Skip to main content

Northern Australia Beef Roads Fund to US$79m injection

The Australian government has pledged US$79 million to the Northern Australia Beef Roads Fund to upgrade roads used to transport cattle from farm gates to markets. The government’s cash injection has pleased many beef producers in northern Australia which supplies an estimated 90% of the country's cattle exports worth around $2.4 billion. Transportation costs can be up to 35% of a livestock's price because they sometimes must be transported several hundred kilometres to market, according to media repo
May 11, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
The Australian government has pledged US$79 million to the Northern Australia Beef Roads Fund to upgrade roads used to transport cattle from farm gates to markets.

The government’s cash injection has pleased many beef producers in northern Australia which supplies an estimated 90% of the country's cattle exports worth around $2.4 billion.

Transportation costs can be up to 35% of a livestock's price because they sometimes must be transported several hundred kilometres to market, according to media reports. Roads are often in poor condition, even impassable during times of flooding.

"In northern Australia, beef is probably the biggest industry, apart from tourism and resources, and it's very important that beef stays strong," said Prime Minister Tony Abbott.

But critics said the money falls far short of what it required. Australia’s Northern Territory government estimates that it will need almost $1.35 billion to improve its roads to what it considers a satisfactory state.

Northern Territory Cattlemen's Association chief executive Tracey Hayes wanted more economic and political courage, a report by the Australian Financial Review said.

"The NTCA has had roads on the agenda at every meeting [with government] for years...some of our members have not been able to get their product to market for a period of nine months. In this day and age that is extraordinary," she said.

The beef export sector is worth about $632 million to the Northern Territory, the AFR noted.

Related Content

  • Caterpillar eyes better performance in 2015 amid stormy weather
    May 13, 2015
    Caterpillar vice president Paolo Fellin sums up the past year for the global equipment manufacturer and looks at the increasing importance of telematics and machine control. David Arminas reports from Caterpillar’s Demonstration and Learning Centre in Malaga, southern Spain First the good news. Despite the difficulties, especially of the financial markets, 2014 was “a record year for a lot of things” for global heavy equipment maker Caterpillar.Now the bad news. Hang onto your seats because despite some
  • Slovak government stands firm over R2 Expressway, including Soroska Tunnel
    August 11, 2017
    Jan Durisin, head of Slovakia’s motorway operator NDS, has said that the R2 expressway, will go ahead despite watchdog fears of poor value for money. Completion of the R2, that includes the Soroska Tunnel, remains 2024, he told Slovakian news agencies. NDS, he said, will start looking for a contractor to start work in 2018 on a stretch of the expressway near the town of Roznava. R2 is a 360km route that will run from Kosice in the east across the country to Trenčín, near the Czech border in the west. It wil
  • ALARM report on UK’s crumbling roads
    March 18, 2025
    ALARM has published a new report on the UK’s crumbling roads.
  • Danish-German Fehmarn Belt road and rail tunnel hits funding snag
    July 9, 2015
    A Danish newspaper has learned of a significant European Union funding gap for one of Europe’s most ambitious transportation road and rail projects. The Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link would connect the German island of Fehmarn with the Danish island of Lolland. A submersed tunnel will cross the 18km-wide Fehmarn Belt, or Fehmarn Strait, in the Baltic Sea. Last February news emerged that contractors had revamped their cost estimates, adding nearly €1.2 billion to the project. This put the final cost of the 18