Alla ämnen
Opinion & commentary

‘Green steel’ best opportunity for job creation and exports – Grattan Institute

Australia has a historic opportunity to create a multi-billion-dollar, export-focused manufacturing sector based on globally competitive renewable energy, according to a new report by the Grattan Institute. Using Australia’s plentiful wind and solar resources to make energy-intensive ‘green’ commodities could create tens of thousands of jobs, which could be concentrated in regions that currently employ tens of thousands of coal miners and other ‘carbon workers’.

Ett fel inträffade

Du är inloggad som prenumerant på Bioenergy International, men nånting är fel.

På din profilsida ser du vilka av våra produkter som du har tillgång till och mer information.

Skulle uppgifterna inte stämma på din profilsida – vänligen kontakta vår support.

Var vänlig ladda om sidan

Vi kunde inte säkerställa om du är inloggad eller inte. Var vänlig ladda om denna sida.
Bioenergy International premium

Vill du läsa hela artikeln?

Endast inloggade betalande prenumeranter kan läsa allt innehåll på bioenergyinternational.com
Som prenumerant får du:
  • Six editions per year
  • Full access to all digital content
  • The E-magazine Bioenergy international
  • And more ...
Australia has a historic opportunity to create a multi-billion-dollar, export-focused manufacturing sector based on globally competitive renewable energy, according to a new report by the Grattan Institute. Using Australia’s plentiful wind and solar resources to make energy-intensive ‘green’ commodities could create tens of thousands of jobs, which could be concentrated in regions that currently employ thousands of coal miners and other ‘carbon workers’ (photo courtesy Grattan Institute).

Published by Grattan Insititute, an independent non-partisan think tank dedicated to “developing high-quality public policy for Australia’s future”, the report  “Start with steel: A practical plan to support carbon workers and cut emissions” shows that using Australia’s plentiful wind and solar resources to make energy-intensive ‘green’ commodities could create tens of thousands of jobs.

Furthermore that these jobs could be concentrated in regions that currently employ tens of thousands of coal miners and other ‘carbon workers’ whose jobs are threatened by global efforts to tackle climate change by cutting greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

Capturing about 6.5 percent of the global steel market would generate about AU$65 billion in annual export revenue and could create 25 000 manufacturing jobs in Queensland (QLD) and New South Wales (NSW).

Climate change is a wicked conundrum for Australia. It’s a threat to our health and to our agriculture and tourism industries – but tens of thousands of Australians work in industries that rely on fossil fuels. Our practical plan could be a win-win-win: it would create a new export industry, support carbon workers, and cut emissions, Grattan Institute’s Energy Program Director, and report lead author Tony Wood said.

Green steel best for job creation and exports

The report assesses the potential of three sectors to help make Australia a green energy superpower: aviation fuel, ammonia, and steel. It concludes that green steel represents the best opportunity for exports and job creation in key regions.

Green steel uses hydrogen, produced from renewable energy, to replace metallurgical coal to reduce iron ore to iron metal. Australia’s extensive wind and solar energy resources mean that it can make hydrogen, and therefore green steel, more cheaply than countries such as Japan, Korea, and Indonesia.

To do this at a global scale will require big industrial workforces – such as those found in the coal-mining regions of central Queensland and the Hunter Valley in NSW. It is cheaper to make green steel in those places, where labour is available and affordable than in the Pilbara in Western Australia (WA) – despite the cost of shipping iron ore to the east coast.

Developing a green steel industry in Australia represents the best opportunity for exports and job creation according to a report “Start with steel: A practical plan to support carbon workers and cut emissions” by the Grattan Institute.

Smaller but still valuable opportunities in green steel and aviation biofuel exist in other locations, including Port Kembla in NSW, Portland in Victoria, Whyalla in South Australia, and Collie in WA.

Flagship project needed

Investment to create a global-scale export industry would have to come from the private sector, but the report highlights that Australian federal governments should act now “to ensure we can capture this opportunity.”

To build local skills and capability in low-emissions steel-making in the next decade, the federal government should help fund a low-emissions steel ‘flagship’ project. This could use WA’s low-cost gas to make steel with lower emissions than coal. Or it could help modernise the steel plants at Port Kembla or Whyalla and sustain existing jobs.

Governments should fund and publish pre-commercial studies of geological potential in Australia for hydrogen storage. Federal, state, and local governments should all play a role in coordinating land-use planning and regional development and helping workers to retrain.

Australia could also support a new, sustainable biofuels industry that uses non-food biomass sources. The federal government should consider mandating that a set share of domestic aviation fuel comes from such biofuels. This could create hundreds of jobs in centres such as Collie, Portland, and Victoria’s Latrobe Valley.

For too long, adding value to Australia’s energy and minerals resources and creating sustainable jobs through manufacturing and exporting has been the stuff of dreams. Not anymore. If we get this right, we will resolve the great climate conundrum that has stretched our political fabric for more than a decade, Tony Wood said.

Most read on Bioenergy International

Get the latest news about Bioenergy

Subscribe for free to our newsletter
Skickar begäran
I accept that Bioenergy International stores and handles my information.
Read more about our integritypolicy here