Shelton urges Australians to defy CCP intimidation and support Shen Yun

Family First National Director and NSW Legislative Council candidate Lyle Shelton is urging Australians to attend Shen Yun’s Australian tour in the wake of the bomb threat that forced Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to evacuate The Lodge.

A Chinese-language email warned that explosives had been placed at the Prime Minister’s residence and that “blood will flow like a river” if Shen Yun’s Gold Coast performance proceeded. Police later confirmed the threat was a hoax.

Mr Shelton said while it has not been proven that the threat originated from the Chinese Communist Party, Australians would be naïve not to consider that possibility.

Given the CCP’s long-running hostility to Shen Yun and its global campaign to silence critics, it is not wrong to suspect the regime or its sympathisers may be involved in bomb threat.”

The Chinese Consulate-General in Sydney, along with the Chinese Consulate in Melbourne, has issued public statements urging Australians not to attend Shen Yun performances. Those statements have described the show — which is presented by a group linked to Falun Gong — as inauthentic or politically motivated, and warned against what they call its “political framing”.

Mr Shelton said such interventions amount to foreign interference in Australia’s cultural life.

It is completely unacceptable for foreign diplomatic missions to pressure Australians about what cultural performances they should or should not attend,” he said.

Shen Yun presents ‘China before communism’ — a celebration of 3,000 years of civilisation before the violent Leninist takeover of 1949.”

In 1949, the CCP seized control of mainland China following civil war. Historians estimate that up to 100 million people perished under communist campaigns, purges, famine and political violence during the twentieth century.

Mr Shelton attended a Sydney performance by Shen Yun Performing Arts last year.

I greatly appreciated the production’s honest portrayal of the persecution of religious believers and dissidents under communist rule,” he said.

This is the China the CCP does not want Australians to see — a rich cultural heritage that predates and contradicts communist ideology.”

Mr Shelton said the appropriate response to threats and intimidation is not retreat but resolve.

Australia is a sovereign nation. We will not have our Prime Minister threatened, nor our artistic freedoms curtailed, by foreign powers,” he said.

If anything, Australians should turn out in even greater numbers to support Shen Yun and send a clear message: intimidation will not work here.”

$250 million upgrade secures Navy’s future in North Queensland

The Albanese Government is strengthening Defence capability in northern Australia, with major milestones reached on delivering the $250 million HMAS Cairns wharf upgrade and the completion of a new shared-user training facility for Australian Navy Cadets.

The HMAS Cairns wharf upgrade is part of the Navy Capability Infrastructure Subprogram (NCIS), supporting the next generation of Navy vessels, including the Hunter class frigates, Supply class auxiliary oiler replenishment ships, and Arafura class offshore patrol vessels.

Delivered by BESIX Watpac, the new 212-metre wharf will enable Arafura class vessels to operate from HMAS Cairns, reinforcing the Royal Australian Navy’s presence in North Queensland and enhancing Australia’s maritime security.

Built for resilience, the wharf has been elevated above surrounding infrastructure to withstand rising king tide levels and ensure it continues to meet Navy operational requirements for decades to come.

Through this project, more than 770 workers have worked onsite, with a peak workforce of 90 people on site each day. 13 major subcontractors have been engaged, with $67.7 million awarded to local businesses within 125 kilometres of Cairns.

Local Indigenous-owned organisations have secured almost $800,000 in contracts, while Indigenous employees have contributed more than nine per cent of total workforce hours.

Complementing the wharf upgrade is a new $11.5 million shared-user facility completed two kilometres south of HMAS Cairns.

The new facility, delivered by Hutchinson Builders, will provide a permanent home for Australian Navy Cadets from Training Ship Endeavour, including offices, classrooms, boatshed and a fully equipped galley.

Located adjacent to the Great Barrier Reef International Marine College, the new facility will strengthen integration with Cairns’ marine education and training sector.

Assistant Minister for Defence, Peter Khalil:

“These projects are critical to the Royal Australian Navy’s future capability and demonstrate our Government’s commitment to delivering ungraded Defence infrastructure across northern Australia.

“The new wharf at HMAS Cairns will support Arafura class offshore patrol vessels, enhance engagement with our Pacific partners and ensure our Navy is equipped to meet operational demands well into the future.

“Just as importantly, it’s great to see this investment delivering strong local outcomes as well, with more than $67 million flowing to regional businesses and meaningful participation from Indigenous organisations and workers.”

Assistant Minister for Northern Australia and Senator for Queensland, Nita Green:

“North Queensland has always been strategically important, and these investments recognise the region’s role in keeping Australia safe while supporting local livelihoods.”

“From construction through to ongoing operations, these upgrades create lasting employment and training pathways for North Queenslanders.”

Member for Leichardt, Matt Smith MP:

“This upgrade ensures HMAS Cairns remains a major employer and economic anchor for the region for decades to come.”

“The new Navy Cadets facility gives young people in Cairns and surrounding communities a direct pathway into Navy and maritime careers, without having to leave the region.”

Visit to Samoa and Niue

This week I will travel to Samoa and Niue to continue to strengthen Australia’s deep ties of friendship, respect and trust with our Pacific partners.

Australia is a partner the Pacific can count on – listening and acting alongside Pacific leaders to build a peaceful, stable and prosperous region.

In Samoa, I will meet Prime Minister Laʻaulialemalietoa and members of his Cabinet to advance Australia’s and Samoa’s cooperation across security, governance, climate, health, education, and economic growth, reflecting our shared commitment to Pacific-led solutions.

In Niue, I will meet Prime Minister Tagelagi to discuss Niue’s development priorities and our shared ambitions for climate action in the Pacific.

Australia is proud to be the Pacific’s largest and most comprehensive development partner, with increased investment in shared security, health and climate resilience to ensure our region is safe and secure in a more uncertain world.

I look forward to the opportunity to advance our partnerships and celebrate the contributions we have made to each other’s societies. Together, we are building a stronger Pacific family.  

Greens: Australian Children belong safe in Australia, not in a dangerous desert camp

Over 20 Australian children have been held in desert detention camps in Syria for half-a-decade. One Nation, the Liberals and Labor have condemned these children to a dangerous and uncertain future in their lurch towards anti-immigration dog whistling.

Responding to the hateful campaigning of One Nation, the current Coalition Leader, Angus Taylor, now wants to make it a crime to help these children. This needs repeating, the Coalition wants to make it a crime to help bring Australian children to safety.

This is not a gimmick, it is not a sound bite, it is not a political move. This is a betrayal of core human values.

Senator Shoebridge, Greens Spokesperson on Home Affairs, said:

“The first responsibility of any Australian government is to keep Australian children safe. It is extraordinary how few politicians in Canberra seem to understand this basic fact.

“Last September I met with one of the children held in these camps who was 6 years old and spoke with a broad Australian accent that took me straight home. She drew me a picture of her favourite story, Rapunzel, with roses she had never seen in a garden she could only dream of.

“The 23 Australian children trapped in the dangerous Syrian detention camp are victims of ISIS. They had no choice in going to Syria to have their childhoods devastated like this.

“It is shocking that both Angus Taylor and Anthony Albanese are failing a moral test that was set by Scott Morrsion who said when he assisted children to return in 2020 that ‘these young children who are coming back to Australia, they can’t be held responsible for the crimes of their parents.’

“The women and children who are Australian citizens will come home, the only thing that will change is how they come home. Will it be in an orderly and monitored way where Australian agencies can integrate people back into the community and monitor community safety or will it be an unplanned and risky mess?

“One Nation, Labor and the Coalition are in a race to the bottom here, demonising children, stoking fear and now threatening to jail people for the ‘crime’ of bringing kids to safety.

“When I met with local Syrian representatives last year they knew the dangers of ISIS, they had fought the appalling war against them and defeated them. They said Australia should bring these women and children home because they are our responsibility. The US has said the same.

“Once the Government abandons, defames and attacks children who have done nothing wrong, what is to stop them doing this to any Australian citizen?

“There is a moral vacuum at the heart of this debate which is the real threat to Australia, and that’s the threat politics needs to meet.”

 

Source: Picture of a drawing by 6 year old Australia, in al-Roj, Syria, taken by the Office of Senator Shoebridge (Sep. 2025)
Source: Picture of a drawing by 6 year old Australia, in al-Roj, Syria, taken by the Office of Senator Shoebridge (Sep. 2025)

Museum of Chinese in Australia officially opens

The Museum of Chinese in Australia has officially opened in Sydney’s iconic Chinatown today, supported by the Albanese Government.

The Albanese Government is supporting the establishment of the first Chinese focused museum in New South Wales dedicated to preserving and presenting the history, heritage and contributions of Chinese Australians, with $2.6 million in funding.

The museum is located within the heritage listed former Haymarket Library, a building with more than 180 years of history and showcases the historical and cultural ties of the Australia Chinese community dating back to the Cantonese traders in the 1920s.

Adapting the three-storey building at Haymarket, the museum will feature an archive, library and include the transformation of former reading rooms into exhibition galleries and public program spaces.

The project has also been supported by the City of Sydney, NSW Government and generous contributions from the Chinese Australian community.

As communities across Australia celebrate Chinese New Year and welcome the Year of the Horse, the official opening of the Museum of Chinese in Australia reflects the Government’s ongoing commitment to strengthening multicultural Australia and preserving the stories that shape our national identity.

The museum is a permanent invitation to all Australians to learn about the significant role the Chinese community has played in Australia.

The Albanese Government is focussed on investing in community infrastructure which preserves and celebrates our history and builds community.

Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese

“The Chinese Australian community is a powerful example of how when people come to our nation seeking a better life for themselves, they make this a better country for all of us.

“This museum will celebrate a vital thread through the history of our modern nation – the long and extraordinary story of Chinese people in Australia.   

“I can’t think of a better site for this museum than in Haymarket – a place synonymous with the Chinese-Australian story – or a more fitting time of year to open it.”

Minister for Social Services Tanya Plibersek

“Labor understands that Australia’s diversity is one of our greatest strengths.

“The Museum of Chinese in Australia is a place to preserve the stories, struggles, and achievements of Chinese Australians, and to remind us of all the richness they bring to our shared history.

“It’s fantastic to see it open in Sydney’s Chinatown, a place where Chinese culture, hard work, and creativity have flourished for generations.”

Minister for Multicultural Affairs Anne Aly

“The Museum of Chinese in Australia will stand as a cultural landmark in Sydney’s Chinatown as a place of connection reflection and celebration.”

“It shines a light on individuals and families whose stories of ambition, resilience and determination are central to Australia’s nation building journey.”

“These are stories worth remembering, because they deepen our understanding of who we are and strengthen the sense of belonging that underpins our multicultural success.”

Visit to Australia by the Prime Minister of Canada

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will welcome the Right Honourable Mark Carney, Prime Minister of Canada, to Australia from 3 to 6 March.

This will be Prime Minister Carney’s first visit to Australia as Prime Minister. He will visit Sydney and Canberra, where he will address the Australian Parliament.

Australia and Canada have a close and enduring partnership, underpinned by trust and shared values, including parliamentary democracy, multiculturalism, equality before the law, and respect for our First Nations peoples.

Prime Minister Carney’s visit is an opportunity to further strengthen cooperation on investment, economic security and critical minerals, defence, and links between our institutions and communities.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“I am pleased to welcome my friend Prime Minister Carney to Australia and look forward to his address to the Australian Parliament.

“Canada is one of Australia’s closest friends, built on generations of trust, with a shared commitment to supporting stability across the Indo-Pacific and beyond.

“As our countries face new challenges and opportunities, we must deepen our cooperation with partners to promote our national interests.

“I look forward to discussing ways to build on our existing cooperation with Canada to shape the next stage of this key relationship.”

Australia’s steadfast support for Ukraine four years on

Today marks four years since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine began in blatant violation of international law, including the United Nations Charter.

Four years of unprovoked Russian aggression against a sovereign, democratic neighbour.

Australia is steadfast in our commitment to a just and lasting peace for Ukraine.

We commend the bravery and resilience of the Ukrainian people.

Australia has committed over $1.7 billion in total assistance, including $1.5 billion in military support to help Ukraine defend itself.

Russia continues to weaponise winter by intensifying its attacks on Ukraine’s critical energy infrastructure and civilian populations. Australia has provided $40 million to the Ukraine Energy Support Fund, including $10 million announced in January 2026, to help keep lights on, homes heated and essential services operating. 

Since the outset of the invasion, Australia has made clear that Russia, and those enabling its illegal war of aggression, will face consequences.

The Australian Government has today imposed additional targeted sanctions on 180 individuals, entities and shadow fleet vessels with links to Russia, our single largest sanctions package since February 2022.

These new sanctions target Russia’s finance and banking, defence, aeronautical, oil and gas, transportation, and science and technology sectors. They are designed to squeeze Russian revenues and further constrain its ability to continue its illegal and brutal invasion.

The banking and finance sectors facilitate the purchase of technology and equipment necessary for Russia to sustain its invasion, while the oil and gas and transport sectors generate revenue for the Russian government. Russia’s aeronautical and defence sectors are critical to the development of Russian military capability.

Shadow fleet vessel sanctions are designed to starve Russia’s war economy of revenue.

For the first time, Australia is also targeting cryptocurrency entities that enable cross-border payments to facilitate sanctions circumvention which sustains Russia’s military operations.

Australia has now imposed more than 1800 sanctions in response to Russia’s illegal full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Australia has also lowered the Russian Oil Price Cap from USD47.60 a barrel to USD44.10, alongside action taken by our international partners to further drive down the market value of Russian crude oil.

Details of these additional measures are available on the sanctions guidance webpage.

We will continue to take action to place further pressures on Russia’s oil revenue, and we expect businesses to prevent their supply chains from inadvertently funding Russia’s illegal and immoral invasion of Ukraine.

Australia coordinates closely with Ukraine and international partners through the Coalition of the Willing. The Deputy Prime Minister will participate in a meeting of the Coalition of the Willing this evening.

Once again, Australia calls on Russia to immediately end its war and uphold its international legal obligations, including in relation to the protection of civilians and treatment of prisoners of war.

Today and everyday, Australia will continue to push for a just and lasting peace that upholds Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, supports security and stability in Europe, and ensures Russia does not renew its aggression.

Polluting electricity retailers take from families’ pockets, while Aussies installing renewables are taking charge of their power 

A  new report from the Climate Council, Power Games: Who’s driving high power bills? reveals that Aussies are being ripped off, while big polluters line their coffers, in part by overcharging millions of us, punishing loyalty and in some cases misleading Aussie consumers. 
 
Expensive gas and unreliable coal clunkers drive spikes in prices that hit families and businesses where it hurts. The evidence is clear: without renewable energy, power bills would be even higher. Renewable energy is the only thing pushing electricity prices down, cutting $417 off the average household electricity bill in 2024 (a collective saving of $3.8 billion). 
 
While gas normally provides just a fraction of the electricity in Australia’s main grid, it dictates wholesale electricity prices up to 90 percent of the time. Domestic gas prices are now four times higher than when Australia began exporting the fossil fuel from the east coast in 2015, exposing Aussie households to the price shocks from volatile global markets. 
If that seems unfair, it is. But Aussies are taking their power back in droves. In the second half of 2025, nearly 140,000 households installed solar panels – joining the one in three who already have them in place – and almost 185,000 homes connected household batteries. 
With renewables bringing down bills for families and businesses, Aussies can stop funding polluting electricity retailers and instead save for their own lives – the kids’ school excursion, an emergency vet visit or simply the weekly shop – a savings benefit and a return to fairness every Aussie should have access to. 
ENDS 
The below case studies of Aussie families, homeowners, farmers and business owners are available for interview to share their stories of taking their power back with renewable energy.
 
New South Wales
 
Ken Enderby, Concord, Sydney. 
Ken and his wife now save about $6000 a year on their energy bills after creating their own power supply by installing solar and a battery, joining a virtual power plant and making money by selling energy back to the grid, switching to a heat pump water heater – which cut their yearly hot water bill down from $600 to $0 – and switching to an electric vehicle. 
 
Paul Barry, Sydney. 
Paul Barry is a publisher, consultant and writer, who also lives with a rare form of Motor Neurone Disease (MND) that limits his speech and movement. Paul’s family home is an energy-intensive household, with a pool heated ten months of the year for his son who lives with an intellectual disability who needs to swim regularly for exercise and self-regulation. Together with Paul’s own symptoms of temperature sensitivity, his household uses a lot of electricity. Before installing solar, Paul’s family’s average electricity bill was at least $600 a month. In 2019 Paul spent almost $20,000 on solar and a battery,  with a payback period of 6.7 years. Paul’s since saved $3000 per year and when using the solar optimally, reduced his family’s electricity bill by $250 a month. 
 
James O’Hanlon, Armidale. 
James lives with his wife and two young daughters, a big dog and four chickens. In July 2025 his family installed a 6.6kW system, consisting of 15 solar panels, plus a Catch Solar Relay to heat their hot water tank using excess solar. James’ family’s most recent bill, covering the sunny summer months, had dropped 75% compared to the previous year. His first bill after getting solar was 21% lower compared to the year before despite using a lot of energy for heating in the cold Armidale winter. James hopes to add a battery as the experience has highlighted the benefits of storage, finding it hard to use up all that excess solar power during off peak daytime hours. 
 
Alisdair Tulloch, Hunter Valley. 
Alisdair is a fifth-generation grapegrower and winemaker at Keith Tulloch wines. The winery has solar and an electric forklift, and is certified carbon neutral. In 2024, Alisdair launched his own wine label, Aeon Wines, with his wife Kenisha. In 2018 the Tulloch family constructed a solar array which met 72 per cent of the farm’s power needs and had a four year payback, which at the time had an immediate savings benefit of $25,000 a year and reduced their emissions by the equivalent of 100 tonnes of CO2. Alisdair can speak to his experience with solar cutting and offsetting electricity costs for his family’s business even as electricity bills rise across Australia. 
 
Nic Seton, CEO of Parents for Climate said: 
“Renewable energy is now the single biggest force pushing power bills down in Australia. Without the wind and solar already in our grid, families would be paying hundreds of dollars more every year. 
 
“Clean energy is a powerful deflation driver that shields households from the rising costs of volatile global gas markets and failing coal clunkers. It’s crystal clear that the fastest way to cut bills is to build more renewables and storage, and to make sure every household, including renters, can access those savings.”
 
Victoria
 
Bo Christopher, Mansfield. 
Bo is the President of the Mansfield Football and Netball Club, which was the first in Australia to work with Footy for Climate through the Power Forward program to install a solar and battery storage system. The Mansfield Football and Netball Club now has a 29.04kW solar system with 40.3kWh of battery storage, which is expected to cut the club’s annual electricity bill from $9000 to $900 – an anticipated saving of around 90 per cent.
 
Michael Unwin, Windermere, Ballarat. 
Michael Unwin, horticulture farmer and operator of the Michael Unwin winery based in the proposed Western Victoria REZ, operates offgrid with a self-sufficient solar set up and carbon friendly and regenerative farming practices. Michael can speak to extreme heat caused by climate change impacting his operations and his belief that the storage of energy is the biggest opportunity to reduce emissions on farms and keep his farm profitable. 
 
Claire Harvey, Melbourne
Claire is a single mum who lives in a rental property with her two kids in Melbourne’s outer south eastern suburbs. She relies on a car to drive her daughter to and from sports games, and in May 2025, saved up enough to replace her petrol car with an EV. To help reduce costs, Claire charges her car between 10am and 3pm, when power is cheapest from her green power cooperative, CoPower, at $0.08/kWh.
 
Queensland
 
Garry Harding, Lake MacDonald
Garry lives with his partner and two teen children in regional Queensland. About 10 years ago, the family installed a 5.2kW solar system to manage rising power bills. Since then, they have become far more intentional about how and when they use electricity, for example by adjusting hot water timing and shifting appliances into the middle of the day, when solar is strongest. The result has been around $1,500 a year in electricity bill savings, plus significant additional savings from replacing their petrol car with an EV. Garry is highly knowledgeable about energy efficiency and demand management solutions, and can speak about how his household uses smart meter data to make sure they are getting the most out of their solar generation.
 
Brad Aldred, Brisbane
Since making a series of solar and home battery investments over the past 9 years, Brad and his family of four now pay just $13 a quarter for electricity and that’s including the costs of running an electric car. Eventually, the family would like their property to be self-sufficient: savings from their clean energy investments have so far gone back towards further efficiency upgrades including solar hot water, removing gas fixtures, improving home insulation, and installing a new modular home battery through the Federal Cheaper Home Batteries Program last year. With a total of 10kW of solar panels on their property, the family has saved an estimated $1,500 a year on power bills plus an additional $70 a week on petrol.
 
Bernadette Systa, Redland City
With five children, a partner, two dogs and a pool, Bernadette relies on rooftop solar to help manage her household costs in Redland City, QLD. In 2022, the family upgraded from a small 8-panel array to a 5kW system and heat pump. They now save over $2,000 a year on electricity bills which, together with government incentives, enabled them to purchase an electric vehicle this year. As an early adopter of household solar, Bernadette benefits from the Queensland Government’s 44-cent feed-in tariff. She plans to put those savings towards a home battery by the time the scheme expires in 2028.
 
Toni Chapman, Cairns
Toni lives with her husband in Cairns. In 2016, the retired couple used their superannuation for solar panels to help reduce the costs of what was then a 6-person household. They have since installed a 10kW battery to power their 3 air-conditioning units, pool pump, 2 fridges and appliances throughout the day and night. With their power bills now down to $60-90 per month, the battery has saved Toni’s family an estimated $3,000 a year.
 
Bianca Sands, Hervey Bay
Bianca lives with her husband, 2 teen children, and dog in Hervey Bay. The family installed solar panels over 15 years ago with the help of government rebates. They currently have a 16-panel, 3kW solar system that has more than covered all their home energy needs for several years, sometimes even resulting in refund cheques of up to $700 a year. In total, Bianca expects the solar array to have saved her family over $30,000, which the family has used on home renovations and more recently, an electric vehicle that also serves as a back-up power source during power outages.
 
South Australia
 
Karl Johncock, Bellevue Heights, Adelaide 
Karl, a teacher, lives with his partner Natalie and their border collie, and just bought a house six months ago. Karl can speak to his experience of saving money in their first summer in their new home despite loving to run the electricity-chewing air conditioning and his partner, Natalie, working from home. Karl can speak to the purely economic motivations behind his choice to power his home with renewables.  
 
Australian Capital Territory
 
Tim Veldre, Canberra
Tim is a Canberra father of two. During the peak of summer after installing a 6.6KW solar system on his family home, Tim’s costs went into the black and the energy companies owed him money instead. Tim can speak to getting access to household solar through the Sustainable Household Scheme with a low interest rate loan. Tim’s family’s financial benefit in 2 years is just under $4,000, having cut $2,625 off electricity bills and $1,350 in feed-in income. Since installation, Tim’s household has exported 15 MWh of electricity to the grid, enough to power an average ACT household for nearly two years. 
 
Western Australia
 
Bronwyn David, Perth
Bronwyn lives with her husband, two young adult children and dog in Perth. In 2013, she chose to install solar panels on their house instead of getting the new car she had planned for. With both parents working from home, a pool, ducted air-conditioning and family-sized loads of laundry to manage each day, Bronwyn says solar was a necessary investment that has helped curb their frightening growth in electricity costs each year.
 
Tasmania
 
Judi Walker, West Ulverstone
Judi lives in rural Tasmania and is a medical educator and professor of rural health at the University of Tasmania. She is on the Ahpra National Psychology Board, Executive Chair of a provider of in-home care services, and on the Board of the Tasmanian Postgraduate Medical Council. Her partner of many years is in dementia care, she lives alone, and recently installed 19 solar panels with an average annual daily electricity usage cost of $0.38C.
 

Mums and dads struggling with the cost of living don’t need blackouts on top of soaring power bills – Labor and Liberals’ net zero obsession pushes NSW to the brink of blackouts

Revelations that NSW faced rolling blackouts because of Liberal and Labor’s planned early closure of the Eraring coal-fired power station are a cruel joke, Family First NSW Upper House candidate Lyle Shelton said today.
 
 “The major parties’ reckless obsession with net zero is putting pressure on families and businesses are being left dangerously exposed,” Mr Shelton said.
 
“While the federal Liberals may have dumped net zero, State Liberals who if in government actually decide if reliable power sources are shut, are still in love with next zero and won’t drop it despite the pain it causes families and business.”
 
Reporting by The Australian shows that the Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) forecast a rising risk of rolling blackouts in NSW in the absence of the Eraring Power Station — only to later advise there would be no reliability gap.
 
“It would be laughable if it wasn’t so serious,” Mr Shelton said.
 
“In what universe do politicians bring a state like NSW to the brink? Origin Energy’s decision to extend Eraring’s life, with the Minns’ Government’s quick agreement, was the only thing that averted a Liberal-induced disaster.
 
“Under former Liberal Energy Minister Matt Kean, the Coalition wanted to shut down Eraring early as part of its net zero crusade. Now Labor has inherited the mess and appears just as determined to press on with unreliable wind and solar factories across country NSW.”
 
Mr Shelton said families are rightly asking how Australia’s most populous state could face rolling blackouts in a country blessed with some of the world’s largest coal and gas reserves.
 
“The fact that NSW could have been plunged into blackouts if Eraring had closed shows how fragile the system has become under net zero ideology,” he said.
 
Centre for Independent Studies energy director Aidan Morrison has exposed the seriousness of the risk.
 
“It’s hard to understate how badly the public, and policymakers, have been misled,” Mr Morrison told The Australian. “The narrative that renewables are on track to replace coal power has been demolished by AEMO’s own analysis.
 
“The reality that NSW would have been plunged into rolling blackouts if Eraring closed in August 2027 has never dawned on the public. AEMO’s data shows expected unserved energy in November 2027 about a thousand times the regulated level the system’s meant to achieve … the equivalent of the whole state blacked out for about an hour each week.”
 
Mr Shelton said both major parties must abandon net zero before more damage is done.
 
“Family First will campaign for Labor and Liberal to dump net zero, halt the roll-out of industrial-scale wind and solar factories in regional NSW, and rebuild the state’s coal and gas generation capacity — with a clear pathway to zero-emissions nuclear energy in the future.
 
“Mums and dads struggling with the cost of living don’t need blackouts on top of soaring power bills. NSW deserves reliable, affordable electricity — not ideological experiments,” Mr Shelton said.
 
 

AUKUS enters new era with the arrival of UK submarine into Western Australia

HMS Anson has arrived at Western Australia’s HMAS Stirling for the first‑ever maintenance activity on a United Kingdom nuclear‑powered submarine in Australia, marking a historic step in our nation’s readiness to operate and maintain conventionally‑armed, nuclear‑powered submarines.

Over the coming weeks, Australian personnel will work alongside partners from the United Kingdom (UK) and United States (US) on maintenance and familiarisation activities on the Astute-class submarine.

Around 100 personnel will contribute to the UK Submarine Maintenance Period (UK SMP) including members of the Royal Navy, the UK Submarine Delivery Agency, Royal Australian Navy, ASC Pty Ltd, and Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard.

This builds on previous work completed on US Virginia-class submarines USS Vermont in 2025 and USS Hawaii in 2024, and strengthens the skills, systems and supply chains required for routine maintenance of nuclear‑powered submarines.     

Participation in the UK SMP represents another significant milestone in the lead up to the establishment of Submarine Rotational Force–West at HMAS Stirling from 2027 and will further build Australia’s familiarity with UK-designed submarines as the nation prepares to begin construction of SSN-AUKUS in Adelaide by the end of the decade. 

Two Royal Australian Navy officers have been embedded aboard HMS Anson, gaining invaluable operational experience on a conventionally-armed, nuclear‑powered submarine.

More than 50 Australians are now embedded within the UK Defence Nuclear Enterprise, and the Royal Navy has provided offshore nuclear safety training to over 950 Australian Submarine Agency personnel.

The presence of HMS Anson also provides another opportunity to test and strengthen Australia’s nuclear stewardship systems, drawing on the world-leading safety practices of AUKUS partners. 

During the HMS Anson visit, AUKUS partners will also undertake a combined AUKUS Pillar I and Pillar II activity, testing the interoperability of the Australian Speartooth large uncrewed underwater vehicle (LUUV) with the UK SSN, and assessing and enhancing AUKUS Pillar II anti-submarine warfare AI algorithms fitted to the RAAF P-8A Poseidon.  

Deputy Prime Minister, Richard Marles:

“Australia’s acquisition of a nuclear-powered submarine capability will create jobs, strengthen our local industry and help keep Australians safe. 

“This Submarine Maintenance Period is the latest demonstration of the continued momentum across all three partners to deliver AUKUS.

“Australia, the UK and the US will work together over the coming weeks on the maintenance of HMS Anson – developing our skills, systems and infrastructure as we prepare for Submarine Rotational Force–West to begin next year.”

Minister for Defence Industry, Pat Conroy:

“This is an important milestone that will build confidence in our strategic partners that we have the workforce able to deliver AUKUS submarines, and also lays ground for more jobs for locals.

“Alongside our AUKUS teammates, our workforce and industry partners are moving with purpose to accelerate Australia’s future nuclear-powered submarine capability.

“AUKUS partners are working together to achieve real operational benefits today, faster than we can working alone.”