Because Adani’s Carmichael coal mine project is primarily seen as an issue about coal, climate inaction and the death of the Great Barrier Reef, the extraordinary nature of what governments are doing to encourage the project has received less attention than it should have.
It’s barely three years since the Abbott government virtually chased General Motors and Toyota out of Australia, because the age of entitlement was over. According to the Productivity Commission, we spent around $2 billion a year in tariffs and direct assistance supporting an industry that, in its last years, was employing around 40-50,000 people but which a few years earlier had employed up to 80,000.
Since then, the tide has swung dramatically back toward protectionism as state and federal governments have rushed to find local projects to lavish cash on — projects that make car manufacturing look like value for money.
The Queensland government is deferring around $320 million in royalties from Adani’s coal mine, in a royalty “holiday” to help the project along. To the extent that it enabled Adani to, bizarrely, declare that it had decided to go ahead — if it could find some more money — this worked. Despite the insistence of the Queensland government, Queensland taxpayers are unlikely to ever see that $320 million — why on earth would the corrupt, tax-dodging Adani ever pay a cent if all it needed to do was warn that the end of the royalty holiday would make the mine unviable and lead to job losses?
Politicians always find ways to tell themselves they’re not really engaging in protectionism. It’s always a “special case”. Or the industry just needs some initial assistance, but once it develops it will stand on its own two feet. Or there are “flow on benefits”. State governments are particularly good at devising ways to kid themselves, whether it’s long-term electricity subsidies for smelters, or paying millions to the grubby spivs of Formula 1 to stage a race on Melbourne, or give tax concessions to multinationals to base offices and plants locally. Annastacia Palaszczuk’s reassurance that the royalty holiday will end and Adani will stump up is just another version.
Losing $320 million to employ, by the company’s own admission, 1460 workers isn’t too bad an outcome — that’s around $220,000 per job in total — we used to spend around $10,000 a year on car workers. But that’s before you factor in the lazy billion from the aptly named NAIF that perpetually outraged resources minister Matt Canavan wants to throw at the rail line to get the coal from the middle of Queensland to a port — a handout that either is crucial to the project, or just a nice extra, depending on which day you ask Adani. That makes it around $900,000 a job. And that’s not counting assistance the Queensland government has already given to the company so far.
We’ve swapped the age of entitlement for the age of largesse, it seems.
Palaszczuk’s royalties holiday, however, gets the Carmichael problem off her back and puts it squarely on Malcolm Turnbull’s. Queensland is crucial to the next federal election — not to mention the small matter of the looming Queensland state election. Palaszczuk can tell Queensland voters that she’s bent over backwards for Adani; any failure from here will be down to the failure of the federal government to spend a billion dollars on concrete sleepers and (overpriced Australian) steel tracks.
It’s a policy race to the bottom that dodgy multinationals like Adani exploit to perfection. Dangle the prospect of jobs in front of electorally desperate politicians like Palaszczuk and Turnbull and they fall over themselves to deliver handouts. Taxpayers, meanwhile, lose out. But taxpayers have always lost out when it comes to protectionism in Australia. And these days, when it comes to the cost per subsidised job, they lose out far more than they used to.
With a bit of luck Adani will go bust before the first km of track is laid – or be arrested by Indian police for corruption.
As at 8 MAY 2016
[quote] “The billionaire Gautam Adani’s Adani group, with Rs 96,031 crore debt, ($A19,753,576,700) is under pressure to sell its stake in the Abbott Point coal mines, port and rail project. The Adani Group’s debt stands at Rs. 72,000 crore. Last year, Standard Chartered bank had recalled loans amounting to $2.5 billion as part of its global policy of reducing exposure in emerging markets. Global lenders have backed out from funding the $10-billion coal mine development project. State Bank of India has also declined to offer a loan despite signing an MoU to fund the group with $1 billion. An Adani spokesperson declined to offer any comments on the issue.”
http://www.thehindu.com/business/Industry/the-biggestever-fire-sale-of-indian-corporate-assets-has-begun-to-tide-over-bad-loans-crisis/article8573163.ece
Gautam Adani can spot fools and there are plenty of fools aka politicians lining up to gift him Australian taxpayer funds to help accelerate Great barrier reef destruction. And no to all politicians; …coal dust slurry does not improve the well being of the Great Barrier Reef.
I think most people are entirely missing the point about Adani. The global company is technically broke, and it would have pulled out of Queensland a long time ago had it not been for the value it has built into it balance sheet of the as yet undeveloped mine. Even in its infancy state it has some value even if it is based on dodgy projection numbers. In addition, it is pushing onto the market the $900+ million the federal government is talking about giving it. Without these two phenomenon, the Adani company itself would no longer exist.
The project itself is a complete myth – no bank either local or international will ever touch it, unless the federal government puts up most of the money and covers the risks. Something which unfortunately is not beyond the bounds of possibility given the stupidity of our current governments on this issue.
Quite correct.
Its NOT about Adani. Adani is just the front. Its about Rinehart & Palmer who have the adjacent leases.
As at 8 May 2016
http://www.thehindu.com/business/Industry/the-biggestever-fire-sale-of-indian-corporate-assets-has-begun-to-tide-over-bad-loans-crisis/article8573163.ece
Why would Palaszczuk want to tell Queensland voters that she’s bent over backwards for Adani? No one up here wants it.
Townsville Bulletin seems to want the mine Jimbo (or at least their News Corp bosses are tell them to push that line) – their bumper stickers prove it. ABC 7.30 last night found a handful of people in Bowen who think it’s the only way to create jobs in the region. So the media and pollies have convinced some people it’s a great idea and that any enviro concerns have been dreamed up by Sydney/Melbourne latte drinkers. I feel for those unemployed coal miners but like those former auto workers, reskilling to work in renewable power surely is better long-term option
Why? So that no one from LNP to Katter to One Nation can say anything about Labor on the Adani front. Palaszczuk has outflanked them all on the right hand side and now thrown the baby over to the federal government. Let’s see if Malcolm Turnbull has the balls to stump up $1 billion and call her bluff. It’s only money and we’ve got plenty of it, apparently.
Believe it or not (and I was really amazed) whilst doing phone around for GetUp I struck 2 people who really really wanted the mine. One was a mining engineer who denied AGW and said it was a lefty plot. The other a raving nutter who also denied AGW and wanted to bend my ear about how GetUp was a bunch of left wing layabouts with no jobs, making mischief for hard working polluting industries. 4 out of 5 wrong was impressive.
Also. it seems that only about 3% of all people called cared enough to talk about it.
So if you really care about preventing this obscenity, 1) talk to anybody and encourage them to let their local MP know they don’t support it and 2) get up with GetUp.
If it was just down to vote buying and protectionism why would they not simply put that $900,000 per job towards renewable energy projects in those same marginal electorates? That would get the double benefit of appeasing the majority of Australians who want us to do more on climate change and energy affordability.
There is more to it, and it’s probably to do with coal-obsession and influence.
Coal/donor profits.
Pay offs somewhere, somehow. That, or steamy photographs.
Again, how many of these jobs (off-shore?) are going to be in building automated machinery to do the actual mining – boosting Adani profits?
Has either/both government/s guaranteed this private company our $tax to float it – in light of banks not touching it because of their economic concerns?
When will Adani be looking to off-load their “White Elephant Mine” –
if/when it dies, and takes our money with it, to that great big furphy in the sky?