Ports: metropolitan container capacity – Adjournment Speech delivered in Parliament 6 June 2012
Mr PALLAS (Tarneit) — The matter I wish to raise is for the Minister for Ports. The action I seek is that the minister review the current plans to locate the secondary, complementary metropolitan container port at the port of Hastings and in so doing conduct a comprehensive cost-benefit analysis of the value of an investment in the port of Hastings as a complementary container port, as opposed to a Bay West development.
There is growing concern within the freight and logistics industry and a growing body of information and advice about the serious transport disadvantages of locating a secondary container port at Hastings, most of which would be resolved by active consideration of locating a secondary and complementary container port at Bay West instead.
AECOM has produced a study for LeadWest which notes that Hastings has major transport access challenges, being 100 kilometres south-east of the region on the far side of the greater Melbourne area. Placing the port at Hastings would increase reliance on the West Gate corridor and create difficulties around providing a standard access rail gauge.
The Australian Financial Review recently reported that the Victorian Freight and Logistics Council and the Property Council of Australia have now lined up in support of a Bay West option. Bay West has the advantage of being in closer proximity to most importers and exporters and to excellent rail and road connections to the rest of the state, presenting an opportunity to relieve the pressure on the West Gate Bridge and Monash Freeway and further develop the employment options in the area.
I note that this issue has been specifically brought to the minister’s attention several times, but every time he has dismissed it out of hand, claiming it is an option that might be looked at in 50 years. At a Public Accounts and Estimates Committee (PAEC) hearing on 8 May the minister said it might be considered as an option between 2050 and 2100.
Given that the port of Melbourne is going to reach capacity within the next 15 years, 50 years is a long time to wait before proper consideration is given to what might be the right option for Victoria. Given the 15-year time frame and the $12.5 billion budget that would be needed to get Hastings right, an alternative option needs to be established for a cost-benefit analysis, and Bay West is the obvious one. Delaying and avoiding is not in the interests of the exporters and importers who incur extra costs and lose productivity by having their goods transported hundreds of extra kilometres across a major metropolitan area, or indeed for Victorians who would have to contend with extra freight on the already crowded highways and the West Gate Bridge.
The Auditor-General, in his report to PAEC on the delivery of significant infrastructure projects, has made it clear that he believes the government announcing a policy should not be the sole guidance for departments in terms of looking at alternative options.
We believe it is important for the government to look at these issues. The minister may express the view that his policy is consistent with the previous government’s policy, but of course Bay West has emerged only recently on the back of export industry and community views. We say it is appropriate that the government look at this in the context of a viable — —
The ACTING SPEAKER (Mr Nardella) — Order! The honourable member’s time has expired