Media Releases
December 2024
Housing bubble or housing trouble? Australians wary of increasing property prices in future
The Australia Institute surveyed 1,009 Australians between 13 and 15 November 2024 about their attitudes to future property prices. The margin of error is ±3%. Key findings: About as many Australians want property prices to decrease in the future (36%) as want them to increase (33%). One in five (18%) want them to stay the
Minister’s early Christmas gift to coal companies
Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek has given an early Christmas present to coal companies by approving three new mine expansions – Caval Ridge (Qld), Boggabri mine (NSW) and Lake Vermont (Qld).
Minister’s Christmas card to foreign gas companies – for whom every day is Christmas
Resources Minister Madeleine King’s latest opinion piece in News Corp newspapers serves the interests of gas corporations at a time when Australians are struggling with an expensive Christmas.
Rate cut already overdue: RBA should meet in January
The Australia Institute is calling on the Reserve Bank of Australia to meet in January, before its next scheduled meeting on February 17-18, 2025.
Dutton revival of ‘gas fired recovery’ bad for households, great for gas companies
The Federal Coalition’s revival of Scott Morrison’s Gas Fired Recovery is likely to increase emissions and keep gas prices high.
Neighbour from hell – A Pacific plea to Anthony Albanese and Peter Dutton
A group of Pacific Island Elders, including two former leaders, have written an open letter to Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton, urging them to stop approving new fossil fuel projects.
Coal royalties a tiny part of NSW Budget
Coal royalties do little to fund schools, hospitals, teachers or nurses, despite frequent claims to the contrary from politicians and the mining industry, new research from The Australia Institute has found.
Opaque, powerful and cashed-up – time to clean up the murky world of industry lobby groups
Companies are funding political parties and political campaigns through well-resourced lobby groups. But this spending may not be in shareholders’ – or the public’s – best interests, according to new research by The Australia Institute.
Nuclear costings are a distraction
Today’s announcement on nuclear is a distraction from Australia’s ongoing fossil fuel use and production.
WA Government greenlights Woodside gas export extension
Experts say the move is a disaster for the climate, WA cultural heritage and energy prices.
Power gouge: how AGL and Origin are milking monster profits from battling families
New research from The Australia Institute shines a light on how much the nation’s two biggest energy retailers are gouging from Australian consumers.
RBA fails households and fails the nation – again
The Reserve Bank of Australia had a great opportunity to give Australians – and the nation’s sluggish economy – something both desperately needed before Christmas. But, once again, the RBA has failed. By leaving interest rates on hold at 4.35%, the Reserve Bank has failed to do what is right for Australians. It has failed
Australians urged to support Minister to keep her promise on “no more extinctions”
The Australia Institute has launched a petition encouraging Australians to support Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek to keep her promise of no more animal extinctions under her watch.
Left behind: South Australian public servants go backwards while the SA economy surges forward
South Australian public servants are 10% worse off now than they were five years ago, despite the state’s booming economy, according to new research by The Australia Institute.
Never used, never worn: the billion-dollar Christmas waste
More than a quarter (27%) of Australians will this year get a Christmas present they’ll never use or wear.
Another day, another bumper catch of misinformation from the salmon industry
Just 24 hours after The Australia Institute exposed the salmon lobby’s lies in the debate over fish farming in Tasmania’s Macquarie Harbour, more misinformation has been spread by those with a vested interest.
NSW government now spending more public money on coal boosting than coal transition
The NSW Government is currently spending significantly more public money promoting coal than helping regional communities’ transition away from it, according to new research by the Australia Institute.
Triple trouble: WA wholesale gas and electricity prices soar since approval of onshore gas exports
The Western Australian government’s approval of exports of the state’s onshore domestic gas reserves in 2020 has exposed Western Australians to high global prices, leading to a tripling of wholesale prices in WA’s domestic gas and electricity markets.
Tasmania’s great skate debate – cutting through lies and misinformation
Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek vowed that there would be no more extinctions under her watch. But the Australian Workers Union has vowed that no species is more important than a single job.
Australia argues against developing international law to meet the unique existential threat of climate change
Australia was one of the first countries to present oral pleadings at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) overnight, as the court began to examine what countries are legally required to do to combat climate change and what is their responsibility to assist nations most affected.
Extreme heat fans flames of inequality
New research from The Australia Institute shows that older, sicker and lower-income Australians are at greater risk during heatwaves (days over 35° Celsius).
November 2024
Tide of public opinion supports stopping fish farming in Macquarie Harbour
One year on from the commencement of the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 reconsideration of salmon farming in Macquarie Harbour, new research released by The Australia Institute today shows a majority of Australians continue to support stopping fish farming where it risks the extinction of the Maugean skate.
Electoral reform impasse provides opportunity for real scrutiny – which voters demand
The breakdown in talks between the government and Coalition over major changes to Australia’s electoral laws provides the perfect opportunity for further scrutiny of the proposed changes.
WA Labor approval of Woodside North West Shelf extension would permanently increase energy bills
A decision by the Western Australian government to approve Woodside’s 50-year North West Shelf (NWS) Extension would add up to 4.3 billion tonnes of emissions to the atmosphere and lock in exposure to high global gas prices indefinitely, increasing energy costs for WA households and businesses.
South Australian electoral experiment deserves much closer scrutiny
With the South Australian House of Assembly considering dramatic changes to electoral law this week, The Australia Institute warns the process has been rushed and the legislation is compromised and unfair.
Pay up: Australians say it’s time big polluters paid for the damage they do to the environment
A vast majority of Australians (70%) believe the nation’s biggest polluters should pay for the damage they do to the environment and the role they play in climate change.
Millions of Australians plant a seed for a healthy life and a healthy planet
From the humble backyard vegetable patch to herb gardens on the kitchen windowsill – 9 million Australians are now growing their own food, according to new research from The Australia Institute, in partnership with Grow It Local.
Australians overwhelmingly support the right to peaceful protest
After a weekend which saw 170 people arrested for briefly delaying ships at the world’s biggest coal port, new polling research by The Australia Institute reveals the vast majority (79%) of Australians support the right to protest.
Visa rules risk modern slavery for Pacific workers
Over 30,000 people from Pacific Island nations and Timor Leste work in Australia on temporary visas as part of the Pacific Australia Labour Mobility (PALM) visa scheme, which a new report calls “a breeding ground for contemporary forms of slavery”.
Go Home on Time Day 2024: Exposing the $91 billion rip-off smashing exhausted Aussie workers
Despite new Right to Disconnect laws coming into force earlier this year, new research reveals Australians are still working an average five weeks’ unpaid overtime each year.
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