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

  • Tunnels and bridges, improving Argentina's major road link
    May 2, 2012
    A road improvement plus tunnel and bridge building contract in an area once inhabited by dinosaurs in northern Argentina, is a small but key part of an ambitious project to complete a road that will eventually link the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Latin America - Adriana Potts reports. Remote, rough and spectacular are words that come to mind when describing the mountains of Ischigualasto in Argentina's northern province of San Juan This is the only place in the world where an undisturbed sequence of rock
  • Tunnels and bridges, improving Argentina's major road link
    April 24, 2012
    A road improvement plus tunnel and bridge building contract in an area once inhabited by dinosaurs in northern Argentina, is a small but key part of an ambitious project to complete a road that will eventually link the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Latin America - Adriana Potts reports. Remote, rough and spectacular are words that come to mind when describing the mountains of Ischigualasto in Argentina's northern province of San Juan This is the only place in the world where an undisturbed sequence of rock
  • Transport under the spotlight
    February 13, 2012
    A round-up of some of the major transport-related meetings that have been held in Europe. Compiled by Patrick Smith. Europe has hosted a number of annual events over the last few weeks, where important matters of transport were discussed, reports produced, and decisions taken. ASECAP (the European Association of Tolled Motorways, Bridges and Tunnels Infrastructures Operators); International Transport Forum (ITF); Arena (TRA); International Road Federation (IRF), and the European Construction Industry Federa
  • Astec launches Don't Let America Dead End road repair campaign
    January 15, 2015
    A major US manufacturer of equipment for building and restoring roads is spearheading a national campaign to have the Federal Government increase funding for America’s much needed highway repairs. Ben Brock, chief executive of Astec Industries, based in Tennessee, is urging people in the transportation and related industries to send a message to their Congressman through the Don’t Let America Dead End website. Astec’s Don't Let America Dead End also includes a national trade ad campaign, direct outrea