Skip to content
Energy, Political

Australia at risk of exclusion from renewable manufacturing boom

The Australia Institute's Centre for Future Work 3 mins read

MEDIA RELEASE | 3 August 2023

Australia risks being left out of lucrative new markets for renewable energy-related manufacturing unless the government provides an urgent, domestic response to match powerful incentives introduced by the U.S and several other industrial nations.

The finding is published in a new report released today by the Australia Institute’s Centre for Future Work, as part of the 4th National Manufacturing Summit, being held in Canberra.

Key points:

  • There is an overseas manufacturing boom in the productions of batteries, electric vehicles, renewable energy generation and transmission equipment, and other renewable energy products.
  • This boom is being driven by incentives provided by the Biden Administration’s Inflation Reduction Act, and similar supports in the EU, China, Japan, Korea, and Canada.
  • Meanwhile, Australia is considering its response, but no clear strategy has been announced.
  • The report estimates the proportional investment required to match the American IRA in the Australian context at between $83 to $138 billion over 10 years in fiscal supports and incentives to match U.S. benchmarks.
  • Several qualitative best practices should also be included in the Australian response to the IRA to generate maximum economic, social, and environmental impact: these include strong labour and environmental standards attached to subsidised projects, public equity participation, and parallel investments in training for workers to fill the new jobs.

“The extraordinary response by industry to the U.S. measures confirms that these policies are having an outsized effect on the volume and location of sustainable manufacturing investment,” said Dr Jim Stanford, Director of the Centre for Future Work and co-author of the report.

“It also confirms that Australia must move quickly with its response to this new industrial landscape, or risk losing its chance to leverage our renewable energy resources into lasting, diversified industrial growth.”

Charlie Joyce, a research fellow at the Centre and co-author of the report, noted: “The global race for clean technology manufacturing is well underway, and Australia is barely on the track.

“Australia has many advantages when compared to other competitors in this market, including an unmatched endowment of renewable energy sources and ample deposits of critical minerals.

“However, the painful legacy of decades of policy neglect for domestic manufacturing has left our industrial base in poor shape to seize the opportunities opening up ahead of us.

“If we don’t support domestic manufacturing to quickly enhance its production, skills, and technological capabilities, all that will happen is we will replace one set of unprocessed minerals: coal, oil and gas; with another: raw lithium and related critical minerals.”

“Without action, most of the spin-off benefits of the renewable energy revolution for industry, technology, value-added and diversification will pass us by."

The report estimates the proportional investment required to match the American IRA in the Australian context at between $83 to $138 billion over 10 years in fiscal supports and incentives to match U.S. benchmarks.

“That is a big fiscal ask by any standards, but not out of reach for Australia,” said Dr Stanford. “But the common claim that Australia cannot afford to undertake proportionately equivalent measures is not convincing.”

“Our federal budget is in much better shape than the U.S. And the government has committed to other, less pressing priorities which are just as expensive – such as nuclear submarines, Stage 3 tax cuts, and ongoing fossil fuel subsidies.”

Please see the full report, Manufacturing the Energy Revolution: Australia’s Position in the Global Race for Sustainable Manufacturing, by Charlie Joyce and Jim Stanford.

The paper is being released at the 4th National Manufacturing Summit, being held at Old Parliament House in Canberra from 8.30am to 4.30 pm on Thursday, August 3, co-sponsored by Weld Australia, the Centre for Future Work, and several industry bodies.


Contact details:

Luciana Lawe Davies
0457 974636

More from this category

  • Foreign Affairs Trade, Political
  • 09/05/2024
  • 17:35
ACFID

ACFID statement on United Nations General assembly vote on Friday 10th May: Granting United Nations Member status to Palestine

Media release | Thursday, 9 May 2024 The Australian Council for International Development (ACFID) encourages the Australian Government to vote in support of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) resolution to give Palestine de-facto UN member status. Following 57 years of military occupation, the Palestinian people deserve to have a right to be represented in the United Nations where their representatives can give voice directly to the experience of Palestinian people. The current humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza and the ongoing denial of people’s human rights in the West Bank underscores that the time has come for the Australian Government to…

  • Business Company News, Energy
  • 09/05/2024
  • 14:50
The Victorian Chamber of Commerce and Industry

Australia’s future needs gas

The Victorian Chamber of Commerce and Industry welcomes the strong support for natural and renewable gas as a key energy source for Australian business and industry. The Federal Government’s Future Gas Strategy identifies the crucial role natural and renewable gas will play as we transition to net zero. It also embraces the role of carbon capture and storage (CCS) as a key feature of our decarbonisation journey, particularly for hard-to-abate sectors. Our net zero targets nationally and, in Victoria particularly, present a significant economic opportunity. But as the Federal Minister for Resources Madeleine King states, a transition to net zero…

  • Contains:
  • Energy, Environment
  • 09/05/2024
  • 12:34
Climate Council

A Future Gas Strategy that sends us Back to the Future

IMMEDIATE RELEASE DATE 09 MAY 2024 Sharply rebuking the Albanese Government's endorsement of gas beyond 2050, the Climate Council has labelled today’s Future Gas Strategy announcement as a regressive echo of the past. Climate Council Head of Policy and Advocacy Dr Jennifer Rayner said: "Today's announcement is more Back to the Future than Future Made in Australia. Australia is already using less gas, so the suggestion we need more of it sounds like Scott Morrison's 'gas led recovery', not Anthony Albanese's 'renewable energy superpower'. "More gas means more climate pollution and a more dangerous future, it's that simple. The Albanese…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.