Friday 3 June 2022

Climate change, distant war & a continuing global pandemic are all impacting on household budgets and business in Australia right now


With La Niña conditions expected to continue above average rainfall over Winter months, higher commercial and residential electricity prices to be reflected in quarterly bills sometime after 1 July 2022, petrol prices at the pump making life harder for small business and households alike, food prices rapidly rising and the loss of commercial passenger flights to Lismore and Grafton airports with a significant reduction in flights to Ballina, Northern Rivers residents are going to have to dig a little deeper to find that fortitude the region’s communities are known for.


BACKGROUND


ANZ Research, Agricultural Insight, 31 May 2022. “Global Food Crisis To Worsen”, exceprt:


Bringing it home


Food shortages are expected to worsen as climatic issues, energy shortages, the pandemic and the invasion of Ukraine all impact the world’s ability to produce sufficient food. China appears to be one step ahead of the rest of the world in terms of securing additional food supplies. Their policy to increase their reserves of imported products is now serving them well as other countries scramble to import product at inflated prices.


High global food prices will cause hunger in developing nations and erode wealth globally, as it will continue to underpin inflation. Food-exporting nations like Australia and New Zealand may continue to benefit in a net sense from high commodity prices, but it’s hard going for lower-income earners. In addition, as global prices become too expensive, demand will fall, as consumers’ ability to purchase higher-value proteins such as dairy products and red meats is reduced. Demand for basic foodstuffs such as grains is not expected to wane to the same extent – people have to eat.


Therefore the world will need to wait for global supply to increase before these markets rebalance and prices temper.


It’s also worth noting that high food prices are not conducive to geopolitical stability. Hunger induces migration and topples governments. The food crisis is another factor to add to the growing list of potential geopolitical risks as the world tentatively emerges from the shadow of COVID-19. [my yellow highlighting]


Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), Consumer Priece Index: March Quarter 2022, 27 April 2022:


  • The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 2.1% this quarter.

  • Over the twelve months to the March 2022 quarter, the CPI rose 5.1%.

  • The most significant price rises were New dwelling purchase by owner-occupiers (+5.7%) and Automotive fuel (+11.0%)….


Food and non-alcoholic beverages rose by 2.8% since the previous December 2021 quarter and 4.3% since March Quarter 2021. Health prices also rose 2.3% since the previous quarter and 3.5% since March Quarter 2021. Education prices went up by 4.5% since the previous quarter and 4.7% since March Quarter 2021. Housing prices rose by 2.4% from the previous quarter and 6.7% since last year’s March quarter. While Transport prices rose 4.2% since the previous quarter and a whopping 13.7% since last year’s March quarter.

With the exception of Clothing and footwear every CPI benchmark rose since the previous quarter.


The Guardian, 1 June 2022:


Australia is set for its third bumper season of crops in a row, but the increased production will probably bring little relief at the cash register as rising global demand pushes prices skyward.


Australian farmers will plant an area almost the size of England this winter as they try to take advantage of soaring global food prices and a third year of good rains.


The quality of production, though, may be hit by waterlogged fields and reduced fertiliser use as those costs surge, according to Rabobank. Local manufacturers, too, say they’re under strain as raw material and other prices climb and not all of the increases can be passed on.


This winter, farmers will plant a record 23.83m hectares, up 1% on last year, and just shy of England’s 24.36m total area, the bank said in its Winter Crop Outlook. That tally is also 11% more than the five-year average, with wheat plantings up 1.4% and canola, an oilseed, up by 20.9%. Plantings of barley, oats and pulses have dropped…..


Too much rain, though, has forced some farmers to delay or even replant crops – including three plantings of canola in some parts of New South Wales, Voznesenski said.


Other challenges include higher costs for diesel and agrochemicals from pesticides to fertilisers. And while prices have been hitting record levels globally, limited export capacity has hindered exports, meaning farmers have missed out on some of the best prices, he said.


However, Tanya Barden, chief executive of the Food & Grocery Council, said local food manufacturers hadn’t seen much benefit. They were struggling from unprecedented steepening prices for all manner of inputs, from wheat to energy and freight and packaging costs.


Input costs had risen by 50% over the last decade, and so profitability has dropped from $8bn [a year] to $5bn, and capital investment stagnated,” Barden said. “Industry now is not in a position where it’s able to keep absorbing all these massive additional levels of cost increases.”


While grocery food prices rose 5.3% in the year to March, according to ABS data, they rose 4% in the previous three months alone, she said.


With the full impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Covid-related disruptions in China still to be felt, it was likely food price inflation would quicken in this and coming quarters, she said.


A separate report by ANZ on Tuesday, meanwhile, argued the world faced a “prolonged global food crisis” caused by lost exports from Russia and Ukraine, two of the biggest exporters…..


Susan Kilsby, an agriculture economist with ANZ, said food inflation is going to be an issue that will “plague Australia and most other countries” well into 2023.


Demand for grains tends to be relatively inelastic, so for global grain prices to ease we really need to see an increase in the supply of grain that is available to be exported globally,” Kilsby said.


While wheat plantings in Australia will be large by historical levels, yields may fall from the highs of recent years.


La Niña brings more rains in Australia and Asia, while drought in the Americas,” she said, adding the timing of the rainfall can also have a big effect on output.


Rabobank in its report noted Australian farmers have been investing heavily in new storage capacity to cope with increased production and also the limited capacity of grain handlers and exporters to move their crops.


Supply chain snags, however, mean some of the additional spending is not resulting in the equipment arriving.


In some cases, farmers “can order them, but they’re not even told when they can get” the extra storage, with waits stretching out to a year.


There’s a lot less certainty in their world at the moment,” Rabobank’s Voznesenski said. [my yellow highlighting]


Soybean farmers on NSW North Coast suffer near-total crop losses. Region grows high-end soy bean crop for foods such as tofu with estimated value of $20 million. Ongoing rain after Feburary-March flooding is causing further losses.


That record flood caused extensive damage to the NSW Sugar Milling Co-operative’s three sugar mills on the Northern Rivers and 3,000 tonnes of raw sugar had to be condemned at Harwood, but it is expected that Condong on the Tweed and Harwood on the Clarence will be operational for the late June start to crushing while the Broadwater enterprise on the Richmond, which experienced extensive damage to the steam and power generation facility may not be fully operational until the end of August.


Australian Institute of Petroleum, Weekly Petrol Prices Report: Week Ending 29 May 2022:


Average Petrol retail price this week: 200.0 cents

Average Petrol wholesale price this week: 189.7 cents


Prices have been rising steadily. With the average petrol retail price for the week ending 1 May 2022 coming in at 178.2 cents and the average petrol wholesale price at 163.1 cents.

The week ending 8 May saw the retail price at 179.6 cents and wholesale price 169.2 cents. By the week ending 15 May average prices had risen to retail 185.0 cents and wholesale 178.7 cents. The following week ending 22 May averages prices had again increased to retail 199.1 cents and wholesale 183.3 cents.


Australian Energy Market, AER Statement – Retail Market, 1 June 2022, excerpt:


As outlined in both our Q1 Quarterly Wholesale Report and our Final Determination of the Default Market Offer last week, there continues to be volatility in the wholesale energy market resulting in added cost pressures on both retailers and consumers.


The AER is closely monitoring the situation in both the wholesale and retail markets and ensuring all participants are complying with the law and the rules…..


ABS, Australian National Accounts: National Income, Expenditure and Product, March 2022, 1 June 2022:


The La Nina weather cycle influenced Australia’s weather during summer and early autumn, leading to severe flooding in areas of south-east Queensland and northern New South Wales.


The impacts of these events can be seen in key national accounts aggregates. Severe storms disrupted mining and construction activity, resulting in reduced gross value added for these industries. Residential and commercial properties were damaged, resulting in increased non-life insurance claims and governments increased spending on defence assistance for affected areas.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Industry Gross Value Added

The response to the L-strain outbreak of COVID-19 led to a large fall in gross value added (GVA) in the June quarter 2020, driven by a record decrease in market sector GVA. Impacts were widespread throughout market industries, with only Mining and Financial and Insurance Services recording growth. The largest falls were seen in tourism and hospitality-related industries, reflecting the restrictions imposed on movement.


Non-market GVA declined driven by Health Care and Social Assistance. Elective surgeries were cancelled and visits to health care professionals declined as households sought to limit the spread of the virus. Both market and non-market GVA partially recovered in the September quarter 2020 as restrictions were lifted.


The Delta strain of COVID-19 had similar effects on market and non-market GVA, with trading and mobility restrictions reducing demand for many goods and services. The falls were not as pronounced as those that occurred during the L-strain, as fewer states experienced outbreaks. Additionally, trading frameworks such as COVID-19 safety plans were developed to allow some businesses in affected states to keep operating under restrictions such as mandatory QR check-ins for patrons and venue capacity limits.


The absence of lockdowns under the Omicron variant resulted in a lower impact on demand. While restrictions were less stringent, hours worked fell due to high COVID-19 infection rates and subsequent isolation requirements. Market sector GVA rose in the March quarter 2022, with the reopening of domestic and international borders. Growth was recorded in travel-related industries such as Transport, Postal and Warehousing and Accommodation and Food Services. Non-market GVA fell due to a contraction in Health Care and Social Assistance, however the fall was less severe than for the prior strains.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


UPDATE

ABC News, 3 June 2022:


Australian manufacturers facing massive increases in gas prices are warning they could be forced to shut, with tens of thousands of jobs on the line.


Gas prices on the spot market have quadrupled amid supply constraints, local coal-fired power station outages, and the war in Ukraine.


Australia's largest plastics producer Qenos buys about 40 per cent of its gas on the open market.


"Prices have gone up in the spot market to between $30 and $40 a gigajoule. In fact, that's in a month alone, that's an increase of 300 to 400 per cent," Qenos chief executive Steve Bell said.


"For energy-intensive businesses like ours that is not sustainable."….


On Wednesday, AEMO triggered the Gas Supply Guarantee Mechanism for the first time since it was introduced in 2017. The mechanism calls for the market to release supply and come up with a plan to address a potential shortfall.


Analyst Gilles Walgenwitz said without enough renewables capacity in the grid to make up the shortfall, local coal fired power station outages were also pushing up gas prices.


"We have about six gigawatts of coal capacity missing in Queensland, six gigawatts in New South Wales. That's huge, when you compare to the total capacity normally available," he said.


"And so, we have much more gas power generation coming into play to meet the demand and it happens that at the same time, the price of gas is extremely high."


Thursday 2 June 2022

Australian Labor Government First Full Albanese Federal Ministry List

 

Prime Minister of Australia, media release, 31 May 2022:


The Prime Minister the Hon. Anthony Albanese has announced his Government’s first full Ministry.


Cabinet


The Hon. Anthony Albanese MP, Prime Minister

The Hon. Richard Marles MP, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Defence

Senator the Hon. Penny Wong, Minister for Foreign Affairs

The Hon. Dr Jim Chalmers MP, Treasurer

Senator the Hon. Katy Gallagher, Minister for Finance, Minister for the Public Service and Minister for Women

Senator the Hon. Don Farrell, Minister for Trade and Tourism Special Minister of State

The Hon. Tony Burke MP, Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations and Minister for the Arts

The Hon. Mark Butler MP, Minister for Health and Aged Care

The Hon. Chris Bowen MP, Minister for Climate Change and Energy

The Hon. Tanya Plibersek MP, Minister for the Environment and Water

The Hon. Catherine King MP, Minister for Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local Government

The Hon. Linda Burney MP, Minister for Indigenous Australians

The Hon. Amanda Rishworth MP, Minister for Social Services

The Hon. Bill Shorten MP, Minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme and Minister for Government Services

The Hon. Mark Dreyfus QC MP, Attorney-General and Cabinet Secretary

The Hon. Brendan O’Connor MP, Minister for Skills and Training

The Hon. Jason Clare MP, Minister for Education

The Hon. Julie Collins MP, Minister for Housing, Minister for Homelessness and Minister for Small Business

Michelle Rowland MP, Minister for Communications

Madeleine King MP, Minister for Resources and Minister for Northern Australia

Senator Murray Watt, Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry Minister for Emergency Management

Ed Husic MP, Minister for Industry and Science

Clare O’Neil MP, Minister for Home Affairs and Minister for Cyber Security


Outer Ministry


Matt Keogh MP, Minister for Veterans’ Affairs and Minister for Defence Personnel

Pat Conroy MP, Minister for Defence Industry and Minister for International Development and the Pacific

Stephen Jones MP, Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Financial Services

Andrew Giles MP, Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs

Anne Aly MP, Minister for Early Childhood Education and Minister for Youth

Anika Wells MP, Minister for Aged Care and Minister for Sport

Kristy McBain MP, Minister for Regional Development, Local Government and Territories


Assistant Ministers


The Hon. Justine Elliot MP, Assistant Minister for Social Services and Assistant Minister for the Prevention of Family Violence

The Hon. Matt Thistlethwaite MP, Assistant Minister for Defence, Assistant Minister for Veterans’ Affairs and Assistant Minister for the Republic

The Hon. Dr Andrew Leigh MP, Assistant Minister for Competition, Charities and Treasury

Patrick Gorman MP, Assistant Minister to the Prime Minister

Senator Jenny McAllister, Assistant Minister for Climate Change and Energy

Senator Carol Brown, Assistant Minister for Infrastructure and Transport

Ged Kearney MP, Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care

Emma McBride MP, Assistant Minister for Mental Health and

Assistant Minister for Rural and Regional Health

Senator Malarndirri McCarthy, Assistant Minister for Indigenous Australians and Assistant Minister for Indigenous Health

Senator Tim Ayres, Assistant Minister for Trade and Assistant Minister for Manufacturing

Senator Anthony Chisholm, Assistant Minister for Education and Assistant Minister for Regional Development

Tim Watts MP, Assistant Minister for Foreign Affairs.


There are 19 women on the 42 strong ministry and portfolio list - 10 women in the 23-member cabinet, 3 women in the 7-member outer ministry and 6 women in the 12-member assistant ministry.


The aftermath of Northern Rivers February-March 2022 floods revealed a failure of planning and emergency response, NSW Upper House inquiry told


Locals rescuing locals
Lismore March 2022
IMAGE: ABC News, 7 March 2022





AAP General Newswire, 30 May 2022:


A failure to plan was behind "devastation" caused by severe flooding to towns across northern NSW, an inquiry has been told.


Northern NSW towns hit by this year's devastating floods have been left "exposed" by the emergency, which highlighted a housing crisis, telco failures and government missteps in the region, an inquiry has been told.


A NSW parliamentary committee is looking into the official response to the flood catastrophe of February and April that struck primarily in the Northern Rivers region.


At least 10 people died in the wild weather that forced thousands of residents to flee their homes and left many towns in the region severely damaged.


Federal and state authorities have faced criticism over their handling of the emergency, including their response times, preparedness and recovery.


On Monday, Byron Shire Council mayor Michael Lyon told the inquiry the floods revealed an "inability to deal" with a housing crisis which existed before the crisis.


"We've put planning proposals (in on) tiny homes, caps on short-term letting, we've been attempting this for several years, we haven't been able to get those through," Mr Lyon told the inquiry, sitting in Ballina.


"What that meant was that the exacerbation caused by the floods, and that existing crisis, left us really exposed and it's made things so much harder in the aftermath of the floods.


"If you fail to plan then the plan is to fail and I think that's what we saw in a number of areas as the result of this devastation."


He also hit out at the NSW Department of Communities and Justice, saying the agency failed at times, especially on setting up evacuation centres.


He pointed to one evacuation centre in the town of Mullumbimby having to be "informally stood up" as DCJ "didn't really make the effort to get in there".


"That left residents stranded with nowhere to go," he said.


Telstra was also in Mr Lyon's firing line for the communications network remaining down for weeks during and after the floods.


He said the telco giant had serious questions to answer over the way its network was designed and whether its privatisation contributed to its performance.


"I'm interested to know how that can be improved so that we are ... more resilient for the future," he said.


Ballina Shire Council mayor Sharon Cadwallader, in her evidence, said residents knew the area faced a flood risk, but "mitigation money" had been inadequate.


Ms Cadwallader also cited communication problems during the crisis which left the area isolated, labelling what happened as "totally inadequate" .


The situation was so dire, she said, "runners" had to go between evacuation centres and people had to cross the border to Queensland to get messages out.


Rebecca Woods, chief executive of the Bogal Local Aboriginal Lands Council, testified that in Coraki -- a small town at the juncture of the Richmond and Wilson Rivers -- flood-hit residents had been taken in by others, resulting in overcrowding.


Ms Woods said the practice had led to the "tragedy" in the town of two and three families living in houses meant for six people.


The upper house inquiry continues in Lismore on Tuesday.


Wednesday 1 June 2022

Today REX Airlines began to abandon Northern Rivers regional airports - yet again

 

On 31 May 2022 Regional Express (REX) airlines confirmed that it was withdrawing airline services from Lismore and Grafton on 1 June 2022 and from Ballina on 2 July 2022.

At the same time it announced cessation of service to Kangarooo Island.

Very predictably this withdrawal again - as it has so often in the past - coincided with the cessation of federal government funding which heavily subsidizes REX.

The phrase 'shakedown merchant' comes to mind.

City of Lismore - first Australian city to begin a major planned climate change reconstruction. Will all three tiers of government, the building-construction lobby, property developers & land speculators be able to resist the temptation to indulge their personal or political ambitions as well as their financial greed, in order to ensure the restoration of safe living space for a vibrant community whilst securing a culturally & environmentally sustainable future?



Lismore City in happier times
IMAGE: Lismore City Council















The Sydney Morning Herald, 28 May 2022:


Public servant David Witherdin holds the fate of the Northern Rivers in his hands, charged with extensive powers to rebuild the flood-ravaged region, writes Heath Gilmore.


David Witherdin is about to begin one of the biggest reconstruction jobs in Australian history, restoring the flood-blighted Northern Rivers of NSW, but he also must confront an even bigger task, almost existential in complexity: can he stop Lismore from drowning?…..


Extensive powers have been bestowed on Witherdin, chief executive of the newly created Northern Rivers Reconstruction Corporation, including to compulsorily acquire or subdivide land, fast-track the building of new premises and accelerate the delivery of planning proposals through the Department of Planning and Environment.


From July 1, and based in Lismore, the corporation will work with all state government agencies, seven local councils and the private sector to ensure that the reconstruction of infrastructure is co-ordinated and streamlined.


And, it is not only the building of new schools, bridges, roads, water and sewerage infrastructure that Witherdin will oversee. Thousands of residents potentially will be rehoused in new estates signed off by him; buildings rebuilt in a manner dictated by him; the order of infrastructure projects determined by him; and multimillion-dollar contracts awarded by him. Undoubtedly, developers and big contractors will lobby him. Further, he will drive a new master plan for Lismore City that responds to these changes, shaping the social and economic fabric of lives for generations.


He will have an advisory board, consult widely with community and local representatives, but ultimately, he will be answerable to one person: Deputy Premier Paul Toole.


It makes this father of three from Newcastle - a trained civil engineer who worked across the mining, utility, transport and local government sectors before a senior leadership role with the Department of Regional NSW - one of the most powerful figures in the Perrottet government. He has to succeed.


Walking the streets of towns and villages in the Northern Rivers it becomes clear why so much power has been vested in a stand-alone, unelected body. "We'll be pushing through mud literally for the next six months to make things happen, yeah, literally wading through s---," Witherdin says…..


Desolation is splattered right across the Northern Rivers, in the tongue-twister towns of Murwillumbah and Mullumbimby, along the winding rivers bordered by earthier named villages such as Wardell, Woodburn, Coraki and Broadwater, right up into the isolated dreamscape communities of the surrounding hills that are cut off by landslides. The region's population is about 280,000.


Ground zero is Lismore, known as the flood capital of Australia, with a population of about 27,000. Four people died in February as rising water inundated 3045 residential, commercial and industrial buildings and damaged hundreds of millions of dollars worth of critical infrastructure.


Large swaths of the city remain in limbo, waiting for the state or federal government to make a call on their future. Lismore City Council believes at least 1000 households should be relocated to higher ground at a cost of $400 million. And, the region faced flooding again this week.


Usually, elected officials in NSW - councillors, mayors and local MPs - jealously guard their role as the democratically elected repositories of political power that plays out across our lives. Lismore MP Janelle Saffin, Ballina MP Tamara Smith and the regions' seven mayors, however, all support the elevation of Witherdin and his corporation. This disaster was just too big to argue otherwise.


From the first day of the disaster, a still wet Saffin, who had to swim for her life through the floodwater, voiced the need for a single body to rebuild the Northern Rivers, similar to what happened after Cyclone Tracy hit Darwin, and the Queensland Reconstruction Authority, which was created after the 2011 floods.


Saffin made it her mission to convince the NSW government to back the idea by being "persistent, consistent". "We were wiped out," Saffin, a Labor MP, says. "I've been through over 40 years of floods, and even 2017, which was really catastrophic, we were able to manage to get up, even with a lot of trauma and pain, but this one was different.


"State and federal governments can be with you in the immediacy of a big event. But they get consumed by the daily business of everything else and everywhere else in the state.


"So I wanted a commitment from government, with a reconstruction body, recognising that this event is like no other we've experienced, and we're going to back you for the long haul.


"Otherwise we'll be buggered."


An ongoing NSW Flood Inquiry, chaired by Professor Mary O'Kane and former NSW Police commissioner Mick Fuller, is conducting hearings and taking submissions, examining everything contributing to the frequency, intensity, timing and location of floods, including climate change.


NSW Deputy Premier Toole says their recommendations will drive the focus of the corporation. The first report from O'Kane and Fuller is due by the end of June.


Toole says the corporation will look at areas where it makes the "most sense" to rebuild as well as work with the insurance industry to ensure reconstruction is sustainable and insurable.


"We want the NRRC [Northern Rivers Reconstruction Corporation] to make decisions on what the evidence is telling us because we're not just building back for now, this is about future-proofing these towns," he says.


The Northern Rivers can be a chaotic and passionate mix of rural conservatism, hard-scrabble working class and loud green activism. It straddles world heritage rainforest, prime farm land and a multimillion-dollar coastal property market, including Byron Bay.


Ballina MP Tamara Smith, from the Greens, whose electorate includes Byron Bay, Mullumbimby, Lennox Head and Ballina, says the community will be on guard for opportunists trying to take advantage of the flood disaster.


"The Greens are very concerned that under the cloak of a natural disaster, we could see open slather development," she says.


"I'm less worried about them compulsorily acquiring property, as I am about them declaring a moratorium on planning laws so developers could do what they want in certain areas, under the argument of providing more stock."


Witherdin will not be drawn on how the lives of Northern Rivers residents will be safeguarded until the inquiry presents its first report. However, he says engineering and planning expertise will be vital, especially in the areas of hydrology and flood modelling. Promising a full and honest dialogue with the community, respecting their wishes, he candidly admits that some decisions may be unpopular. "This won't be easy," he says. "I think as soon as you draw a line on a map, we will absolutely feel that. But we'll get there. I know the solutions will be different from town to town, catchment to catchment. We've got to listen to our community and understand what they've been through, a lot of pain. I know the corporation will have the tools in the toolkit and the relevant experience [to meet the government's aims], but the corporation is there to work with the community to also find out their best outcomes, not to sort of walk in there and impose things."


Witherdin says the work of the corporation will set up the Northern Rivers communities for the next 50 to 100 years. "As we look to the future [with climate change], I think we are likely to see more of this kind of natural disaster - not just in Australia but internationally," he says. "If we do this reconstruction well, it could really serve as a great template of what to do in the future across Australia."