INFRASTRUCTURE AUSTRALIA
at delivering a single asset. For example, realising the social and economic benefits of a hospital requires the physical buildings to be well integrated with transport infrastructure, so that people can access it. It’s about collaborating with communities, rather than informing them, to develop the strategic direction for their area, and getting buy-in early.
were awarded the World Green Building Council Chairman’s Award in 2017. You were named as ‘True Leaders’ by AFR BOSS Magazine’s and ‘100 Game Changers’ by Vogue Australia Magazine in 2018. How has your journey been? My career and life has traversed a variety of different roles from studying Agricultural Economics, owning a vineyard, winery and restaurant with my husband, working in a law firm, then real estate and now infrastructure as well as being a lifesaver. I have always been active in both my community and place of work, driven to make a difference. I have not sought the recognition, however I am honoured to have been, but I have not done it alone. Through it all I have been lucky enough to work with some amazing and talented people including my family. There is still much more work to be done in my new role so part of me feels like I’m just getting started on a new journey in my current role. What are the main core functions of Infrastructure Australia? Essentially we have two core functions. The first is to evaluate business cases for nationallysignificant investment proposals seeking more than $100 million in commonwealth funding, which is part of our work in developing and maintaining the Infrastructure Priority List.
FACING AUSTRALIA’S MAJOR INFRASTRUCTURE CHALLENGES Omesh Jethwani, Government Projects & Programs Manager in-conversation with Romilly Madew AO, CEO Infrastructure Australia on the major challenges and opportunities facing Australia’s infrastructure over the next 15 years and beyond. You have quite an impressive resume. You have held Board positions with the Currawong State Park Advisory Board, Australian Sustainable Built Environment Council, Sydney Olympic Park Authority, Surf Life Saving Foundation and Chief Executive Women. You have sat on numerous ministerial panels including the Cities Reference Group, National Urban Policy Forum and the China/Australia Services Sector Forum. How did you come to take on the role of CEO Infrastructure Australia? Through my previous role as Chief Executive of
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Green Building Council of Australia (GBCA) for 13 years, I had been involved in Infrastructure Australia (IA) since its inception in 2008. The opportunity arose in 2018 to consider joining IA and I jumped at the opportunity, starting my role with IA in April this year taking the reins on an ambitious research and reform agenda. I love a challenge and I am passionate about place-making. Already I have found that the work in my previous roles have resonated with the current work I am doing: similar ambitions and challenges, but in a different sector. At GBCA I was able to develop a strong appreciation of the value in working
MBA NSW | Issue Four | October-December 2019
collaboratively to achieve policy outcomes and I knew that would serve me well at IA. Now instead of just buildings, it’s the sustainability of cities and their productivity that dominates the agenda. You were the National winner of the Telstra Business Women’s Awards (TBWA) in 2009. You were named one of the ‘100 Women of Influence’ by the Australian Financial Review and Westpac in 2012. The US Green Building Council awarded you the International Leadership Award in 2015. In the same year, the Planning Institute made you an Honorary Fellow of Australia. You
The second is to set the agenda on the longterm opportunities for infrastructure investment and reform that will improve living standards and national productivity. Underpinning all our investment and reform recommendations are our four-yearly national infrastructure Audits – the most recent of which was released in August this year. With the inception of Infrastructure Australia in 2008, its remit included transport, energy, water and telecommunications. However, in 2017, it changed its remit to include social infrastructure. Why was that? Social Infrastructure was added to our remit in our last Ministerial Statement of Expectations in 2017. The 2019 Australian Infrastructure Audit, which presents a forward-looking view of Australia’s infrastructure challenges and opportunities over the next 15 years and beyond, examines the infrastructure needs of the Australian community and industry – and yes for the first time that includes social infrastructure. This reflects our view that the liveability of our communities is not only about more access to transport, energy, water, and telecommunications – but access to a whole range of supporting infrastructure like health, education, housing, justice, cultural spaces and green space.
The Australian population is growing in Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne and Perth. More than 60% of Australia’s population is in those four fast-growing cities, of which 40% is specifically in Sydney and Melbourne. It is predicted that these cities will have more than 6 million residents by 2031. How will Infrastructure Australia resolve the road congestion, crowding on public transport, growing demands of social infrastructure, including health, education and open space? IA is the nation’s independent infrastructure advisor. Our role is to provide research and advice to governments, industry and the community on the infrastructure investments and reforms that will benefit all Australians.
Romilly Madew AO Chief Executive Officer, Infrastructure Australia Social infrastructure is critical for social inclusion and cohesion. It provides the essential services required for communities to function, helps make places liveable and improves quality of life for the people living there.
Throughout our bodies of work our rigorous and independent analysis identifies infrastructure needs and opportunities, to ensure that our infrastructure funds are spent where they are needed most.
However the ease of access, quality and cost of social infrastructure varies across the country and we need to close the divide.
In the 2019 Audit, to address congestion and growth of cities, Australia’s current infrastructure program must do more than plug the immediate funding gap.
The Australian Infrastructure Audit was released in August 2019. The Audit takes a forward-looking view at the decisive trends impacting Australia’s infrastructure over the next 15 years and beyond. What were some of the key findings, and what has changed since the 2015 Audit? The release of the 2019 Audit comes at a particularly important time for infrastructure investment. We are facing a changing climate, a re-ordering of the world economy, and a reshaping of global institutions and norms. Closer to home, our population is growing and changing, the structure of the economy is shifting, and rapid technology change is fundamentally reshaping our day-to-day lives. This will have significant implications for how we plan, build and deliver infrastructure. In addition to the inclusion of social infrastructure in this year’s Audit, we have also identified the need for a stronger awareness of place making and what integrated requirements are needed in the future planning of communities. We look at the growing recognition that infrastructure and social services do not end
Changing and growing demand, and a mounting maintenance backlog is putting unprecedented pressure on the infrastructure services we rely on. More than $123 billion of construction work has commenced since 2015, with a committed forward pipeline of over $200 billion but we maintain that the current investment program must be the new normal. Rather than a short-term boom, the historic level of activity we are seeing in the sector must continue for the next 15 years If we look at project commitments in the short and medium-term pipeline, as well as major long-term commitments that haven’t yet been funded, we think this level of activity is likely to, and will in fact need to, stay elevated for more than a decade and potentially beyond. There are 3.3 million (12%) Australians who do not live in urban areas. What are some of the issues affecting them, and how are these issues being addressed? Australia has always been a vast country but we have seen declining populations in regional, rural and remote areas and at
Issue Four | October-December 2019 | MBA NSW
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Contents Feature Article
Contents Feature Article
INFRASTRUCTURE AUSTRALIA