored ocean beaches in Ballina Shire achieved a Good or Very Good grading. This means the swim sites were suitable for swimming most or almost all the time.

The best rated beaches in the Ballina electorate were Seven Mile Beach, Shelly Beach, and Lighthouse Beach. In Ballina Shire three of the seven estuarine swim spots were classed as Good while Shaws Bay North, East and West, and Missingham Beach – received poor grades. Shaws Bay East was downgraded from Good from the previous year. Only one of the four monitored lake/lagoon sites (Lake Ainsworth South) was graded as Good in 2023-24, with Lake Ainsworth North, East and West all graded as Poor this year.

The North Coast experienced above average rainfall in Spring 2023 due to heavy rainfall in October and November. Rainfall is the major driver of pollution in swim sites, with water quality impacted by stormwater runoff and sewage overflows.

State of the Beaches grades are compiled from water quality samples collected at NSW swim sites monitored under the Beachwatch and Beachwatch Partnership programs.

Member for Ballina

“It is fantastic to see our ocean beaches receive great results despite the high rainfall we have received.”

“It is also a timely reminder that that swimming should be avoided during and for up to three days following rainfall or if there are signs of stormwater pollution such as discoloured water or floating debris.”

“I will be working with Ballina Shire Council to confirm if the beaches that were rated poorly near the mouth of the Richmond River are due to the overall poor health of the river, or if there are other contributing factors.”

“As a major tourist destination for our beautiful beaches it is great news that our ocean beaches are some of the safest in terms of water quality in the State.”

Labor’s international student caps policy is wreaking havoc with potential for more than 1,000 uni job cuts

Senator Mehreen Faruqi, Deputy Greens leader and spokesperson for Higher Education, has reacted to reports that over 1,000 jobs could be at risk at universities nationwide due to the government’s reckless international student cap legislation, which is before the senate.

Senator Faruqi: 

“Labor’s disastrous plan to introduce international student caps is wreaking havoc in the sector before they’ve even come into effect.

“If the prospect of more than 1000 uni job cuts across many universities during a cost of living crisis isn’t enough to convince the Albanese Government that international student caps are a catastrophic mistake, nothing will. 

“Rampant casualisation, wage theft and unsustainable workloads were already crushing staff, and now more than 1000 university workers stand to lose their jobs because of Labor.

“Labor should dump its disastrous international student caps bill and get rid of Ministerial direction 107 right now.

“What universities need is a boost in funding and an overhaul of governance to prioritise staff and students in every decision, not these politically motivative crackdowns on international students.”

Additional humanitarian assistance to Lebanon

Australia will provide a further $10 million in humanitarian assistance to conflict-affected civilians in Lebanon.

Around 800,000 people have been displaced in Lebanon by the conflict between Israel and Hizballah. Emergency shelters have been overwhelmed and humanitarian workers killed.

Australia’s humanitarian assistance will be delivered through United Nations partners to address immediate and emerging needs, including access to food, shelter, healthcare and other critical services.

This will support international efforts, including through the International Conference in Support of Lebanon’s People and Sovereignty, convened in Paris overnight.

Since 7 October 2023, we have committed $94.5 million in humanitarian assistance to support civilians impacted by conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon and to respond to the refugee crisis in the region worsened by those conflicts.

Australia has been clear in its call for ceasefires in both Lebanon and in Gaza. We continue to call for all parties to uphold international law and protect civilians and humanitarian workers.

We continue to advise Australians not to travel to Lebanon. Australians in Lebanon should leave. Australians in Lebanon can register on DFAT’s Crisis Portal or by calling the Australian Government’s 24-hour Consular Emergency Centre on +61 2 6261 3305.

Minister for Foreign Affairs, Senator the Hon Penny Wong:

“The conflict in Lebanon is taking a heavy toll on civilians, including women and children, with around 800,000 people having now been displaced.

“Australia and our partners continue to press for ceasefires in Lebanon and in Gaza. This additional contribution will help those in urgent need, through access to food, shelter and healthcare.”

Minister for International Development and The Pacific, the Hon Pat Conroy MP:

“Civilians and humanitarian workers must be protected, and humanitarian personnel must be able to access all individuals in need of assistance.”

“Australia’s humanitarian funding will provide critical services for people displaced or affected by these conflicts and help protect the most vulnerable.”

Pacific Policing Initiative Steps Up at CHOGM 2024

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has today joined other Pacific leaders to mark the first deployment of the new Pacific Police Support Group, part of the Pacific Policing Initiative (PPI), backed by Australia and endorsed by Pacific Island Forum leaders in August 2024.
 
More than 40 police officers from 11 Pacific countries are part of this deployment, providing security support for Samoa’s hosting of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.  The deployment includes officers from Pacific partners trained at the PPI’s Pinkenba training hub in Brisbane.
 
The Pacific Police Support Group is a new multi-country police capability ready to respond to emergencies or assist during major events, at the request of a Pacific Island Forum Government.
 
Australia has committed approximately $400 million over five years to ensure the Pacific Policing Initiative delivers on the agreement by leaders that the security of the Pacific is the shared responsibility of the Pacific family.
 
The PPI is a Pacific-led initiative designed to strengthen policing capacity and coordination in the region. The PPI has three pillars – regional police training Centres of Excellence, the Pacific Police Support Group and a Pacific Policing Development and Coordination Hub, based in Brisbane.
 
In marking this first deployment, Prime Minister Albanese confirmed that Australia will support the establishment of four regional Centres of Excellence under the PPI. The Centres of Excellence will be purpose-built to train police from across the region in a range of specialist capabilities.
 
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese:
 
“Samoa is the first Pacific island country to host CHOGM. Australia is proud to join our Pacific family to provide police and security support for Samoa as host.
 
“Two months since the Pacific Policing Initiative was endorsed by Pacific leaders, we are seeing it deliver for the region at CHOGM 2024.
 
“The Pacific Policing Initiative will play an important role in promoting regional security across the Pacific region.
 
This is about Pacific security, delivered by the Pacific, in support of Pacific sovereignty.”

Bolstering Food Security in Africa

The Australian Government is bolstering Africa’s ability to withstand the escalating impacts of climate change and combatting food insecurity through a new Africa-Australia Partnership for Climate Responsive Agriculture.

To be announced at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting where climate change is a major focus, the Partnership will use Australian expertise to support the climate resilience of farming communities in Africa. 

Delivered by the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR) over a six-year period, the first year of $11.9 million in funding will contribute to the development of new bilateral research projects and training programs, in close collaboration with local partners. 

ACIAR is already supporting impactful research in Eastern and Southern Africa, including the improvement of sustainable crop and livestock systems, and forest management practices as well as plant biosecurity to stimulate commercial options for smallholder farmers.

The Partnership will allow ACIAR to expand its operations into Northern and Western Africa, as well as deliver capacity development and innovative partnerships across the continent.

Minister for Foreign Affairs, Senator the Hon Penny Wong: 

“Through innovative partnerships and Australian know-how, we are helping build a future where communities are fed, economies are stronger and the environment is protected. It’s about securing a better, more resilient future for all.

“This initiative will help address food insecurity in regions most exposed to climate change’s devastating impacts.

“It is another example of the Albanese Government’s commitment to helping our partners across the world in the fight against climate change and our work to shape the world for the better.”

Minister for International Development, the Hon Pat Conroy MP:

“Investing in Africa’s food security through climate-responsive agriculture is also an investment in Australian farmers and those throughout our region who are facing similar climate impacts.

“This will help secure lives and livelihoods for decades to come.”

Assistant Minister for Foreign Affairs, the Hon Tim Watts MP: 

“Australia is a trusted partner in agricultural innovation and this Partnership will further deepen our economic and research ties with Africa.

“By sharing expertise and resources with African nations, we are helping to build resilient communities that can withstand the interconnected challenges of food security and climate change.”