Bass — what Growing Australia delivers

Member for Bass: Jess Teesdale (Australian Labor Party) · Tasmania

The Bell Bay Growth Precinct sits inside Bass — $2.0B of platform investment, 2,800 direct jobs, with the government building the solar, the industrial estate, the CSIRO research lab and the TAFE training campus, while private operators take the leases and create the manufacturing jobs. Bell Bay produces Green aluminium, sovereign ferroalloys, aluminium recycling, MG-silicon (semiconductor substrate + export), green hydrogen.

Beyond the precinct network, Bass also benefits from the national programs the plan funds. Australia currently holds about 24 days of liquid fuel — well under the 90-day reserve the International Energy Agency requires of member countries. Growing Australia funds the four sites that take the country to 90 days, and Growth Precinct solar generation delivers wholesale industrial power at 2.5–3 cents per kilowatt-hour, half today's wholesale rate. Cheaper sovereign power flows through to household bills in Bass as it does everywhere else.

Australia imports more than 90% of its medicines, runs on 24 days of fuel cover, and has watched its manufacturing share of the economy fall from 25% in the 1980s to under 6% today. Growing Australia is a costed, public-domain plan to reverse that — $169.1 billion across five sovereign-industry programs over ten years, roughly 2.0% of federal spending. The same federal spending that funds the NDIS, AUKUS, and Medicare. Bass's share isn't a number on a spreadsheet somewhere — it's whatever the Bell Bay Growth Precinct actually puts into the local economy.

Growth Precincts near Bass

National programs that reach Bass

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