AU$ 22 billion earmarked for infrastructure

13 May 2009

Wayne Swan MP, Treasurer of Australia

Wayne Swan MP, Treasurer of Australia

Unveiling the 2009-2010 Budget this week Wayne Swan, Treasurer of Australia, said the government will invest more than AU$ 22 billion (US$ 16.9 billion) for ‘Nation Building Infrastructure' - rail, road, port, education, health, energy and broadband access.

The budget earmarked AU$ 3.4 billion (US$ 2.6 billion) for roads, AU$ 4.6 billion (US$ 3.52 billion) for metro rail, AU$ 389 million (US$ 298 million) for ports and freight infrastructure, and AU$ 4.5 billion (US$ 3.45 billion) for the Clean Energy Initiative, which includes AU$ 1 billion (US$ 765 million) of existing funding.

There was also AU$ 2.6 billion (US$ 1.99 billion) available for projects focused on universities and research from the Education Investment Fund, AU$ 3.2 billion (US$ 2.45 billion) for projects focused on hospitals and health infrastructure from the Health and Hospitals Fund, and partnering with the private sector to build the AU$ 43 billion (US$ 33 billion) National Broadband Network.

Mr Swan listed 15 infrastructure projects of "national importance", 10 of which were outlined in a shortlist of projects compiled by the government's Infrastructure Australia advisory body last week.

These include metro rail projects, including the Regional Rail Express project in Victoria - AU$ 3.2 billion (US$ 2.45 billion), the Gold Coast light rail project, Queensland - AU$ 365 million (US$ 279 million), the Gawler rail line modernisation - South Australia - AU$ 294 million (US 225 million), the Noarlunga to Seaford rail link, South Australia - AU$ 291 million (US$ 222 million), the Northbridge rail link, known as "the Hub", Western Australia - AU$ 236 million (US$ 180 million), the West Metro Sydney project, New South Wales - AU$ 91 million (US$ 70 million), the O-Bahn track extension, South Australia - AU$ 61 million (US$ 47 million) and the East-West Rail Tunnel, Victoria - AU$ 40 million (US$ 30.5 million).

Other projects earmarked by Mr Swan include the Brisbane rail feasibility study, Queensland - AU$ 20 million (US$ 15 million), the Hunter Expressway, New South Wales - AU$ 1.5 billion (US$ 1.15 billion), the Ipswich Motorway, Queensland - AU$ 884 million (US$ 676 million), the Kempsey Bypass, New South Wales - AU$ 618 million (US$ 473 million), the Bruce Highway - Cooroy to Curra, Queensland - AU$ 488 million (US$ 373 million), Oakajee Port, Western Australia - AU$ 339 million (US$ 259 million), and the Port of Darwin expansion, Northern Territories - AU$ 50 million (US$ 38 million).

The budget also outlined plans to part fund a raft of projects and offered seed capital to a plethora of others.

Mr Swan said investment in critical infrastructure projects would support an estimated 15000 jobs a year, peaking at 18000 in 2011-12.

However, Mr Swan also revealed that Australia will post a record AU$ 57.6 billion (US$ 44.1 billion) deficit in 2009-10. Mr Swan said the government therefore needed to borrow money for stimulus measures to kick-start the ailing economy and offset a AU$ 210 billion (US$ 160.5 billion) shortfall in revenues caused by the crisis.

"The global recession has been unleashed on Australia with a brutal, uncompromising force," said Mr Swan.

Latest News
ARA forecasts “soft landing” at Working at Height Conference
Chief economist shares forecasts with Working at Height at delegates in Nashville yesterday 
Wolff tower cranes work out in Norway
Five flat top tower cranes are helping to rejuvenate an industrial district of Oslo
NessCampbell debuts North America’s first Grove GMK6450-1
NessCampbell Crane + Rigging partnered with Western Towboat to assemble a new towboat at its Seattle facility.