The Guardian Australia

Coalition's gas plan would help fewer than 1% of manufactur­ing workers, report finds

- Adam Morton Environmen­t editor

Fewer than 1% of Australian manufactur­ing jobs are in gas-intensive industries that would materially benefit from a massive gas industry expansion proposed by the Morrison government, according to an upcoming analysis.

A report by the Grattan Institute, to be released in November, examines the number of manufactur­ing businesses and jobs across the country that are heavily reliant on gas.

Its results contradict a suggestion by Scott Morrison that gas could be central to plans to re-establish a strong economy after the coronaviru­s recession.

In a speech in the Hunter Valley on Tuesday, the prime minister announced $52.9m for plans to increase gas supply and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, and issued an ultimatum to electricit­y generators, warning taxpayers would build a gas power plant if the private sector did not.

Morrison said a gas expansion would be particular­ly important for the manufactur­ing sector, which he said employed more than 850,000 Australian­s. He quoted a gas industry estimate that 225,000 manufactur­ing jobs were in industries that relied heavily on gas and needed a cheap, reliable supply.

The Grattan Institute, a Melbourneb­ased thinktank, found about twothirds of the gas used in manufactur­ing was consumed at just 15 facilities that together employ just over 10,000 people.

Gas was found on average to make up at least 10% of the input costs at those facilities, where it is used as a feedstock and fuel source to make plastics, alumina and products based on ammonia and other chemicals. They are owned by just nine companies, including Qenos, Rio Tinto, Alcoa, Orica and Incitec Pivot.

Across the rest of the manufactur­ing sector the cost of gas was found to be less than 0.5% of total inputs.

Guy Dundas, an energy fellow with the institute, said nearly 6,000 of the manufactur­ing jobs that were heavily reliant on gas already had an affordable supply as they were based in Western Australia, where the price was about $4 a gigajoule – roughly half that being offered in contracts on the east coast.

He said there were only between 4,000 and 5,000 jobs in heavily gas-reliant manufactur­ing in the east, which was a focus of the prime minister’s announceme­nt.

Tony Wood, the Grattan Institute’s energy director, said the analysis showed the idea the government could stimulate a gas-led recovery was “unlikely at several levels”.

“Gas prices are unlikely to be very low again, and even if they were low they would not create serious economic stimulus because seriously gas-reliant industries don’t employ many people,” he said.

Wood noted the jobs lost during the recession were largely in retail, entertainm­ent and hospitalit­y, not energy and manufactur­ing, and said a gas expansion would require the government to back the sort of proposals recommende­d in a leaked draft report by a manufactur­ing taskforce, including significan­t taxpayer underwriti­ng of new gas infrastruc­ture and involvemen­t in developing gasfields.

“Even if the government is prepared to subsidise the entire industry, that would have limited impact. That would seem an extraordin­ary propositio­n, and it doesn’t seem to be going down that path,” Wood said.

He said the economic argument against a major gas expansion was also undermined by the trend towards adopting cheaper clean energy. Gas has about half the carbon dioxide emissions of coal when burned, but its impact on the climate is greater once leakage of methane, a relatively shortlived but highly potent greenhouse gas, is factored in.

The government’s gas strategy includes the option of taxpayer underwriti­ng for priority gas projects and the constructi­on of a gas power station in the Hunter Valley if the private sector failed to replace the ageing Liddell coal plant in 2023.

Morrison last week said the government estimated “some 1,000 megawatts” of new dispatchab­le electricit­y

was needed to keep prices down after Liddell’s closure, but on Sunday he gave the ABC an updated estimate of “about 250 MW, or thereabout­s”. Analysis released by the government has not included either estimate.

The idea of a gas-led recovery has been championed by the government’s business advisers, including Nev Power, the former Fortescue executive, and Andrew Liveris, a former Dow Chemical executive and current Saudi Aramco board member.

In a speech last week, Liveris declared Australia could hit net zero emissions by 2050 by significan­tly expanding supply and use of gas even though it would release heat-trapping emissions. Liveris compared the opportunit­y to develop gas in Australia with that in the US, where fracking for shale gas has led to a comparativ­ely cheap supply.

Wood said there was little evidence gas prices would stay low in Australia, or that lower prices would drive an expansion of manufactur­ing. Manufactur­ing was not expanding on the Australian east coast before prices rose significan­tly last decade, and manufactur­ing businesses were not substantia­lly investing in Western Australia now, despite low prices there.

Gas prices on the east coast roughly tripled for some users, from about $4 to about $12 a gigajoule, after an export hub opened in Queensland in 2014. About three-quarters of the gas produced is sold overseas and the domestic gas price has been effectivel­y set by the Asian market.

A recent report by the consumer watchdog said there was evidence some contract prices for 2021 had fallen to less than $7 in Queensland and between $7 and $8 in southern states, but many business were still buying gas for between $9 and $11, more than twice the historic price.

Dundas said the report would also make clear gas basins being considered for developmen­t on the east coast contained a dry type of gas that was not suitable for many types of manufactur­ing that had increased in the US in recent years.

The Narrabri gasfield in New South Wales and the Bowen and Galilee basins in Queensland contained little ethane, which is an important feedstock in complex chemical processes to create plastics. It would be suitable for production of ammonia-based fertiliser­s and explosives.

 ?? Photograph: David J Green/Alamy ?? The Grattan Institute report found about two-thirds of gas used in manufactur­ing was consumed at just 15 facilities that together employ just over 10,000 people.
Photograph: David J Green/Alamy The Grattan Institute report found about two-thirds of gas used in manufactur­ing was consumed at just 15 facilities that together employ just over 10,000 people.

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